REPORT ANY CORRUPTION BY LAW ENFORCEMENT TODAY !!

EMAIL INFORMATION TO:

CLICK HERE TO REPORT LAW ENFORCEMENT CORRUPTION (Provide as much information as possible: full names, descriptions, dates, times, activity, witnesses, etc.)

Telephone: 347-632-9775
Email:
LawEnforcementCorruption@gmail.com

Monday, January 3, 2011

One Officer Pleads Guilty, Charges Dropped Against Another

Providence officer pleads; charges dropped against 2nd
The Journal by Gregory Smith - December 29, 2010

PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- Attorney General Patrick C. Lynch Wednesday morning dropped his prosecution of Providence police narcotics Detective Robert M. Enright, who was charged in the Operation Deception investigation of a drug ring in which four policemen were implicated in criminality. Enright, 44, of 181 Burnt Hill Rd., Scituate, was charged with harboring Albert B. Hamlin, the convicted leader of the drug ring, and conspiracy to harbor Hamlin. And Sgt. Stephen T. Gonsalves, 47, of 146 Rankin Ave., Providence, entered a plea of no contest Wednesday to reduced charges in Superior Court. He pleaded to two counts of frequenting a narcotics nuisance, a misdemeanor, after having been charged with four felony counts of soliciting to buy drugs. Regarding Enright, Assistant Attorney General Matthew S. Dawson announced to Superior Court Judge Francis J. Darigan Jr. that the attorney general's office recently obtained new evidence that gave prosecutors concern that they would not be able to sustain a conviction against Enright. He moved to dismiss the case, and Darigan approved the motion. Enright and Gonsalves, who were indicted by a grand jury, have been suspended from duty without pay for months. Still suspended without pay, as well, are the other two Providence officers charged in the case: Narcotics Detective Joseph A. Colanduono, who has plead guilty to some charges in a plea bargain but has not yet been sentenced, and Patrolman Robert J. Hamlin Jr., Albert Hamlin's older brother, against whom charges remain pending. Gonsalves plead no contest -- the equivalent of guilty under Rhode Island law, the judge noted -- in connection with a plea bargain with Lynch. Gonsalves agreed to be sentenced to back-to-back one-year suspended prison terms with probation, and the judge imposed that sentence. The sergeant also agreed as a condition of his sentence that he will continue to receive substance abuse counseling and that he retire from the Police Department. Gonsalves apologized to the court, the state police and the attorney general's office "for putting them in this difficult situation." Operation Deception was a joint investigation by the state police and the FBI. And he also thanked the state police and the attorney general's office for their professionalism. He made no mention, however, of his own department, where he has been employed for 22 years. "You have not covered yourself with glory ...," Darigan told him. "Let's see if you can stay out of trouble. ..."

Sunday, January 2, 2011

27 Freed From Prison in Law Enforcement Corruption Probe

Illegal immigrant's drug conviction thrown out in police-corruption probe fallout
Tulsa World by Omer Gillham - December 28, 2010

A judge has thrown out a felony conviction against an illegal immigrant who alleges that a Tulsa police officer and a federal agent planted drugs on him, records show. Tulsa County District Judge William Kellough on Monday vacated the drug conviction of Ruben Flores-Olmos, 23, court records show. He has also gone by the name of Angel Perez Olmos, records show. District Attorney Tim Harris’ office filed a motion to dismiss Olmos’ case without prejudice due to the involvement of an indicted police officer and a former federal agent. The agent has pleaded guilty in a police corruption probe. Olmos was convicted March 6, 2007, of possession of drugs with intent to distribute, records show. He pleaded no contest and received a six-year suspended sentence, records show. Olmos is represented by attorney Art Fleak. Fleak said Kellough’s decision to dismiss the conviction gives Olmos a second chance to become a legal citizen. “Mr. Olmos is undocumented, so he will be deported,” Fleak said. “He has a girlfriend here, and with the felony conviction being set aside, that means he can leave the country and apply for re-entry without a criminal record.” Thus far, 27 people have been freed from prison, had charges dismissed, had sentences reduced or been granted new trials as a result of the federal police corruption probe, which became public in November 2009, a World investigation shows. In legal pleadings filed before Kellough’s ruling, Olmos alleges that Tulsa Police Officer Jeff Henderson, 37, and former federal agent Brandon McFadden, 34, planted drugs on him. Henderson is charged with drug conspiracy, perjury, attempted bribery, witness tampering and civil rights violations, U.S. District Court records show. Henderson was indicted July 20 along with four former and current police officers. He has remained jailed as he awaits his trial on criminal charges. McFadden pleaded guilty May 6 to drug conspiracy and implicated himself and Henderson in alleged criminal activity involving drug arrests.

Trial Delayed in Police Corruption Probe

Trial delayed in Tulsa Police corruption probe
Tulsa World by David Harper - December 29, 2010

Grand jury investigates police corruption: Read all of the stories, view a timeline and read key documents. A federal judge on Wednesday delayed the trial of suspended Tulsa Police Department officers Jeff Henderson and Bill Yelton for almost five months, finding that additional time is required for the defense to conduct investigations, review discovery and otherwise prepare for trial. The decision by U.S. District Judge Bruce Black to push back the trial from Jan. 31 until June 20 came one day after he moved the trial of suspended TPD officers Nick DeBruin and Bruce Bonham and retired officer Harold R. Wells to March 21. They had also been set to go to trial Jan. 31. In both orders, Black noted that he had already declared both matters to be “complex” cases in August. That designation was in response to a prosecution motion by U.S. Attorney Jane Duke. Duke’s motion states that pre-trial discovery could consist of more than 30,000 pages of documents and includes “voluminous” materials subpoenaed by the grand jury investigating corruption connected to the Tulsa Police Department. Duke wrote that it “will require an extraordinary amount of time by the attorneys involved to review, understand, and digest the enormous amount of discovery to be provided as well as to conduct investigations regarding those matters.” After the case was categorized as complex, Black moved the trials from last Sept. 13 to Jan. 31. However, defense motions filed earlier this month indicated more time was needed to prepare. In a Dec. 16 joint filing, attorneys for Henderson and Yelton informed the court that the amount of documents related to the probe had grown to more than 76,000. “The time allotted by the court until Jan. 31 to prepare (a) defense in this case is insufficient to permit the defendants to investigate adequately all defenses, track down witnesses, interview witnesses and review the voluminous paper and audio discovery,” they wrote. The attorneys for Henderson and Yelton added this is a unique criminal case because many of the defense witnesses will be law enforcement personnel and that interviewing them and reviewing their records is proving to be “a very slow process.” In the case involving Bonham, DeBruin and Wells, Bonham attorney William D. Lunn wrote in a Dec. 16 pleading, “the discovery materials provided by the government have become so voluminous that the time provided to review them has proven to be insufficient.” Lunn suggested a March setting for the trial involving his client and counsel for Wells and DeBruin did not object. Attorneys Stephen Jones and Robert Wyatt IV, on behalf of Henderson, and Scott Graham and Anthony Allen, representing Yelton, had requested a June trial in that case. The prosecution did not file an objection to either motion. Black noted in his Wednesday order that defendants have not had sufficient time to prepare their defense and that conducting a trial starting on Jan. 31 “in the face of these facts would be contrary to the interests of justice.” Bonham, DeBruin and Wells are on bond. Henderson and Yelton are awaiting their trial while in jail. Henderson and Yelton were indicted together last July in a 61-count indictment. Henderson was named in 58 counts: 22 counts related to perjury, 20 related to alleged civil rights violations, 12 connected to drug crimes, two witness tampering charges, one firearms count and one attempted bribery count. Yelton was charged in seven counts: four related to alleged civil rights violations, two related to purported witness tampering and one connected to a perjury allegation. In a separate indictment, Wells was charged with 10 counts that included conspiracy and possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, and DeBruin was charged with six counts that include distributing crack cocaine and conspiracy to steal money. Bonham was accused in that indictment in five counts that include distributing crack and methamphetamine and conspiracy to steal U.S. funds.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

County Sheriff, Two Others, Indicted

Upshur County Sheriff, Two Others Indicted
Tyler Morning Telegraph by Phillip Williams - December 31, 2010

