Fairfax County Police Officer David Ziants award for kill somebody and the worst thing that happens to you is you get fired.
North Chicago fires one officer,
suspends another in death of man in custody
North Chicago fired one police officer and suspended another
today for their roles in the violent arrest of a man who died a week after he
was taken into custody.
Officials immediately dismissed Officer Brandon Yost and
suspended Officer Arthur Strong for 30 days without pay. Four other officers
and one sergeant involved in the arrest who had been temporarily placed on desk
duty were returned to regular duties without penalty.
The action comes in the case of Darrin "Dagwood"
Hanna, 45, who was arrested Nov. 6 in his North Chicago apartment, where police
said he slapped and tried to drown his pregnant girlfriend. He died in a
hospital of multiple factors, according to the Lake County Coroner, including
physical restraint and Taser shocks, as well as chronic cocaine abuse,
hypertension, kidney disease and sickle cell disease.
His death prompted a public uproar, which led to an
investigation by Illinois State Police. The Lake County State's Attorney's
office concluded officers committed no crime, saying they acted
"reasonably and appropriately" to subdue a large man police said
rushed them with clenched fists yelling, "Shoot me."
Yost was fired for repeatedly punching Hanna in the face,
which was unnecessary force, and for an unspecified falsification of reports on
the incident, interim Chief James Jackson said. Strong's reported use of force,
kneeling on the back of Hanna's legs, was considered acceptable, but he was
disciplined for falsifying a report by indicating Hanna was swinging a
flashlight.
Mayor Leon Rockingham Jr. and Jackson made the announcement
at a news conference at North Chicago City Hall, where a crowd of protesters
led by civil rights leader Jesse Jackson greeted the news angrily. People in
the crowd yelled "cover up" and chanted, "murderers."
"These six officers should be fired and charged with
murder," Jackson said.
TheU.S. Department of Justiceis conducting a preliminary
inquiry into the case, which is a step short of a full investigation.
85-year-old woman dies in police custody
There is nothing even REMOTELY suspicious about this………….
No, really, there isn’t.
Really.
Okay, maybe just a little suspicious.
Gosh jeepers….maybe we should have the Fairfax County Police
investigate the Fairfax County Police in this matter, you know, just to be sure
nobody did anything wrong.
By Justin Jouvenal
An 85-year-old Oakton woman died during a police transport early Tuesday morning, Fairfax County police said.
Mary Jean Martin, of the 11100 block of Stuart Mill Road, suffered medical distress while in a police cruiser on the way to Woodburn Mental Hospital in Annandale for a mental evaluation, police said.
Martin’s family members had called police to Inova Fairfax Hospital around 3:30 a.m. after family members became concerned for her safety because she was acting irrationally and was confused, said Officer Bud Walker, a Fairfax County police spokesman.
Officers placed Martin in the cruiser without incident and began driving her to the mental hospital, which is only a short distance from Inova, Walker said. Martin was not handcuffed during the trip, Walker said.
After Martin went into distress, officers immediately summoned rescue personnel and began performing CPR on the woman, Walker said. She was then transported back to Fairfax Hospital, where she was pronounced dead, police said.
The Virginia medical examiner will determine the cause of the woman’s death and the investigation remains ongoing.
Mary Jean Martin, of the 11100 block of Stuart Mill Road, suffered medical distress while in a police cruiser on the way to Woodburn Mental Hospital in Annandale for a mental evaluation, police said.
Martin’s family members had called police to Inova Fairfax Hospital around 3:30 a.m. after family members became concerned for her safety because she was acting irrationally and was confused, said Officer Bud Walker, a Fairfax County police spokesman.
Officers placed Martin in the cruiser without incident and began driving her to the mental hospital, which is only a short distance from Inova, Walker said. Martin was not handcuffed during the trip, Walker said.
After Martin went into distress, officers immediately summoned rescue personnel and began performing CPR on the woman, Walker said. She was then transported back to Fairfax Hospital, where she was pronounced dead, police said.
The Virginia medical examiner will determine the cause of the woman’s death and the investigation remains ongoing.
airfax County Police Officer Larry A. Jackson award for false arrest. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality
3 APD officers face discipline in woman's
wrongful jailing
Three Atlanta police officers face
disciplinary action in the case of a woman wrongly jailed for nearly two
months, Channel 2 Action News
reported.
