Cops and the women they abuse: Off-Duty Cop Allegedly Attacked Wife Over Broken R...
Cops and the women they abuse: Off-Duty Cop Allegedly Attacked Wife Over Broken R...: Off-Duty Cop Allegedly Attacked Wife Over Broken Remote Control An off-duty NYPD officer was arrested after a drunken row with his w...
Cop in Moriarty case pleads not guilty
WOODBURY — A New Jersey police
officer has pleaded not guilty to charges he made a bogus drunken driving
arrest of a politician last year.
Washington Township officer
Joseph DiBuonoventura entered the plea Monday. He could face decades in prison
if he is convicted of official misconduct, falsifying records and other
offenses.
A prosecutor said a guilty plea
would have been met with a recommendation for five years in prison.
The officer charged Assemblyman
Paul Moriarty, D-Gloucester, in July 2012 with drunken driving and other
crimes.
Moriarty, a former mayor of
Washington Township, said he had not been drinking and was wrongly accused. He
produced a video of the incident and the charges against him were dropped.
The epidemic of mentally unstable cops in America: Crooked Cop Jerry “J.D.” Roth, 56, commits suicide...
The epidemic of mentally unstable cops in America: Crooked Cop Jerry “J.D.” Roth, 56, commits suicide...: FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS Ill. • Jerry “J.D.” Roth, who was suspended from his job as Caseyville’s police chief last month after being charged ...
Former East Washington Police Chief Sentenced To 11 Years
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – Former East
Washington Police Chief Donald Solomon was sentenced to 11 years in jail for
violations of the federal Hobbs Act.
FBI surveillance tape helped
put him there.
One of those tapes captured
Solomon saying, “I’m the best cop money can buy.”
That was a conversation between
an informant and Solomon about protecting a drug deal in 2011.
U.S. Attorney David Hickton
argued in person for a stern sentence at Friday’s hearing, and says the “best
cop money can buy” reference stuck with investigators.
“Well, that’s the line that
stands out above all others,” said Hickton. “I made a point in court today that
that line was not retrieved from him. He volunteered that line. And there were
several other points in the audio and video recordings where it was clear that
he was voluntarily engaging in this behavior. There was another line that
captured some attention where he was asked if he wanted to continue in this
type of behavior and he said ‘hell yeah.’”
Federal investigators also
developed surveillance of Solomon as chief actually protecting drug deals as
well as threatening to take out personal vendettas against a former girlfriend.
“If she came to my apartment I
got body bags in my apartment, so put her in a body bag, wait till it was
night, put her in the car. Take her someplace, drop her off,” Solomon is quoted
as saying on one of the recordings.
The defense argued that Solomon
should be given credit for his work as a paramedic and police officer for 38
years without any criminal activity. He was.
His 11-year sentence, imposed
by Judge Joi Flowers Conti, is at the lower end of the term prescribed in the
sentencing guidelines.
On Thursday night, Solomon
attended high school graduation for one of his sons. Today in court, he
apologized to both his friends in law enforcement, and his children, because in
his words, “They’re the ones I’ve hurt the most.”
City to consider claim of police misconduct
Laguna Beach City Council
members will decide whether to accept a legal consultant's suggestion the city
deny a man's claim that a police officer mistreated him while he slept in his
car on Nov. 30.
Porto claims Officer Mike
Jeffries violently awakened him at 2:30 a.m. Nov. 30 while he slept in his car
in front of 300 El Paseo near Main Beach during a rainstorm, according to
Porto's claim filed with the city clerk on May 29.
"Officer Jeffries banged
on the roof of claimants' vehicle multiple times to awaken claimant
[Porto]," according to the claim, which also said a female officer
accompanied Jeffries. "Disabled claimant [Porto] suffered severe emotional
and physical trauma of being awakened violently by strangers ... [the
officer's] actions were intentional, malicious, uncivilized and shocking."
Police issued Porto a $43
citation for violating the city's municipal code, which prohibits a person from
parking a car on any public street, beach or park, where someone can't see
inside the vehicle.
A sunshade covered the front
windshield while towels hung from the inside on the driver- and passenger-side
windows, Porto said in an email.
Covering the windows with
towels helped keep the vehicle warm and added privacy, said Porto, who said he
was homeless at the time.