GILMER, TX — An Upshur County Grand Jury on Wednesday indicted three elected county officials on misdemeanor charges stemming from a man's removal from a meeting of the county commissioners court last month, District Attorney Billy Byrd said. Sheriff Anthony Betterton, County Judge Dean Fowler and Precinct 3 County Commissioner Lloyd Crabtree were charged with official oppression before turning themselves in Thursday, Byrd said. The officials were released on respective $10,000 personal recognizance bonds set by 115th District Judge Lauren Parish, Byrd said Thursday night. The district attorney said the charges stem from a Nov. 30 incident in which Deputy Sheriff Larry Fortson called Jimmy Caughron out of a meeting of the commissioners court after Caughron placed duct tape over his mouth to protest the court’s recent decision to stop hearing public comment. Betterton attended the meeting, and Crabtree participated in it with Fowler presiding. When Caughron started applying the tape, Crabtree had told him, “Jimmy, you don’t need to do that.” Within a short time, Fortson called Caughron from the county courtroom. Caughron filed a complaint that day with the District Attorney’s office, saying Fortson had told him that the deputy’s “boss” had instructed him to arrest Caughron for criminal trespass unless Caughron left the courthouse. Caughron, who had worn the tape at two earlier meetings of the court (and wore it at two afterward, all without incident) said he left the courthouse to avoid arrest. Fortson said that day that Caughron left on his own accord, and “I did not escort him out.” Caughron challenged that version of events. Byrd told the Tyler Morning Telegraph on Thursday that he could not comment on further details of the charges in the indictments but would issue a news release today. He said the men will continue serving in office while the charges are pending, and that the charge against them is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in jail and a maximum fine of $4,000. Fowler’s attorney, Todd Tefteller, set a news conference for 10:30 a.m. today at his Gilmer office.

Ironically, with Fowler casting the tie-breaking vote, the Upshur County Commissioners Court had voted 3-2 on Thursday morning to resume hearing public comment. Crabtree voted against the motion as Caughron and at least four other people sported duct tape over their mouths in the audience. Tefteller strongly condemned the indictments Thursday evening in a telephone interview with the newspaper. Betterton was contacted but did not comment on the indictments. A message left on Crabtree’s home answering machine was not immediately returned. Tefteller meanwhile assailed both the grand jury and Byrd’s office over their handling of the case, and charged that wearing duct tape during a commissioners court meeting was “disruptive.” The attorney charged that some grand jurors were “biased” and that one had “bragged” that he paid the election filing fee for one of Fowler’s political opponents. Fowler overwhelmingly won the Republican Party primary over a challenger in March and won landslide re-election with 74 percent of the vote against a Democrat in November. He is scheduled to begin his third term in office Saturday. Tefteller said the grand jury held a secret “Star Chamber” session with no notice to the three officials, and that Byrd’s office didn’t get the defendants’ version of what transpired. He said he and Fowler learned of the indictments “through the grapevine” after Thursday morning’s court meeting. The charges “completed a rift” between Byrd’s office and law enforcement, and “the public here, I don’t think, is going to support this,” the attorney charged. He said Byrd’s office should have instead investigated protesters who have appeared at commissioners court meetings wearing T-shirts and duct tape to protest the ban on public comment. “Holding public office here is a … hazardous occupation. These indictments are going to set law enforcement back 25 years,” Teftteller predicted. He added that “you can indict the neighbor’s dog and a ham sandwich. ... What we’ve got now is the grand jury process being used as a club.” Tefteller also said law mandates that Fowler “conduct public meetings in an orderly fashion,” and that the Commissioners Court had a legal right to ban public comment when it voted 3-1 to do so Sept. 30. The lawyer also noted that Fowler “didn’t even participate in” that vote. Protesters’ wearing of duct tape over their mouths to protest the ban at subsequent meetings “is disruptive to the meeting ... a form of disruptive speech,” Tefteller asserted. “I think (Fowler) told the sheriff’s office (that) if (protesters are) going to be disruptive and wear duct tape on their mouth ... they need to be removed from the meeting,” Tefteller said. Fowler said within minutes after the Sept. 30 meeting that he did not think Caughron’s action was “necessarily disruptive.” Tefteller said he and Fowler went before Justice of the Peace W.V. Ray, who read the defendants their rights and released them on the bonds set by Judge Parish.

Two Law Enforcement Officials Arrested For Driving Drunk

Prosecutor, deputy among 25 charged with DWI
The Galveston Daily News by Chris Paschenko - January 1, 2011

GALVESTON, TX — A Galveston County assistant district attorney and a sheriff’s deputy were among 25 people charged with driving while intoxicated, authorities said Friday. Prosecutor Lester Blizzard, 50, and deputy Tino Ramirez, 43, were booked on the charges stemming from Thursday night arrests, sheriff’s office spokesman Maj. Ray Tuttoilmondo said. Their bonds on the misdemeanor charges were set at $5,000 each. Their arrests followed traffic stops by state troopers at 51st Street and Harborside Drive in Galveston, Tela Mange, a spokeswoman for the Department of Public Safety, said. Blizzard was arrested at 10:16 p.m. State troopers accused Blizzard of speeding and showing signs of intoxication, Mange said. “He refused a breath test, and a search warrant was done to take blood because it’s no-refusal week,” Mange said. Ramirez was arrested an hour earlier at the same location under the same circumstances, Mange said and sheriff’s office records reveal. “He did consent to a blood draw,” Mange said. District Attorney Kurt Sistrunk, whose term in office ends on Jan. 1, said he suspended Blizzard without pay because of the incident. New District Attorney Jack Roady takes office at midnight Saturday morning. At least 25 people were booked on charges of driving while intoxicated since midnight Wednesday through Friday morning, Tuttoilmondo said. Others arrested in the roundup included a mailman in uniform and a Houston Independent School District principal, Tuttoilmondo said. “The bulk of the arrests were from the Department of Public Safety,” Tuttoilmondo said. “We don’t have what their intoxication levels were and won’t for several weeks,” Mange said. Blizzard in October successfully prosecuted a man, who received two life sentences for a drunken-driving crash in 2009 that killed two teenage girls. Ramirez is a court bailiff at the Justice Center, Tuttoilmondo said. An attempt to reach Blizzard for comment was unsuccessful, after finding no public telephone listing for him. A message left for Ramirez wasn’t immediately returned. Ramirez was placed on administrative duty, pending completion of an internal investigation by the sheriff’s office, Tuttoilmondo said. Galveston police in conjunction with state troopers are operating a no-refusal program this holiday weekend, in which people arrested under suspicion of drunken driving could be forced by court order to submit to an alcohol test. The no-refusal program isn’t countywide, but deputies could use the program if needed, Tuttoilmondo said.

Friday, December 31, 2010

Police Commander Calls for Courage in Corruption Fight

Police Beat: Resolve this year to be courageous
The Sun-Times by KRISTEN ZIMAN - December 30, 2010

There is no shortage of bravery in the Aurora Police Department. I have worked alongside many men and women throughout my career who did not hesitate to run toward the sound of gunfire or to jump fences in pursuit of an armed suspect. I originally believed the law enforcement profession attracted these “fearless” individuals who think nothing of putting their own lives on the line for strangers in the name of preserving justice. Since bravery is the ability to persevere despite fear, pain and risk of danger, it would seem that those without bravery need not apply. Over the years, I’ve come to realize that bravery is not as difficult as it seems. Ask any person who has put themselves at risk to help another and they will tell you that they simply acted without thought. When a person falls, it is our instinct to extend an arm and help. This is why a soldier or police officer often refutes accolades after an act of heroism by responding, “I was just doing my job.” Because it is inherent in our nature to help each other, we are all just “doing our jobs” as human beings. The only difference between police officers and the common citizen is the hours of training that make officers more confident and equipped to face dangerous situations. As Aristotle pointed out, we become brave by doing brave acts. I’m sure many will dispute this belief by saying that they could never do the job of a police officer or firefighter. Over the years, I’ve heard many people say that confronting a suspect in a home invasion or running into a home engulfed in flames is not on their list of things to accomplish. I challenge that when confronted with a situation where you must act immediately in order to prevent a catastrophe or save a life, most would do so without pausing to consider the risk. Bravery is not as difficult as it appears to be. Courage, on the other hand, is quite rare. Bravery and courage are often used synonymously but they are not the same. Physical bravery is to act upon instinct while moral courage is the thing that sets the truly courageous apart from all the others. It can manifest in seemingly minuscule ways or it can be magnificent in magnitude. It is the strength to stand firmly grounded while those around you scurry to align themselves to the majority opinion.