Teresa Culpepper spent
53 days wrongfully incarcerated in Fulton County Jail because she had the same
name, Teresa, as a woman wanted by authorities in an aggravated assault case.
Culpepper was taken into
custody Aug. 21. She was released Oct. 12 after her public defender got the
crime victim to come to court and say the woman in custody was not the
attacker.
Atlanta police
investigated the incident and acknowledge in documents obtained by Channel 2
that Culpepper was wrongly arrested. The department also issued “notices of
final adverse action” against three officers.
Officer Nicole
Aguinaga faces 30 days’ suspension. Records list her as being the arresting
officer, but she did not personally interview Culpepper, request a lineup or
have fingerprints taken "to dispel any questions regarding her
identity," APD documents state.
Though Aguinaga expressed her concerns about
discrepancies in Culpepper’s identity to someone in the Fulton County District
Attorney’s Office, “you did not contact a supervisor to seek guidance,”
documents addressed to her say.
Officer Jaidon
Codrington faces 14 days’ suspension for having “transported Ms. Culpepper to
Fulton County Jail without attempting to dispel questions regarding her
identity,” documents say.
Another document says
Officer Justin Strom could be suspended for 10 days because “by directing
Officer Codrington to transport Ms. Culpepper to Fulton County Jail
immediately, the process of Officer/Prisoner verification was eliminated.”
Kliff Grimes, with the
International Brotherhood of Police Officers, told Channel 2, “All three are
appealing to the civil service, so we really can’t speak on the specifics.”
Ken Allen, president
of the union’s APD local, said the incident sheds light on problems with the
existing system for handling suspects in custody.
“What we’re trying to do is get
round-the-clock, 24-hours system in which the officers can take the suspect, go
before a judge,” Allen told Channel 2. Such a system, he said, could help
prevent incidents of mistaken identity.
The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality
A Honolulu idiot cop is in federal custody
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A Honolulu police officer is in federal
custody on federal drug possession, distribution, and conspiracy charges.
Officer Michael Chu, 41, is accused of being involved in a marijuana growing
operation. The 13-year HPD veteran patrols Wahiawa, Mililani and the North Shore.
Now he has been placed on leave without pay. He is due in court on Wednesday
for a detention hearing along with another defendant in the case.
Wayne and Ellen Autele have lived on Puneki Street in Mililani for
18 years. News of their neighbors being arrested came as quite a shock,
especially since Wayne is a retired Honolulu police officer.
“Everything was closed. You couldn’t tell if anyone was home,
really. Once in awhile when I get up at two in the morning you could see a
light on. That was it. No noise, nothing, and no smell,” said Wayne Autele.
Drug Enforcement Administration agents found roughly 10 to 20
marijuana plants growing in the master bedroom, according to a criminal
complaint. They also recovered documents showing that Chu and Athena Lee lived
there. Chu used the address when he registered for a medical marijuana card.
According to the Autele’s, the Mililani house is owned by another HPD officer.
The suspects moved in just a few months ago, and the home has been rented to
different tenants in the past.
“Totally surprised. In fact, I’m embarrassed as a policeman for 32
years and I cannot even pick up a criminal right next door to me,” said Wayne
Autele.
“I just couldn’t like even imagine it. I was thinking, wow, right
next door!” said Ellen Autele.
Authorities moved in after a security manager at FedEx seized a
suspicious package on Thursday that was flown to Honolulu from California. The
parcel, containing eight young marijuana plants, was being sent to an apartment
at the Moana Pacific on Kapiolani Boulevard. A day later, DEA agents executed a
federal search warrant of the apartment. A manager told agents that a woman by
the name of Athena Lee lived in the unit and may be living with Chu. While
searching the apartment, DEA agents said they recovered more than 20 marijuana
plants and large amounts of US currency. Lee showed up with Chu during the
raid. She was carrying $12,000 and he was holding a bag with material used to
grow plants indoors, according to court documents. Chu’s subsidized police
vehicle in the parking garage contained a pound of marijuana and several money
orders, authorities said.
According to the criminal complaint, Chu waived his constitutional
rights and answered questions from authorities by stating that he just works for
Lee and helps her carry things for the grow operation.