The “Thin Blue Line” is an emblem representing the camaraderie of police officers signifying their unity and solidarity. Over the years, the term has taken on a negative connotation and may now depict corruption and cover-up of those officers who tarnish the badge. Fortunately, policing has evolved whereby the thin blue line of protecting those corrupt officers has faded considerably because of courageous police leaders who in their own organizations have declared it intolerable. Even more courageous are the line level officers who stand up in defiance of corruption and boldly police themselves and their comrades. Being courageous might simply mean thinking differently from everyone else and declaring as much. It is more common for a person to avoid promoting viewpoints outside the comfort zone of consensus thinking for fear of being seen as foolish, to avoid embarrassing themselves or angering other members of a group. Cowardliness is choosing to protect one’s own interest rather than opposing an injustice. True courage means doing what you know is right, even at personal risk. Resolve this new year to practice more courage. Resolve to fight the urge to sit in silence when you know you should be speaking out. Resolve to stand up against a wrong when you know it would be easier to allow it to occur. Resolve to defend someone who deserves defending even if it will make you uncomfortable or unpopular. By practicing courage, you will become courageous. Aurora Police Cmdr. Kristen Ziman can be reached at KristenZiman@gmail.com.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Corrupt College Police Chief Sentenced to One Year in Jail

Former Mt. San Jacinto College police chief sentenced to year in jail
Southwest Riverside News Network by Jose Arballo Jr - December 28, 2010

Segawa, 40, has sought to withdraw the guilty plea he entered June 23, but Judge Helios Hernandez, after hearing testimony on the matter, rejected the request.

Former Mt. San Jacinto College police Chief Kevin Harold Segawa has been sentenced to a year in jail Tuesday after a motion to withdraw his guilty plea was rejected, said John Hall, spokesman for Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco. Segawa, 40, has sought to withdraw the guilty plea he entered June 23, but Judge Helios Hernandez, after hearing testimony on the matter, rejected the request and sentenced the former police chief to the 12-month jail sentence, Hall said in an email. Segawa was to begin serving his time immediately. Segawa was also placed on three years’ probation. He was charged in December with one count each of bribery and destruction of evidence by a public official, and two counts each of perjury, submitting falsified documents and embezzlement — all felonies — as well as misdemeanor counts of concealing evidence and modifying a written notice to appear. Prosecutors said that between 2005 and 2008, Segawa sent 85 percent of the campus’s towing business to Pirot’s Towing, whose 40-year-old owner, Morgan Allen McComas, is charged with bribery and misappropriation of funds.Segawa received a motorcycle, rims and tires for his pickup truck, about $120 in free lunches at a Riverside restaurant, tickets for a box seat at the Del Mar Racetrack and $75 in food and drinks at a 2006 Christmas party, none of which he declared, according to the prosecution. Investigators estimate McComas’ company may have earned as much as a half-million dollars from towing fees.The case for the co-defendant McComas is still set for trial and the next court date is in February.

BACKGROUND STORY:

MENIFEE: MSJC's police chief arrested
The Californian - December 2, 2009
DISTRICT ATTORNEY'S OFFICE ALLEGES HE ACCEPTED A BRIBE, WITHHELD EVIDENCE

Mt. San Jacinto College's police chief surrendered to authorities Wednesday after the district attorney's office filed criminal charges against him alleging that he directed nearly all the school's towing needs to one company in exchange for gifts and free lunches from the tow company's owner. Kevin Segawa, 39, was charged with 10 felony and misdemeanor counts, including bribery, perjury and misappropriation of public funds, court records show. He was booked into Robert Presley Detention Center in Riverside and his bail was set at $25,000. Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco said in a telephone interview Wednesday that Segawa's arrest was the culmination of a 13-month probe prompted late last year by tips received from several disgruntled former officers of the college's police department. "We got the information and started looking into it very quietly until we started getting corroboration and more and more evidence," Pacheco said. Investigators ultimately uncovered a police chief who pretty much felt he was above the law, Pacheco said. "In a small department, every now and then, people say, 'Well hey, I am the law, and who is going to check me?'" Pacheco said. "That is why the district attorney has a bureau of investigations and has jurisdiction that covers the entire county." Mt. San Jacinto College founded its police department in 2002 with a $150,000 federal grant. It has since grown to an operation that includes 12 employees and an annual budget of $900,000. Officers are responsible for maintaining public safety and enforcing the law at the college's two campuses in Menifee and San Jacinto and are vested with full law enforcement powers. Segawa was hired in 2003 as a campus police officer and worked his way up the ranks, earning the role of chief of police in 2005. According to the district attorney's office, Segawa allegedly used that position to his own advantage. From 2005 to 2008, campus police officers had about 1,200 vehicles towed in and around the two campuses for various vehicle code violations, said John Hall, a spokesman for the district attorney's office. Although an informal tow rotation existed involving four companies, 85 percent of the tows were directed to the San Jacinto-based Pirot's Towing Service, investigators say. That generated an estimated $200,000 to $500,000 in potential profit for the towing company, Hall said. Investigators say that, in exchange, Segawa received gifts from the owner of Pirot's Towing including a used motorcycle, used rims and tires for his personal pickup, tickets for a box seat at a Del Mar Racetrack event, and about $120 in free lunches, he said. Authorities say it was sort of an unofficial department policy of Segawa's to use that company. Several campus officers told investigators that Segawa directed or influenced them to not only tow vehicles, but use Pirot's Towing, Hall said. A December 2008 civil lawsuit filed by several officers who were fired from the college's police department also asserts as much. One plaintiff in the civil suit claims he was called into Segawa's office in April 2008 and told that "if he impounded 100 vehicles he would be able to ride a brand new Honda motorcycle as a patrol vehicle," the suit states. "Segawa stated (he) had to exclusively use Pirot's Towing in San Jacinto for all vehicle impounds, even the vehicles impounded at the Menifee campus, over 25 miles away," the lawsuit states. That case, which alleged wrongful termination, harassment and intimidation by Segawa, was dismissed by a judge in August. Nevertheless, Pacheco said, the quid pro quo between Segawa and Morgan McComas, 40, owner of Pirot's Towing in San Jacinto, was illegal. He said for a public agency to give exclusive towing rights to one company is a violation of state law, and receiving gifts in exchange for that arrangement amounts to bribery, he said. "We take public safety very seriously in our office," Pacheco said. "Bribery is not something we look away from." McComas, who also surrendered to investigators Wednesday afternoon, was charged with one felony count of offering a bribe to a public officer and two felony counts of being an aider and abettor in the misappropriation of public funds. In addition to the bribery charges, Segawa also is accused of failing to disclose the gifts on paperwork that public officials are required to submit annually to the California Fair Political Practices Commission, leading to perjury charges. Segawa also is facing two counts of concealing and destroying evidence, allegedly a supplemental police report that portrayed him in a negative light, according to the district attorney's office. Those charges involve a former college employee whom he arrested on suspicion of embezzlement. That employee, Tomorrow Horton, claims in a civil suit filed in April that Segawa pressured her to resign. That case is pending. Also in 2008, Segawa arrested an illegal immigrant who was selling ice cream from a cart in Menifee, not on the college campus, according to the district attorney's office. He cited the ice cream vendor, seized the cart, then turned the man in to immigration officers, who deported him, prosecutors say. Segawa reportedly took the ice cream home, gave what would not fit in his refrigerator to a neighbor, and never filed an arrest report with his department's records division, which is required by law. Segawa has been on paid administrative leave from his $103,508-a-year job since July, said the college's spokeswoman, Karin Marriott. She could not say Wednesday whether his arrest would prompt him to be put on unpaid leave. In Segawa's absence, the college earlier this year named Terry Meadows, a 30-year veteran of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, as interim police chief.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Ohio's Number 2 Top Highway Cop Retires Under Fire

Patrol's No. 2 retires
The Columbus Dispatch by Randy Ludlow - December 27, 2010
Lt. Col. Peyton Watts faced discipline