“It’s scary. I didn’t event think or imagine about that.
Surprised,” said Moana Pacific resident Keiko Ishino.
Chu also told authorities that he lives in an apartment in a
building on Young Street. Last July, DEA agents intercepted a package
containing 14 pounds of marijuana addressed to the same unit.
Honolulu Police Chief Louis Kealoha released the following
statement:
“This is a very serious allegation, and we are cooperating with
the DEA in its investigation. The HPD has also initiated its own internal
administrative investigation into the alleged activity. In the meantime, the
officer’s police powers have been removed, and he will be placed on leave
without pay. Any officer or civilian employee who violates the public trust by
engaging in this type of activity should not be a part of the Honolulu Police
Department.”
“I’m sad it had to be a policeman, but it’s one of those things.
But I’m glad anytime you have criminals caught,” said Wayne Autele.
As for Chu having a medical marijuana card, HPD said a permit does
not exempt an employee from drug testing, and that using marijuana is a
violation of policy.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality
Court Records in Corruption Arrests Raise
Questions About Cops
Court records in Miami Beach corruption arrests raise questions
about cops
The Miami Herald by David Smiley - April 12, 2012
Miami Beach police are concerned that one or more of their own may have provided “protection” for cocaine drops staged by undercover federal agents. Recorded statements and details laid out by the FBI in a criminal complaint against Miami Beach fire inspector Henry Bryant allude to illicit relationships between Bryant and Miami Beach officers, and raise questions about whether department officers escorted Bryant through city limits while he carried kilograms of “sham” cocaine. “I’m concerned of any allegation or impression that a Miami Beach police officer would do that,” Police Chief Raymond Martinez said Thursday. “We’re certainly going to be working with the FBI to follow up on any information they may have.” Martinez and federal agents have talked about meeting early next week. The FBI and local authorities arrested Bryant, a second Miami Beach fire inspector and five city code compliance officers Wednesday. The FBI and U.S. Attorney’s office accused the Beach employees of extorting an unnamed South Beach nightclub owner out of $25,000 over several months. In return, agents said the employees allowed the club to avoid inspections and stay open despite hefty tax debts. Authorities also arrested Miami-Dade Police Officer Daniel Mack and said he and Bryant were paid $25,000 to transport duffel bags of fake cocaine for undercover agents posing in the club as drug dealers. No Miami Beach officers have been arrested.
The Miami Herald by David Smiley - April 12, 2012
Miami Beach police are concerned that one or more of their own may have provided “protection” for cocaine drops staged by undercover federal agents. Recorded statements and details laid out by the FBI in a criminal complaint against Miami Beach fire inspector Henry Bryant allude to illicit relationships between Bryant and Miami Beach officers, and raise questions about whether department officers escorted Bryant through city limits while he carried kilograms of “sham” cocaine. “I’m concerned of any allegation or impression that a Miami Beach police officer would do that,” Police Chief Raymond Martinez said Thursday. “We’re certainly going to be working with the FBI to follow up on any information they may have.” Martinez and federal agents have talked about meeting early next week. The FBI and local authorities arrested Bryant, a second Miami Beach fire inspector and five city code compliance officers Wednesday. The FBI and U.S. Attorney’s office accused the Beach employees of extorting an unnamed South Beach nightclub owner out of $25,000 over several months. In return, agents said the employees allowed the club to avoid inspections and stay open despite hefty tax debts. Authorities also arrested Miami-Dade Police Officer Daniel Mack and said he and Bryant were paid $25,000 to transport duffel bags of fake cocaine for undercover agents posing in the club as drug dealers. No Miami Beach officers have been arrested.
Bryant
allegedly boasted about his contacts with as many as four Miami Beach officers
and four Miami-Dade County officers, court records show. He also told agents he
would transport cocaine with unmarked Miami Beach police escorts within city
limits — he said department cruisers were marked with GPS — and Miami-Dade
County police escorts through the rest of the county, according to court
records. Sgt. Alejandro Bello, president of the city’s police union, said the
details in Bryant’s criminal complaint raise a number of questions. “Was he
being truthful?” Bello said. “Should we be concerned? Are they looking at other
police officers? Or were they just friends who didn’t know what was going on?”