The second-in-command of the State Highway Patrol retired today while awaiting discipline for allegedly lying during an internal investigation of another officer. Lt. Col. Peyton Watts, 56, who was suspended with pay Dec. 13 following the release of a report by the state inspector general's office, retired effective today from his $120,536-a-year job, said Lt. Gary Lewis, patrol spokesman. A report released by Inspector General Thomas P. Charles found that Watts maintained inappropriate contact with an officer who came under investigation after he was discovered in his cruiser with a 16-year-old girl. Watts lied about his frequent telephone calls and personal friendship with former Staff Lt. Roger Norris in undermining patrol and criminal investigations and staining the patrol's integrity, the report concluded. The report and a Department of Public Safety investigation prompted Public Safety Director Thomas Stickrath to suspend Watts and begin disciplinary proceedings against the 33-year veteran. Watts' departure follows the resignation of former Col. David Dicken, who resigned as patrol superintendent effective Dec. 17 as Stickrath moved to discipline him for mishandling his duties. Dicken returned to his former job as a captain in the business services section. The next lieutenant colonel will be appointed under the auspices of Charles, who was named the next public-safety director by Gov.-elect John Kasich, and Maj. John Born, the next superintendent. Charles and Born begin their new duties on Jan. 10. Watts, who attended a disciplinary hearing a week ago today, had denied wrongdoing. A hearing officer had found cause to discipline Watts. Watts told investigators that he spoke with Norris by telephone only three or four times and denied that the two were close, despite widespread patrol knowledge of a friendship dating to 1987 and their days at the Zanesville post. Records show the men exchanged 94 calls between June 11 and Aug. 6, with 29 calls consisting of conversations of two to 41 minutes, often at key points of the investigation. Norris, 43, retired on Aug. 28 as patrol officials moved to fire him after investigating his on-duty meeting with the girl behind a building in rural Belmont County on June 8. A building caretaker who came across the cruiser told investigators that Norris was clad in a T-shirt but not wearing his uniform shirt or gun belt, as required by patrol rules. He did not see any illicit activity. Norris denied any wrongdoing. He faces a criminal investigation.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Police Use Of Taser On Teen Prompts Lawsuit

Syracuse police use of Taser on teen prompts lawsuit
REUTERS - December 21, 2010

(Reuters) - A civil liberties group on Tuesday filed suit against the city of Syracuse and two police officers, arguing the use of a Taser against a high school student was unconstitutional. The lawsuit stems from a September 2009 incident when the boy, then 15, tried to intervene in a fight between two girls and was Tasered by a Syracuse police officer called to the scene. The officer used his Taser stun gun on the teen, identified only as A.E., without warning and without issuing any commands, according to the complaint filed by the New York Civil Liberties Union on behalf of the boy's mother. The police action constituted excessive force, false arrest and false imprisonment, all in violation of the U.S. Constitution and state law, the suit claims. The complaint seeks compensatory damages for A.E.'s family to cover medical expenses. A.E. was arrested and hospitalized after the incident but never charged with any crime. "I still don't understand why I got Tased; I was only trying to stop a fight," A.E. said in a statement. "This is one of the scariest things I've ever been through. I don't want any other kids to go through what I've been through." A spokesman for the Syracuse police department was not available for comment on the case. A Taser incident in 2007 gained national attention when a University of Florida student repeatedly tried to question Sen. John Kerry during an appearance, and campus police used a stun gun on the student when he refused to leave. A video of the incident spread widely on the Internet and prompted debate over Taser use. In Syracuse, police officers are routinely deployed to maintain order in and around city high schools. The NYCLU argues that Syracuse police policies make no distinction between using Tasers on children or on adults. Tasers use electric current rather than bullets. According to the lawsuit, police officers are not required to issue any warnings before using a Taser on a suspect. Warnings are required before using a firearm. "Monitoring children in a learning environment is much different than patrolling the streets and the Police Department's policies should address that distinction," NYCLU Attorney Corey Stoughton said. "Otherwise, more students will suffer frightening and unnecessarily violent encounters with police officers." (Reporting by Bernd Debusmann Jr., editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Greg McCune)

Monday, December 27, 2010

Citing Police Abuse, Citizens Just Leave

Citing police abuse, Hispanics leaving Conn. town
The Associated Press by Michael Melia - December 26, 2010

EAST HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Santiago Malave has worked law enforcement jobs in Connecticut for more than four decades, but as a Puerto Rican, he says he cannot drive through his own town without worrying about police harassing him. Malave, a probation officer who works in New Haven, says the racial abuse is so bad that he only crosses the town line into East Haven to go home. He and his wife are now preparing to sell their house and move, joining an exodus of Hispanics who say police have hassled them with traffic stops, false arrests and even jailhouse beatings. The Justice Department has started a civil rights investigation, and the FBI recently opened a criminal probe. But that has not changed things on Main Street, where restaurants and stores that cater to Hispanics are going out of business. If the goal of police was to ruin East Haven's Hispanic community, some grudgingly say they have succeeded. "We can't tolerate the town anymore," said Malave, 64. "For us to leave our beautiful home is something that hurts, but we can't deal with these people." Racial profiling allegations began swirling about two years ago in East Haven, a predominantly Italian-American seaside suburb of about 28,000 people 70 miles northeast of New York City. Hispanics make up only about 7 percent of the population, but their numbers had been growing as the peaceful, small-town setting and thriving businesses attracted newcomers from Mexico and Ecuador.

Police Chief Leonard Gallo, who is on administrative leave, has denied the allegations. The office of acting Police Chief Gaetano Nappi referred calls to Town Attorney Patricia Cofrancesco, who did not respond to phone messages seeking comment. Hispanic business owners say police made a practice of parking outside their shops and stopping any Latinos. Some who complained say they faced retaliation. Luis Rodriguez, an immigrant from Ecuador who owns the Los Amigos Grocery, said he was arrested two months ago and jailed for five days after a woman pointed out to police that his 3-year-old son was unsupervised on the sidewalk outside the store. He said police were out for revenge because his wife had been videotaping them. He was charged with child neglect; the case is still pending. Meanwhile, his store is up for sale. Ecuadoreans used to travel from as far as Massachusetts for jalapenos, Ecuadorean sodas and other specialty products. But Rodriguez said police have scared customers away by threatening to alert immigration authorities if they ever saw them in town again. "If I had known the police in East Haven are so much trouble I never would have invested so much money here," said Rodriguez, 41, who has put more than $120,000 into the store. The Justice Department's civil rights branch began investigating the police force in September 2009. It is still looking into alleged discriminatory policing, but it identified preliminary concerns in April over issues including outdated policies and a lack of clear guidance on the use of force. The town's mayor, April Capone, revealed this month that the FBI was gathering evidence for potential criminal prosecutions of some of the officers. Her office declined to comment. Dermot Lynch, a student intern with Yale Law School's Worker and Immigrant Rights Advocacy Clinic, said the problem goes beyond a few rogue officers.

"This is a systemwide leadership failure. It's going to need widespread reform," said Lynch, whose group filed a lawsuit in October on behalf of nine immigrants who say East Haven police abused them with beatings and unwarranted use of a stun gun. It also quotes officers using ethnic slurs. Until recently, East Haven was considered a refuge by Hispanics, a suburb with ample parking and less crime than New Haven. Malave, who has lived here since 1977, said he never had problems before late 2008 when police responded to a report by his wife that some money was missing. The couple had begun to argue. Malave, who was asked his nationality, said police arrested him for disorderly conduct the minute he said he was born in Puerto Rico. "I tried to talk to the sergeant, but he said, 'You spics don't have rights here,"' said Malave, a former New Haven police officer. Hispanics in East Haven say more than half their population — estimated at 1,900 by the Census Bureau — has moved away. Mario Marin, who was at work one recent afternoon in his family's empty restaurant, La Bamba, said two of his siblings moved to nearby Waterbury and another brother returned to Ecuador. He said one brother, like other Hispanic property owners, lost a house to foreclosure after his tenants moved away. "They destroyed our future here," Marin said of police. He said even out-of-town diners have stopped coming since officers launched raids on the restaurant's parking lot, towing away any cars with out-of-state license plates. Marin and others said run-ins with police have been less common since police came under federal scrutiny. But activist John Lugo of Latinos United in Action, who helped organize a march against racial profiling last year, said his group still advises Hispanics to steer clear of East Haven.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Former Police Chief Charged With Theft