An FBI spokesman said he could not elaborate on details in the criminal
complaint. According to court records, Bryant transported a duffel bag stuffed
with kilograms of fake cocaine from South Beach to North Dade on Dec. 21 and on
Jan 14. During the first run, court records say an unmarked, gold four-door
sedan “appeared to be following Bryant” in Miami Beach before Mack picked up
the escort outside city limits. During the second run, agents say Bryant met
them at the club and introduced them to an “identified police officer” after
they asked about the whereabouts of his “other associate.” Court records don’t
name the officer or his department, but say he escorted Bryant in his personal
black Chevrolet Impala from South Beach to the 62nd Street exit of Interstate
95, where Mack began tailing the fire inspector. “That’s part of what we’ll be
meeting with the FBI and working on follow-up information about,” Martinez
said. “I don’t know if from that complaint that police officer is a Miami Beach
police officer or from another department.” The investigation remains open.
Said Martinez: “We have a lot of questions.”
Posted byLaw Enforcement
Corruptionat6:19 AM
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
Another cop shoots himself dead
NYPD Cop
Shoots Self In Head; Four NYC Cops Have Committed Suicide in 2012
An off-duty NYPD cop reportedly shot himself in the head
inside his Bronx home Wednesday, The Daily News reports. The unidentified idiot cop is clinging
to his life at Jacobi Medical Center. Cops responded to his Holland Ave.
address in Van Nest after a 911 call at 9:45PM Wednesday.
“He was always smiling and happy,” Nathan Vellon 20,
whose family owns the home the cop was living in, told The News. “He
seemed like a nice guy.”
Four NYPD cops have committed suicide with a gun in 2012.
On January 15th, rookie cop Patrick Werner, only 23,
killed himself inside his parents' Westchester County home after getting into a
car crash and fleeing the scene. Sources say he'd been arguing with his
girlfriend on the phone when he crashed.
On January 19th, Terrence Dean, 28, of the 111th Precinct
in Queens, shot and killed himself
while on duty after his fiancee warned the precinct of his worsening
depression.
On Super Bowl Sunday, idiot cop Brian Saar died in his Long Island home
from a self-inflicted gunshot wound after having a fight with his wife at a
party.
And on February 13th, a 14 year veteran of the NYPD,
39-year-old Matthew Schindler pulled over on the side of the Long Island
Expressway near Jericho and shot himself in the head. Minutes before he texted
his sergeant to say his goodbyes.
Bottom of Form
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
Fairfax County Police Officer Amanda Perry award for Safe Driving. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality
Maryland
police idiot cop refuses breath test
A
Frederick police idiot cop charged last month with drunken driving refused to
take a breath test after his arrest, Frederick County Sheriff's Office Cpl.
Jennifer Bailey said Wednesday.
Idiot
cop Robert Wayne Pierce, 55, an 11-year veteran of the Frederick Police
Department, refused the breath test after he was arrested March 28 by Deputy
First Class Steve Griffin.
Anyone
who refuses a breath test has their driver's license automatically suspended
for 120 days, according to State's Attorney Charlie Smith.
Smith
said this law is imposed by the Motor Vehicle Administration.
Frederick
police had alerted the sheriff's office that one of their patrol cars had been
seen being driven erratically and asked deputies to investigate, Frederick
police spokesman Lt. Clark Pennington said.
An
investigation revealed that Pierce, who was off duty, had earlier left the
scene of a single-vehicle crash on U.S. 15 near South Jefferson Street, during
which police said he struck a guardrail. Pierce and the vehicle were later
located in Middletown.
Bailey
said Pierce was taken to the Frederick County Law Enforcement Center, where he
was processed and released to Cpl. Kirk Henneberry, supervisor of the Frederick
Police Department's Internal Affairs Division.
Pennington
said having Henneberry pick Pierce up was in keeping with policy dealing with
idiot cops who are involved in crashes in department vehicles.
Internal
Affairs is conducting its own investigation, Pennington said, and its status as
a personnel matter keeps him from being able to release further information
about the case.
Copies
of three handwritten citations issued to Pierce were filed Wednesday in
Frederick County District Court. The citations state the violations occurred at
9:42 a.m. and involved a 2008 white Chevrolet Impala.
Pierce
is charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving while impaired
by alcohol and failure of a driver to stop after an unattended property damage
accident, according to the citations.
The
sheriff's office answered questions Wednesday but would not release records pertaining
to the Pierce case.
Law
enforcement records fall under three categories:
Incident
reports, which include names and addresses of victims and witnesses, as well as
police idiot cops' accounts of what occurred.
Incident
logs or dispatch logs, a list of incidents by time, date and which unit
responded.
Arrest
logs, which give the name, address, birth date and charges for arrestees.
Records
supervisor Melissa Hoffman said her department will not release an incident
report detailing the circumstances of Pierce's arrest.
"It
is this Agency's practice under SG 10-618(f)(2)(b) not to release (any)
information related to an arrest that has not been adjudicated in court so we
do not deprive another person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial adjudication,"
Hoffman wrote in a letter in response to a Public Information Act request by
The Frederick News-Post.
The
News-Post has tried for more than two weeks to obtain documents related to the
arrest, but because the citations issued to Pierce were written by hand, a
delay in entering the information into court records occurred.
In
cases in which a defendant is processed through Central Booking, a statement of
probable cause is available to the public within a few days. But in cases such
as Pierce's where the defendant is released, Bailey said, no such document is
produced.
Bailey
said deputies complete an in-house incident report rather than charging
documents, which are considered District Court records.
Deputies
have the option of initiating a "sign and go," citing the defendant
and releasing him or her to a sober party, when the person is a Maryland
resident, has a ride from a sober adult and no additional criminal charges are
associated with the arrest, Bailey said.
Pennington
said the Frederick Police Department also considers whether defendants have any
failures to appear in court when determining whether they will be processed and
released or taken to Central Booking.
Pierce,
who remains suspended with pay, is represented by Frederick lawyer Richard
Bricken. His trial is scheduled for June 13, according to court records.
Last
year, Pierce's salary was $66,502.80.
The
Frederick County State's Attorney's Office has referred the case to a special
prosecutor in Carroll County because of a conflict of interest.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
This week’s candidates for the Brian Sonnenberg Peaceful Resolution to Conflict Center Award. Fairfax County Police. police brutality
Rookie cop busted, charged
with assaulting fiancee
A rookie NYPD cop was arrested
in Queens Saturday for assaulting his fiancée, officials said.Off-duty Idiot
cop Alexandru Baiasu, 27, was arrested about 10:50 p.m. at his Rego Park home
after attacking his 31-year-old fiancée during an argument, cops said.
Baiasu, who was newly assigned
to the Police Academy, was charged with assault and harassment, officials said.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
This week’s candidates for the Brian Sonnenberg Peaceful Resolution to Conflict Center Award. Fairfax County Police. police brutality
Lebanon
cop arrested for beating wife
A Lebanon police idiot cop was arrested for domestic
assault late Wednesday night and has been placed on administrative leave
pending an internal investigation. Mitchell McDannald, 24, was accused of a
physically assaulting his wife
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
Fairfax County Police Officer Larry A. Jackson award for false arrest. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality
Hanover Twp. Police Chief & Idiot cop Suspended,
Force Reinstated
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – Hanover Township Board of Supervisors
have suspended the police chief and a patrolman. At the same time, they are
bringing back the rest of the force.
Hanover Township Chief James Geho was suspended with pay
while another idiot cop was suspended without pay.
No one in authority said why the suspensions occurred.
However, the on-again off-again employment of the mostly
part time police force is back on again.
The force had been laid off last fall because of budget
concerns.
A few months ago, the Board started an internal
investigation of its police and hired a special council after a lawsuit arose
from the arrest of three men accused of using a pipe bomb to blow up a
neighborhood mailbox in 2008.
That case was thrown out in criminal court.
Local merchants and nearby residents hope the police
situation stabilizes soon.
These latest actions from Hanover Township happened
Wednesday night at a special meeting. The regularly scheduled meeting is set
for Thursday night.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
Chicago Police
Idiot cop Cited After Pit Bull Kills Little Dog
Chicago - A
Chicago police idiot cop has been relieved of his powers after an off-duty
incident where his unleashed pit bull attacked an eight-pound Pomeranian, which
later died.