Montesano police chief charged with theft over $10,000 in illegal credit card purchases
The News Tribune - December 24, 2010

MONTESANO, WA - Montesano officials say Ray Sowers has been charged with theft and falsification of accounts when he was the city's police chief. City Administrator Kristy Powell told The Daily World of Aberdeen on Friday that prosecutors followed the recommendation of Washington State Patrol investigators. They reported in August that Sowers had made more than $10,000 in illegal credit card purchases over a year-and-a-half. The charges were filed by the Thurston County prosecutor's office. Sowers was relieved from his job in June and resigned in September. He had been with Montesano force since 1987 and chief since 1994.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Whistleblowing cop slaps NYPD with $50 million suit for locking him up in psych ward
The New York Daily News by ROCCO PARASCANDOLA - August 10, 2010

Memos in stationhouse weren't seeking quotas, Kelly says

A police whistleblower is suing the NYPD for $50 million for locking him up in a psych ward after he accused his bosses of tampering with crime stats. Brooklyn cop Adrian Schoolcraft claims his bosses wanted to wreck his reputation because he had proof they were fudging numbers at the 81st Precinct. "They wanted to intimidate and silence him," said Schoolcraft's lawyer, Jon Norinsberg. "And they wanted to destroy his credibility so that no one would believe him when he went public with his charges." The NYPD has portrayed the 35-year-old Bedford-Stuyvesant cop as a bumbling, unstable officer. He spent six days under psychiatric observation at Jamaica Hospital after a confrontation with cops who came to his Queens home on Halloween. Cops say he went AWOL from work. The suit, to be filed in Manhattan Federal Court Tuesday, says precinct brass had plenty of reasons to want Schoolcraft locked away. The suit takes aim at Deputy Inspector Steven Mauriello, the former commanding officer of the 81st Precinct, and at Deputy Chief Michael Marino. The second-in-command for Brooklyn North, Marino was among at least a dozen cops who showed up at Schoolcraft's Glendale apartment. In 2006, an arbitrator ruled that Marino, then running the 75th Precinct, broke state labor law by punishing cops who did not meet ticket and arrest quotas. "Marino had a lot to lose if Adrian went public about the corruption at the 81st Precinct," Norinsberg said. Marino did not respond to a request for comment. The lawsuit says the hospital kept Schoolcraft against his will. "They did absolutely nothing to assess Adrian's mental state," Norinsberg said. "There were no tests done." After his release, the Daily News spoke to 10 of 14 victims whose names Schoolcraft had passed onto internal investigators. Seven said precinct cops refused to take their reports, downgraded felonies to misdemeanors or gave them wrong information about reporting a crime. A short time later, Schoolcraft released tapes capturing Mauriello and other supervisors pushing cops to meet quotas and greeting crime victims with skepticism, even not taking their reports in some cases. The NYPD initially stood by Mauriello, but Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly last month transferred him to Bronx Transit. Schoolcraft, an eight-year veteran, remains under suspension for leaving work without permission. He denies that charge.

Five Cops Charged With Tampering With Crime Reports."

Friday, December 24, 2010

Police "Abuse of Authority" Costs Big Bucks

NYPD lieutenant who ID'd wrong man as shooter has cost city $500G in settlements
The New York Daily News by William Sherman and John Marzulli - December 24, 2010

An NYPD lieutenant who identified the wrong person as the gunman who fired at cops has been named in eight federal suits that have cost the city more than $500,000 in settlements. Lt. Robert Henderson will soon be a defendant in a ninth suit - this one filed by Shane Rhooms, who prosecutors cleared of attempted murder charges this week. "The number of lawsuits and settlements suggest there's something troubling about this officer's history," Rhooms' lawyer, Brett Klein, said Thursday. Henderson has been sued in federal court in Brooklyn and Manhattan as far back as 2001, but he isn't the only cop accused in the complaints of false arrest, illegal search and seizure or other constitutional violations. In two suits, the city declined to cover Henderson's liability, and he was forced to cough up a total of $1,250 to the plaintiffs. The city forked over settlements ranging from $10,000 to $225,000 in other suits, court records show. "It seems clear to me he has made multiple false arrests in the hope of finding contraband," said lawyer Leo Glickman, who has sued Henderson on behalf of clients five times. Sources said Henderson is an active cop who has won commendations for taking illegal guns off the toughest streets in Brooklyn. "The lieutenant put his life on the line, which is more than a plaintiff's lawyer will do," said Deputy Police Commissioner Paul Browne. The 13-year veteran told the Daily News he didn't know how many suits he'd faced, and declined further comment. Henderson, Lt. Robert Ortlieb and Sgt. Joseph Seminara identified Rhooms as the gunman who started shooting after they spotted him smoking pot on Lenox Road in East Flatbush on Sept. 6. Seminera later picked Rhooms out of a photo array, and all three identified him in a lineup. But the 22-year-old had an alibi: surveillance video caught him entering Webster Hall in Manhattan for a reggae concert. Phone records also confirmed incoming and outgoing calls from Rhooms' phone to a Manhattan transmission tower around the time of the shooting in Brooklyn. "The fact they could all be so wrong in the identification suggests there was collusion by the three [cops]," Klein said. Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said investigators stand by the original identification and think Rhooms was the shooter regardless of what prosecutors say. If Rhooms had been convicted of the crime, he would have faced 45 years in prison. Henderson supervises cops in the 75th Precinct in East New York, one of the busiest police stations in the city. NYPD Deputy Chief Michael Marino testified in a 2006 deposition that Henderson's anti-crime unit in the 77th Precinct was receiving a lot of civilian complaints for "abuse of authority." Marino attributed the complaints to the officers "being too professional" during car stops. jlauinger@nydailynews.com

Prosecutor Arrested, Again...

Suspended Montrose County DA Serra arrested again
The Daily Sentinel by Rachel Sauer - December 22, 2010

Seventh Judicial District Attorney Myrl Serra was arrested again Wednesday, this time on allegations of harassment, protection-order violation and violating bond conditions, a felony. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation, which is conducting the investigation, accuses Serra of contacting at least one of his three accusers in an ongoing sexual assault investigation against him. “He violated his bond agreement,” CBI Agent in Charge Collin Reese said Wednesday evening. “Originally, when he was first arrested, he had imposed on him a condition for his bond, and he also had a protection order imposed, and he violated those agreements. That’s why he was arrested today.” Serra first was arrested Sept. 30 on suspicion of unlawful sexual contact, official misconduct and indecent exposure. In November, he was charged with criminal extortion, unlawful sexual contact, three counts of indecent exposure, official misconduct and unlawful sexual contact. He is accused of victimizing several women who worked in the 7th Judicial District offices. A condition of his bond in that case, in which the preliminary hearing is set for Feb. 11, prohibits him from contacting his accusers or any witnesses in the case against him, or from entering 7th Judicial District offices. The Montrose Police Department arrested Serra on Wednesday, but declined to comment on the case because it is a CBI investigation. Serra was released on bond Wednesday evening. Montrose attorney Dan Hotsenpiller will take over as interim 7th Judicial District Attorney in January. Currently, the office is being run by Colorado First Assistant Attorney General Jean Woodford.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Two Cops Plea Guilty to Tampering with Evidence

Beaumont officers on paid leave following guilty plea
KYTX - December 22, 2010

Two Beaumont Police Officers accused of tampering with evidence are on paid administrative leave after they pleaded guilty Wednesday morning to tampering with government documents. Officers Brad Beaulieu and Eric Heilman each entered their plea before Jefferson County Court at Law #2 Judge G.R. "Lupe" Flores. The plea does not necessarily end their law enforcement career. The charge is a Class A misdemeanor and stems from a probable cause affidavit and supplemental report filed by the officers in a 2008 drug case. Beaulieu and Heilman will have to serve 100 hours of community service. and have been given 1-year probation. Defense attorney James Makin says the length of the officers probation could be cut in half. "If they do everything they're supposed to after six months we can petition the courts and the special prosecutor would not oppose them getting off early," said Makin. Makin went on to say the officers are expected to resign the Beaumont Police Department early in January. Beaumont Police Public Relations Officer Carol Riley told 12NewsNow.Com the news came as a bit of a shock this morning. "It is disheartening when these things happen. We will still continue to do our job and make sure the citizens of Beaumont are safe this holiday season," said Officer Riley. Both men could become peace officers again if charges are dropped at the end of their probation and reinstatement of their peace officers licence is approved by the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Education.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Airport Customs Agent Nabbed in Mammoth Ecstasy Seizure