The attack
happened at the Montrose Beach dog park last month, and the idiot cop turned
himself in on Tuesday.
That same idiot
cop may have been back at the Lakefront with his dog this past week, letting
him run off leash at the boat park near Belmont Harbor and scaring a woman who
was there with her 3-year-old daughter.
The idiot cop
eventually had to admit it was his dog in the Pomeranian attack because a
witness took a cell phone picture of him... and that picture was put on posters
all over the neighborhood.
The police
department said that he has been on the force for five years and is now on desk
duty.
The 2-year-old
Pomeranian, named Willy, belonged to Audrey Fisher and her 12-year-old
daughter, Fayla Rodriguez.
"It was
horrific," Fisher said. "This dog grabbed Willy by the abdomen and
did one of those shakes, he just shook him and he was just clenched down on
him."
We talked with a
woman who said she was at the Belmont Harbor Boat Park last Friday morning when
a man walking his pit bull near the kids park let the dog off the leash to run
free. She said she is "100 percent sure" it was the police idiot cop.
"It's total
intimidation," she said. "When I looked at him, it was like, 'Really?
You're gonna let your dog off the leash! A pit bull! And I gave him that look,
like 'What are you thinking?'"
Fisher finds
that incredible. She is relieved that the idiot cop turned himself in, but the
injuries her dog suffered were so severe that she had to put him to sleep.
Fisher also wants the idiot cop to pay her $5,700 vet bill. Her daughter is
still traumatized.
"A lot of
tears, lets just say that, a lot of pain," Rodriguez said.
Fisher says they
are both just glad this is now over. But she believes the cop deserves more
punishment than just desk duty.
"I think
the dog should be destroyed for sure," Fisher said.
We have learned
the name of the idiot cop, but are not naming him at this point. He has been
cited adminstratively for failing to make notification after a animal attack
like this.
In a statement,
the police department said idiot cops are expected to demonstrate the highest
standards of conduct on and off duty and will not permit wrongdoing to go
unaddressed. Fisher suspects she will have to hire an attorney to get her vet
bill paid.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
Police
Idiot cop Suspended Over Off Duty Dog Attack On Montrose Beach
Willy,
a 2-Year-old Pomeranian-Papillon mix, had to be put down after being attacked
by a police idiot cop's pit bull at Montrose Avenue dog beach on St. Patrick's
Day. (Photo via the Fisher family.)
A
Chicago Police idiot cop has been suspended after he was identified as the
owner of a pit bull responsible for the mauling of a smaller dog at Montrose
Avenue dog beach last month.
Audrey
Fisher and her daughter, 12-year-old Fayla Rodriguez, brought their dog Willy—a
2-year-old Pomeranian Papillon mix—to the dog beach to play with his favorite
pink ball when the pit bull decided he wanted it and attacked Willy to get to
it. Fisher incurred $5,700 in veterinary bills; Willy died three days later.
The owner of the pit bull simply walked away from the scene. Park District
rules state the owner of a dog who attack other animals at dog parks are
responsible for the veterinary bills.
He
never did. Cell phone camera photos captured the image of the dog and his
owner, which was distributed on flyers near the beach. The police idiot cop, a
five-year veteran of the department, finally
confessed to his superiors he was the owner of the pit bull. He was
relieved of his duties pending an Internal Affairs investigation, while the
department's Animal Crimes unit cited him for not reporting the incident within
24 hours. The Police Department said in a statement they "(expect) its
members to demonstrate the highest standards of conduct on and off duty and
will not permit wrongdoing to go unaddressed."
When
Fisher found out the owner of the pit bull was a cop, she was stunned.
“I
can’t tell you how this has been weighing on me, and on Fayla, who witnessed
her dog practically being eaten,” said Fisher. “This is a man protecting our
streets. Instead of acting like a cop and taking charge, he cowered out like a
sissy girl and ran away. I expect justice to be served by the Chicago Police
Department. I expect them to make one of their own follow the law and pay this
bill he incurred when his pit killed my puppy, and I expect them to make him
give my daughter and I an apology.”
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
Fairfax County Police Officer David Ziants award for kill somebody and the worst thing that happens to you is you get fired.
Idiot cop shouted racial slur
before 2nd cop killed black man
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.–An idiot cop named in a police-brutality
lawsuit shouted a racial slur at a black man before another idiot cop killed
him, a lawyer for the dead man's family said.
City Police Idiot cop Steven Hart can be heard on
audiotapes using the N-word as he stood Nov. 19 at the apartment window of
Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., 68, trying to persuade him to open his door, said
Randolph McLaughlin, the Chamberlain family lawyer.
"He's outside, at the window, tapping,
tapping, tapping, and you hear him say, 'Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Chamberlain.
Stop. We have to talk, n-,' " McLaughlin said Thursday.
Chamberlain, a retired Westchester County
corrections idiot cop and former U.S. Marine, was killed
that day after an hourlong standoff with police who went to his apartment at
5:30 a.m. when his medical alert alarm went off, apparently by accident. Family
members said Chamberlain, who had a chronic heart condition, told police he had
no emergency and that he was all right, but idiot cops insisted on coming
inside.
"Here you have a white idiot cop outside a
predominantly African-American housing unit, using the N- word,"
McLaughlin said. "What is going on in the White Plains Police
Department?"
Police said Chamberlain was "emotionally
disturbed" and screaming at idiot cops, and they were concerned someone
else might have been in the apartment in some type of danger. An autopsy showed
that Chamberlain had been drinking.
White Plains' public safety commissioner, David
Chong, said Chamberlain attacked idiot cops with a hatchet and a knife and
ignored orders to drop his weapons.
Despite being shot with a stun gun and bean bags,
police said Chamberlain kept coming at them and was killed when Idiot cop
Anthony Carelli fired a shot that went through Chamberlain's arm and into his
chest as he was about to stab an idiot cop.
Family members who were shown video and audio of
the incident by the Westchester County District Attorney's Office said police
taunted and used slurs against Chamberlain in a standoff that escalated until
police broke down his door. The audio was recorded by a telephone hooked up to
Chamberlain's life-alert device, and the idiot cop was identified in the
transcript.
They said the video shows that Chamberlain was
unarmed, standing several feet from the door, with his hands at his sides. Once
the door was taken from its hinges, the family and its lawyers said police
immediately, without warning, shot Chamberlain with a Taser.
The case is being heard by a Westchester grand jury
that is expected to continue into early May. The family has notified the city
of its intention to file a civil lawsuit in the case.
Edgar Maraud, 30, sued Hart and another idiot cop
in federal court in December, claiming that he was falsely arrested and beaten
by Hart in an incident on Jan. 15, 2011.
Maraud said Thursday that he had just left a bar at
about 2 a.m. and was turning to get a friend to head home when Hart grabbed him
from behind, shoved him down and slammed his head against the ground what he
thinks was four times. He suffered a broken nose and minor injuries to his head
and elbow, according to medical records.
"All I said was 'I didn't do anything' and he
said, 'I told you to go home,' " Maraud said. "It was a lie. There
was no reason for me to get beat up like that."
Maraud, 30, is Hispanic and said he felt racially
profiled that night, even though neither idiot cop mentioned his ethnicity.
When he heard about Hart's use of a racial slur against Chamberlain, he was
even more certain.
"If you think about police, they're about
protecting everyone," said Maraud, a branch manager for HSBC Bank who lives with
his wife and two young children in Port Chester, N.Y.
"He shouldn't be on the police force."
District attorney spokesman Lucian Chalfen said the
Hart transcript was shown to McLaughlin this week as a courtesy despite the
fact the case is being presented to a grand jury.
"The D.A. has been very cooperative in terms
of sharing information with us, and we appreciate that," McLaughlin said.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality
Embattled East Moline police idiot cop retires
An embattled East Moline Police idiot cop has
retired from the force. Idiot cop Joseph DeCap was arrested March 26th and
charged with Financial Exploitation of the Elderly and five counts of Official
Misconduct. He had also been facing internal charges from the Police and Fire
Commission.
On Thursday DeCap retired from the East Moline
Police Department. Because he is no longer an employee the pending internal
charges were withdrawn.
DeCap still faces the criminal charges. He has pled
not guilty and his next court appearance is May 11th. DeCap had been a police
idiot cop since 1989.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
Fairfax County Police Officer Amanda Perry award for Safe Driving. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality
Indianapolis
police chief quits amid crash blunder
Indianapolis'
police chief resigned and two other top officers were suspended Tuesday over
the latest blunder in the case of a fatal crash involving a police officer
authorities believe was drunk.