Airport customs agent nabbed in mammoth ecstasy seizure
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution by Christian Boone - December 16, 2010

13 people arrested in airport gun- and drug-smuggling ring

A U.S. Customs agent from Stockbridge and his wife, a Delta employee, face charges of helping funnel guns and drug money through Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, federal officials announced Thursday. They were arrested along with 12 others after parallel investigations turned up $2.8 million worth of ecstasy, about 700,000 tabs of the amphetamine-like drug, stored at a residence in Chamblee. U.S. Attorney Sally Quillian Yates said it was “the largest ecstasy seizure in the country this year" and the ninth largest in U.S. history. Veteran customs agent Devon Samuels, aka "Smokey," was granted a secured bond with home monitoring Thursday morning, said Yates, who is appealing that decision. Samuels and his wife, Keisha Jones, are charged with conspiring to launder drug money, bulk cash smuggling and attempting to bring weapons onto an aircraft. The investigation into Samuels' actions progressed quickly after a tip from an unnamed source. According to the indictment, a federal agent, posing as a money launderer, met with Samuels on Nov. 3. Samuels was given $22,000 he believed was generated from drug sales, federal agents said. Samuels then allegedly used his security clearance to avoid screening checkpoints en route to Jamaica, where he delivered the money to a Jamaican police officer acting as an international drug trafficker. Samuels' wife accompanied him on the trip, officials said. Delta spokeswoman Susan Elliott would not say what Jones' position was with the airline. "We actively participated in this investigation from its inception and will continue to provide our support," she said. The couple returned to Jamaica on Nov. 19 after accepting another $50,000 in alleged drug funds, according to the indictment. Samuels was given $20,000, along with five firearms, on Nov. 30 by an undercover officer who instructed the customs agent to deliver the package to the airport. There, he was met by another incognito agent, who told Samuels he was headed to Arizona for a meeting with members of a Mexican drug cartel. David D'Amato, special agent in charge of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said Samuels sold himself to the highest bidder. "By bringing down Samuels, we're cutting the head off the snake" of this organization, he said. The ecstasy and marijuana trafficking ring, allegedly led by Jerome Bushay, of Norcross, and Fnu Lu, known as "Otis" (address unknown), was responsible for "the lion's share of ecstasy coming into this region," said Rod Benson, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Agency. Using his government clearance, Samuels, 45, ran periodic computer checks to determine whether he or his associates were under federal investigation. He's also accused of using his position to assist Carlton Ferguson and Dahlia McLaren, of Decatur, in deceiving immigration authorities about their sham marriage, officials said. He was allegedly paid at least $500 to help McLaren obtain U.S. citizenship. "The severity of Samuels' actions can't be overstated," D'Amato said.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Former Nashville police officer convicted of false statements in Guatemalan gun smuggling case
The Associated Press - December 20, 2010

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A former Nashville police officer was found guilty by a federal jury of two counts of making false statements when purchasing guns intended to be smuggled to Guatemala. According to prosecutors, Edwing Ronal Morales was convicted last week and will face sentencing in April 2011. Each of the violations carries a penalty of up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. Morales was one of five people indicted last year on charges of conspiring to illegally purchase weapons that investigators say were smuggled to Guatemalan drug cartels. Prosecutors say Morales falsely represented that he was the actual buyer when purchasing the guns from a Tennessee dealer, but he was actually giving the guns to a co-defendant who was taking the guns to Guatemala.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Former Police Sergeant Found Guilty

Former police sergeant found guilty
The Bucks County Courier Times by LAURIE MASON SCHROEDER - December 18, 2010

BENSALEM, PA- A jury found that Michael Marren, former head of Bensalem police's Special Victim's Unit, sexually assaulted a woman. Michael Marren, a former Bensalem police sergeant who spent much of his career arresting sex offenders, joined their ranks Friday after a jury convicted him of sexually assaulting a 23-year-old woman. Marren, who oversaw the force's Special Victims Unit, will now be a registered sex offender under Megan's Law for the rest of his life and could serve more than 10 years in prison, although his attorney said he will argue for less. "Hopefully the court will realize that this was an aberration," said defense lawyer Jack McMahon. "We're hoping that his background, his character and his service to his country will be taken into consideration." Marren, a married father of four, wept silently and turned around to look at his wife and supporters after the verdict was read. There was no other reaction in the courtroom. Marren was found guilty of aggravated indecent assault - a felony - and indecent assault. The jury of nine men and three women found him not guilty of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and sexual assault. The verdict capped a weeklong trial in Bucks County Court in Doylestown. The victim, a volunteer emergency medical technician who worked alongside Marren at his part-time job at the Bensalem Rescue Squad, told the jury that Marren attacked her in a bathroom at the squad's headquarters. The incident occurred in the early morning hours of March 9, after Marren and the woman had been out drinking with several other squad members who were mourning the death of a paramedic. The woman told the jury that she had asked Marren for a ride back to the squad, where she planned to stay the night, and that he forced himself on her when she went in to use the bathroom. She testified that Marren groped her and put his mouth on her body, then forced her to her knees and made her perform a sex act. She said she tried text-messaging friends for help during the assault, but did not call 911 because she feared other police officers might sexually assault her too. Jurors saw photos and heard testimony about the woman's injuries. Marren's DNA and saliva were found on her breast. Coworkers found the woman hiding in a mechanic's closet after the assault. They called police. On the witness stand Thursday, Marren denied assaulting the woman. He told the jury that she drunkenly tried to kiss him, then reached into his pants. He said he rebuffed her advances, and said she was behaving erratically. He said he was driving home after dropping the woman off when he began getting cell phone calls about the allegations. "I'm seeing my whole life unravel before me," he told the jury. In a 2-hour closing statement to the jury Friday morning, McMahon accused the woman of creating "fake ass drama" and crying rape to get attention. He questioned the validity of DNA evidence and said prosecutors had not proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Marren assaulted the woman. McMahon said the woman should not be believed, calling her testimony that she texted friends in the midst of the attack "absurd," and described her account of the incident as "a scatter-shot, erratic, schizophrenic rant." First Assistant District Attorney Michelle Henry said she'd never witnessed such a "trashing" of a sex assault victim in court. She argued that Marren, with his knowledge of sex crimes, crafted an account of the evening to fit the evidence he thought police had. She noted that Marren had no explanation for his DNA being found on the woman, a piece of evidence that he didn't know about when he gave his statement to county detectives. "It was damage control," Henry told the jury. Henry said the victim was pleased with the verdict. "The defendant and his attorney attempted to put her on trial. The verdict clearly shows that the jury rejected that," Henry said. "This has been a long, hard process for her. She feels that justice was served." Marren was fired shortly after the incident, following an internal investigation. He had worked for Bensalem since 2001 and had headed the Special Victim's Unit for three years. Prior to that he was a Philadelphia firefighter and a Bucks County corrections officer. Marren will be sentenced in about 90 days, following a Megan's Law evaluation. Laurie Mason Schroeder can be reached at 215-694-7489 or lmason@phillyBurbs.com Follow Laurie on Twitter at twitter.com/buckscourts.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Inmate Seeks Release in Police Drug Plant Probe

Inmate seeks release in police probe
Tulsa World by Omer Gillham - December 16, 2010

Tulsa, OK - A Tulsa judge has scheduled a hearing for an inmate asking to be freed from prison because one of his arresting officers allegedly planted drugs on him and has admitted planting drugs on people in a police corruption probe, court records show. Edward D. White, 32, appeared in Tulsa County District Court Wednesday seeking post-conviction relief for a 2010 drug conviction. District Judge Kurt Glassco scheduled a hearing Jan. 27 to determine if White should be freed. White was sentenced to four years in state prison after pleading no contest June 11, 2010, to possession of a controlled drug, court records show. The case was filed July 24, 2008. If released from prison, White would be the 26th person to be freed from prison, have a case dismissed or have a prison sentence modified because of a grand jury investigation involving police corruption, a World investigation shows. White also pleaded no contest in June to a second case involving possession of a controlled drug. White received a four-year sentence, which ran concurrent with the first case, records show. Both of the cases involve former Tulsa Police Officer Eric J. Hill, who was fired after he admitted planting drugs on defendants and stealing drug money, records show. In a telephone interview with the Tulsa World on Tuesday, White said he was transported from the Oklahoma State Reformatory in Granite to the Tulsa Jail for his court appearance. He remains in custody pending his hearing.

In court records filed Oct. 25, White accused Hill of planting drugs on him July 20, 2008, records show. "How do I feel being locked up for something I did not do?" White asked. "I want my integrity back. I think they robbed me of my integrity. I want my family to know I was telling the truth from the start." White said that Hill planted drugs on him in July 2008 and November 2008 during separate traffic stops. "I went to Internal Affairs and filed a report after the first time and after that he pulled me over a few months later (November 2008) and planted three bags of weed on me," White said. White has a felony record, including convictions of assault and battery of a police officer and unlawful possession of marijuana in 2001, records show. In 2004, he was convicted of possession of a controlled drug. White's attorney, James Linger, said White has talked to federal agents believed to be involved with the grand jury investigation of police corruption. Linger said he would speak to U.S. Attorney Jane W. Duke to seek information that could benefit his client. Duke, who is the U.S. attorney for eastern Arkansas, is the special prosecutor overseeing the police corruption inquiry. Hill was hired by the Tulsa Police Department on July 5, 2005. He was fired Aug. 18 after admitting that he planted drugs and stole money during drug arrests. Hill has prosecutorial immunity and is cooperating with Duke's office, a World investigation shows. During a June 7 interview with the FBI and Duke, Hill admitted to criminal activity, a Tulsa Police Department personnel order states. The order indicates Hill told Department of Justice officials that more than once he "replaced" narcotics that had either been destroyed or disposed of by a suspect with narcotics that he or another officer brought to the scene. The order also says Hill told federal officials he received $500 stolen during a drug investigation. During the FBI interview, Hill admitted that he and three officers shared $10,000 stolen during the drug bust, federal court records state. Before Hill was fired, he was assigned to the Gilcrease Division. Hill was arrested July 19 on an unrelated complaint of domestic assault and battery. He was charged with misdemeanor assault and battery. omer.gillham@tulsaworld.com

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Former Cop Wants to Keep PD In Line

Former police officer wants to keep the Fairfax Police Department in line
The Washington Post by Tom Jackman - May 13, 2010

Nicholas Beltrante is an unlikely candidate to take on one of the nation's largest suburban police forces. He's 82, a World War II veteran, a former D.C. police officer, longtime private investigator, lifetime member of the National Rifle Association and frequent appointee to criminal justice advisory boards. But the Mount Vernon resident was troubled by the police crash that killed teacher's assistant Ashley McIntosh on Route 1 in 2008, and then bothered by the fatal shooting of unarmed motorist David Masters on Route 1 last November. In both cases, Fairfax police disclosed little information about the events, did not release the names of the officers involved and would not discuss any internal discipline, for various long-standing policy reasons. Now his dogged efforts and growing disillusion have created a groundswell, and some county residents have launched an effort to create a citizens group to oversee the Fairfax Police Department. Fairfax police and politicians say they're open to the idea. Mary Ann Jennings, a police spokeswoman, said her department is researching oversight groups around the country and "we want to closely examine the most successful among those to ensure fairness" to officers as well as civilians. Sharon Bulova, chairman of the Fairfax Board of Supervisors, said she had heard of Beltrante's effort and discussed it with Fairfax Police Chief David M. Rohrer. "There could be a place for some kind of a citizen body that could be a constructive forum for these issues," Bulova said. Supervisor Gerald W. Hyland (D-Mount Vernon) said he would present the idea to the board for consideration. "When Dave Masters got killed," Beltrante said, "I said, 'I've got to do something about this. This is too much.' The police are sort of out of control. Not all of them. A small number. I think mostly they do a great job. We need them, and they need us, the citizens." Citizen groups overseeing police departments are not a new idea. The Office of Police Complaints in the District often is cited as a national model. Reestablished by the D.C. Council in 2001, it has subpoena power and independent investigators. Its work has resulted in departmental discipline including reprimands, suspensions and termination. Philip K. Eure, executive director of the D.C. Office of Police Complaints and president of the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement, said there are 150 citizen groups involved in police oversight around the country, including in most large cities. Fairfax's police force is "one of the largest law enforcement agencies without any form of public review," he said. "You think of Fairfax County as being this 'best practices' county government, which is why it's somewhat shocking they're behind the curve on this idea."

A new calling

Beltrante retired from the D.C. police as a sergeant after 14 years and opened up Beltrante and Associates. The Washington Post once called him "the dean of Washington's private investigators." After the Watergate break-in, the Democratic National Committee hired him to de-bug their offices in 1972. Married for 35 years, he is the father of three, grandfather of six and great-grandfather of one. As he followed the cases of McIntosh and Masters, he began to put his investigative skills to work. He researched civilian oversight panels, read books on the subject and called various police oversight officials around the country. Next, he rounded up support from groups such as the local NAACP branch, the ACLU, the National Police Accountability Project in Boston and the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement. The Fairfax branch of the NAACP appointed one of its members to help, although it recently posted a statement on its Web site saying it has not decided whether to become involved. Branch President Olivia Jones-Smith did not respond to requests for clarification. Beltrante named the group the Virginia Citizens Coalition for Police Accountability. And he did it all without the Internet -- no computer, no e-mail account, no BlackBerry. Beltrante used his phone, his fax machine, and a typewriter with the all-caps key apparently stuck. In April, Beltrante convened the Citizens Coalition's first meeting at a public library in Mount Vernon. Representatives from the NAACP and the ACLU's Racial Justice Program and Immigrants' Rights Project attended and offered their support, as did Gail Masters, the still-grieving ex-wife of David Masters, and Cindy Colasanto, the mother of McIntosh. Beltrante said that Fairfax officers had shot and killed nine people since 2006 and that a 10th person recently was shot twice in the chest at close range but survived. He said the group had two goals: holding police accountable for their actions on duty and making more police reports and records open to the public. He noted that Fairfax recently paid $1.5 million to McIntosh's family to settle the lawsuit filed after Officer Amanda Perry ran through a red light and killed McIntosh. "What is the cost to the taxpayer of this police abuse?" Beltrante said.

Getting organized

With the NAACP's help, Beltrante set up an e-mail address and is creating a Web site. He wants to begin taking complaints and investigating them, and he has sent a letter to Rohrer asking for cooperation. He also has filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the name of the officer who shot Masters -- a shooting ruled justifiable by the Fairfax prosecutor. Beltrante said if the police reject his request, he will challenge it in court. Samuel Walker, the author of two books on civilian oversight of police, said there are two models of police review panels. One involves the panel doing its own investigations with its own staff. The other, which Walker gradually came to favor, simply oversees the results of police internal affairs investigations to look for patterns or problems. "When you focus on individual cases," Walker said, "you don't focus on the underlying causes." The Virginia Citizens Coalition for Police Accountability can be reached by e-mail at virginiaccpa@aol.com.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Former Atlanta Cop Sentenced for Corruption

Former Atlanta police officer sentenced for corruption
The Examiner by Todd DeFeo - December 16, 2010

ATLANTA, GA – A former Atlanta police officer faces 12 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to drug and corruption charges. Lucius T. Solomon III, 32, of Atlanta, also faces five years of supervised release after his prison term. In addition, the former officer must perform 200 hours of community service. “This police officer took an oath to protect the public from criminals. Instead, he protected the criminals from law enforcement. Now he is headed to federal prison,” U.S. Attorney Sally Quillian Yates said in a statement. According to federal officials, Solomon three times offered protection for what he thought were “multi-kilogram cocaine deals” in exchange for money. For two of the “deals,” the ex-officer was in uniform and on duty, authorities said. “The public simply must have confidence in its police officers,” Atlanta Police Chief George Turner said in a statement. “While I believe this incident is not indicative of the vast majority of hardworking, honest and dedicated officers out there on the streets of Atlanta day in and day out, today’s sentence sends a strong message to those who would stray from their mission to uphold and enforce the law. Solomon pleaded guilty on Sept. 2.