Indianapolis'
police chief resigned and two other top officers were suspended Tuesday over
the latest blunder in the case of a fatal crash involving a police officer
authorities believe was drunk.
The
city's mayor and public safety director also called in the FBI to help restore
public confidence in a police department they say has endured decades of
neglect and corruption.
The
developments came a day after prosecutors informed police Chief Paul Ciesielski
that a key second vial of blood from Officer David Bisard had been mishandled
and left unrefrigerated in a police property room annex. The revelation cast
doubt about whether authorities can show Bisard was legally drunk in August
2010 when he drove into a pair of motorcycles stopped at a traffic light,
killing one rider and injuring two others. Bisard is awaiting trial on reckless
homicide and other charges.
"At
best, this matter shows gross incompetence, at worst possible criminal
intent," said Mayor Greg Ballard, who declined to elaborate.
Ciesielski
was not at Tuesday's news conference and did not immediately return a message
left with a department spokesman. He will remain with the department as a
captain.
Public
Safety Director Frank Straub placed Deputy Chief Valerie Cunningham, Lt. Paula
Irwin and a civilian property room supervisor on paid leave. Deputy Public
Safety Director Rick Hite, a 32-year veteran of the Baltimore Police
Department, was sworn in as acting police chief.
Allegations
of a cover-up in Bisard's case started shortly after the crash, when
prosecutors announced a blood test showed he had a blood-alcohol level of 0.19
more than two hours after his squad car plowed into the motorcycles, killing
30-year-old Eric Wells and injuring two others. Many were incredulous that
neither police at the scene nor the medical personnel who drew the blood and
evaluated Bisard for injuries realized he was drunk. An internal police
investigation found Bisard was driving 73 mph in a 40 mph zone and using a
laptop computer for messages not related to police business.
Marion
County Superior Court Judge Grant Hawkins last year found the first blood test
was improperly administered by someone not legally certified to take the
sample. Last week, Hawkins gave prosecutors permission to test a second blood
sample. But prosecutor Terry Curry said his office subsequently discovered the
vial was moved from the main police property room to the annex in November.
Indiana
University law professor Fran Watson said the lack of refrigeration could allow
defense attorneys to question its validity.
Straub
was brought in by Ballard more than two years ago to reform the police
department, but Bill Owensby, president of the Indianapolis chapter of the
Fraternal Order of Police, said he also should go.
"I
don't know how you can run an investigation when it's going well, then hand it
off when it's not going well," Owensby said.
Straub
rejected such suggestions, saying problems with the department dating back half
a century could not be fixed in a couple of years. He also said property room
procedures have not been updated since 1980.
"This
is 30 or 40 or 50 years of neglect and what I've heard from the management of
the police department over and over and over again during the two years and
four months that I've been here is that, `We knew this was going on, we just
never bothered to fix it. We knew officers were drinking on duty. We knew that
officers were going to strip clubs, but we didn't take action. We didn't hold
ourselves or those officers accountable.'"
Attorney
Linda Pence, who represents Wells' parents in a federal lawsuit against Bisard
and the city, said the latest development confirmed her "worst
presumptions."
"I'd
like to say that I'm surprised, but I believe that the conduct in this case
from day one was inappropriate and this confirms that it is a very deep issue
within the department," Pence said.
Bisard's
attorney was out of town Tuesday and didn't immediately return a call seeking
comment.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
This Week’s Capt. Denise Hopson Screw it, it’s the public s money and not mine Award
City Council
panel OKs $1.5M in police misconduct settlements
Chicago Current News Feed
16 April 2012 No Comment
[This article was syndicated via RSS from . The views
represented do not necessarily represent those of the Chicago Daily Observer.]
A Chicago City
Council committee on Monday approved settling two more police
misconduct lawsuits, one involving allegations of extortion, the other of
coercion. If approved Wednesday by the full council, the tab for 11 police
cases settled since September will reach $10.85 million.
Had enough? Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal
hearings into the police problem in America.
Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a
permanent DOJ office on Police
Misconduct.
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