Compelling Police Accountability

Compelling police accountability
The Washington Post - OPINION - December 17, 2010

FAIRFAX COUNTY POLICE enjoy a long-standing reputation for professionalism and scandal-free dealings with the public they are sworn to protect. However, the department's recent track record for accountability in a few cases involving shootings by police officers suggests there is room for improvement. In one such case, the county police have remained tight-lipped about the fatal shooting 13 months ago of David Masters, a carpenter and former Army Green Beret with bipolar disease. The police have been conducting an internal investigation into the shooting for a year, and they have yet to release findings. The officer who shot Mr. Masters has remained on the force at full pay, though he is limited to administrative duties. The department has not adequately explained why the investigation has taken so long. The incident involved just a handful of officers, one of whom fired the shots that killed Mr. Masters as he sat alone and unarmed in his vehicle. Police officials, when asked when they might reach some sort of conclusion, have reacted with what amounts to a shrug. Some of Mr. Masters's loved ones are furious. A group calling itself the Virginia Citizens Coalition for Police Accountability, founded by a retired District police detective who lives in Fairfax, has urged the county to establish a citizens board empowered to review questionable incidents involving the police - particularly in cases of lethal force used by officers. The proposal has support from members of the county Board of Supervisors, which asked Fairfax Police Chief David M. Rohrer to look into establishing a review panel. The next step is unclear, as is the county's approach. Fairfax police have made no effort to contact the national association that serves as a clearinghouse for information about how citizen review boards work. Nor have they contacted the Office of Police Complaints in the District, a 10-year-old body with considerable expertise and resources. Dozens of police departments nationally, including plenty that are smaller than Fairfax's, have such oversight mechanisms. The most effective ones function independently of the police chain of command and have investigative muscle - even, in the case of the District's office, the power to issue subpoenas. Judging from the less-than-forthright behavior of the Fairfax police in the Masters case, there is every reason to think that creating an external review body would be helpful, both as a means to shake loose information in response to reasonable allegations of police error, misconduct and abuse, and to encourage accountability.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Cop Guilty of Assaulting Wife Resign

Cop guilty of assaulting wife resigns
The Albany Times Union by Tim O'Brien - December 14, 2010

COLONIE, NY -- A town police officer has agreed to resign from the force and will be sentenced Wednesday on a charge of assaulting his wife. Edward Weber broke his wife's nose during the incident last May near Albany's Washington Park. He pleaded guilty Oct. 21 in Albany City Court to a domestic violence charge that left him unable to carry a gun. Weber pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of third-degree assault. Under the plea deal, he will be sentenced to three years' probation and will have to attend a batterers intervention program. An order of protection also was issued barring him from illegal contact. Last week, the Town Board OK'd a settlement of disciplinary charges that included Weber's resignation. Weber punched his wife at 11 p.m. May 29 as the two drove near Henry Johnson Boulevard and State Street in Albany, Albany police said at the time. Weber, who had been on the Colonie force since 2000, was placed on paid administrative leave after the incident.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Police Set To Appeal Cop's Reinstatement

LR police set to appeal officer’s reinstatement
The Democrat-Gazette by C.S. Murphy - December 15, 2010

LITTLE ROCK, AR - Little Rock Police Department leaders say they will appeal last month’s Civil Service Commission ruling that reinstated an officer who had been fired after being caught on camera using a racial slur. “We believe the right decision was made in terminating officer [David] Edgmon’s employment,” police spokesman Lt. Terry Hastings said Tuesday. Chief Deputy City Attorney Bill Mann said Tuesday he was notified by e-mail on Dec. 8 that police “management” wanted to appeal the reinstatement. Private attorney Jess Sweere will represent the Police Department in the matter because the city attorney’s office represents the commission, Mann explained. In a Nov. 18 decision, the commission decided 3-2 to give Edgmon his job back. In reversing his dismissal, commissioners handed him a 30-day suspension. “We respect the Civil Service Commission’s decision, but we also have a right to appeal that decision, just as an officer can appeal the decision of the commission,”Hastings said. “Chief [Stuart] Thomas and City Manager Bruce Moore discussed the issue and believe the appeal is the correct thing to do in this case.”

Sweere, who has been representing the department in Civil Service Commission matters for four years, said such an appeal is unusual. It’s also rare, he said, for the commission to overturn a termination. Robert Newcomb, Edgmon’s attorney, said his client has returned to work without incident. “He says he hasn’t had one person say anything negative to him since he came back to work,” Newcomb said. Newcomb, who has been representing police and firefighters for more than 30 years, said he can recall only one other time the city appealed a Civil Service Commission decision. In a letter last week, Little Rock Black Police Officers Association President Terrell Vaughn called for the resignation of the three commissioners who voted to reinstate Edgmon. On Tuesday, Vaughn said he was pleased to hear of the appeal but added, “If the civil service commission had done their job in the beginning, we wouldn’t be discussing the issue.” Edgmon, 24, was fired in August for conduct unbecoming an officer, being intoxicated in public and for engaging in activities that “could result in the justified criticism” of the officer and the Police Department. Thomas launched an internal investigation after Edgmon was caught on amateur video in March using the term “jigaboo” to a group of young black men in the River Market. On the video, recorded by a group called Ill Legal Productions, Edgmon flashes his police badge after one of the men asks to see it. It’s unclear whether Edgmon, who is not in uniform, mentioned beforehand that he was a police officer. In subsequent comments to the men, Edgmon uses the racial slur once. At the November commission hearing, Edgmon testified that he didn't know the word “jigaboo” was a racial slur but conceded that he knew the term was derogatory. Overcome with emotion more than once, Edgmon told the commissioners that the incident and his termination prompted him to make changes in his life, spending more time with his family and refraining from drinking to excess.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Grand Jury Adds More Charges Against Deputy Sheriff

GRAND JURY ADDS NEW CHARGES AGAINST DEPUTY SHERIFF AND CHARGES WIFE IN SUPERSEDING INDICTMENT
Apostille.us.news - December 9, 2010

HOUSTON, TX—A federal grand jury has returned a six-count superseding indictment against Harris County Deputy Sheriff George Wesley Ellington, 38, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno announced today along with FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard C. Powers and Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia. The superseding indictment incorporates charges of accepting bribes in return for protection of loads of Ecstasy from the original indictment returned in late October 2010 and adds four additional charges, including two counts of aiding and abetting the possession with intent to distribute Ecstasy—with one count adding his wife, Katrise Tania Ellington, 31, as a defendant—and two counts of carrying and possessing a firearm during and in relation to the drug trafficking offenses charged. George Ellington, arrested following the unsealing of the original indictment in October 2010, was later released on bond. He is expected to appear before U.S. Magistrate Judge Mary Milloy on Monday, Dec. 13, 2010, for arraignment on the new charges. Katrise Ellington surrendered to federal authorities this morning and after appearing before U.S. Magistrate Judge John Froeshner has been ordered released on a $25,000 unsecured bond pending trial. George Ellington is charged in Counts 1 and 2 with accepting a total of $1000 in bribes in February 2010 and April 2010 in return for using his position as a Harris County Deputy Sheriff to provide protection for two loads of 3, 4 Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), commonly called Ecstasy, and with unauthorized access to confidential law enforcement databases; Counts 3 and 4 accuse Ellington of aiding and abetting the possession with intent to distribute Ecstasy on the same dates in February and April 2010; and Counts 5 and 6 charge him with carrying and possessing a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crimes alleged in the previous counts. Katrise Ellington is charged along with her husband in Count 4 with aiding and abetting the possession with the intent to distribute Ecstasy in April 2010. Each of the two bribery charges and two drug trafficking charges carries a maximum penalty, upon conviction, of 20 years’ imprisonment and/or a $250,000 fine. The two firearm charges carry a potential 30-year sentence—that is, five years upon conviction of the first count and an additional 25-year sentence if convicted of the second charge—which must be served consecutive to any other sentence imposed. The case will be prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel C. Rodriguez. An indictment is a formal accusation of criminal conduct, not evidence. A defendant is presumed innocent unless convicted through due process of law.