Murder suspect freed; attorney says Bossier City police lied about evidence
A defense attorney believes
Bossier City police misconduct played a role in the yearlong incarceration of a
man who now is no longer accused in a murder that took place almost two years
ago. Attorney Elton Richey alleges
the police department is not being forthcoming about the use of a live lineup
that produced another suspect in the July 23, 2011, shooting death of James
Dean Smith, 21, of Vivian. Police officers testifying at a pretrial hearing in
January denied the use of a live lineup. But the state’s primary witness, Tyler
Quandt, testified that he picked Michael Ray Madden Jr., 27, out of a live
lineup conducted at the Bossier City Police Department days after Smith’s
shooting death. And the victim’s sister, Amy Smith, also testified she
accompanied Quandt to the police station and remained in another room while it
took place.
Photograph the Police: Philadelphia PD Sued Over Arrest of Student Photog...
Photograph the Police: Philadelphia PD Sued Over Arrest of Student Photog...: THE AMERICAN Civil Liberties Union plans to file two federal lawsuits today against the Philadelphia Police Department for wrongfully...
Photograph the Police: Philadelphia PD Sued Over Arrest of Student Photog...
Photograph the Police: Philadelphia PD Sued Over Arrest of Student Photog...: THE AMERICAN Civil Liberties Union plans to file two federal lawsuits today against the Philadelphia Police Department for wrongfully...
Arlington Police Officer Charged with Unlawfully Providing Law Enforcement Sensitive Information to a Known Drug Dealer
Defendant Allegedly Involved in
Anabolic Steroids Distribution Investigation
U.S. Attorney’s OfficeJune 12,
2013 • Northern District of Texas(214) 659-8600
DALLAS—Thomas S. Kantzos, 45,
of Fort Worth, Texas, an officer with the Arlington Police Department (APD),
was arrested last night on a federal criminal complaint charging him with
unlawfully providing law enforcement sensitive information by exceeding authorized
access to a protected computer. He will make his initial appearance in federal
court this afternoon, at 2:00 p.m., before U.S. Magistrate Paul D. Stickney.
Today’s announcement was made by U.S. Attorney Sarah R. Saldaña of the Northern
District of Texas.
According to the affidavit
filed with the criminal complaint, a particular individual (witness), who was
arrested in January 2013 for distributing anabolic steroids, a Scheduled III
controlled substance, admitted to routinely using and distributing anabolic
steroids and human growth hormones (HGH) during the last 13 years. This witness
also admitted that during the last five or six years, he directly and regularly
provided anabolic steroids and HGH to Kantzos, whom he knew to be an officer
with the APD. In fact, on at least one occasion, this witness delivered
approximately 20 HGH kits to Kantzos while Kantzos was on duty, wearing an APD
uniform, and driving a marked APD patrol car.
The affidavit further notes
that on multiple occasions, Kantzos solicited anabolic steroids from this
witness for himself and for others, including friends and colleagues in the
APD. Kantzos allegedly collected money from the other individuals before he
obtained the steroids, but on some occasions, he “fronted” the money for the
purchases. According to the affidavit, most of the anabolic steroids and HGH he
obtained from this witness were provided to other officers of the APD. Also,
Kantzos allegedly put this witness in contact with two other APD officers so
that they could obtain anabolic steroids directly.
Kantzos was authorized to
access law enforcement information obtained through the Texas Crime Information
Center (TCIC) and the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), and he received
specialized training on the authorized uses of the information, as well as the
potential penalties for the misuse of such information. Personal use of such
information, including releasing information to members of the general public,
is not authorized and violates APD policy.
On several occasions, according
to the affidavit, this witness, who indicated he was concerned that police
might be watching his activities, asked Kantzos to query a name or a license
plate using a law enforcement database. On several occasions, Kantzos did this,
or had someone else do it for him, and then provided the obtained sensitive
information to the witness. In fact, on one occasion in December 2011, Kantzos
provided the name of a person who was known to be a law enforcement officer
and, based on that information, the witness inspected his/her vehicle and
discovered a tracking device attached to it. The investigation revealed that
this witness immediately began “laying low” for several weeks. During that
time, however, the witness and Kantzos talked about the tracking device and the
police surveillance of the witness.
A federal complaint is a
written statement of the essential facts of the offense charged and must be
made under oath before a magistrate judge. A defendant is entitled to the
presumption of innocence until proven guilty. The U.S. Attorney’s Office has 30
days to present the matter to a grand jury for indictment. Kantzos is charged
with exceeding authorized access to a protected computer. That offense, as
charged, carries a maximum statutory penalty 10 years in federal prison and a
$250,000 fine, per count.
The matter is being
investigated by the FBI and the Texas Ranger Division of the Texas Department
of Public Safety. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Penley and Deputy Criminal Chief
Assistant U.S. Attorney Gary Tromblay are in charge of the prosecution.
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Trial Of cop Charged In Teen’s Death
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Trial Of cop Charged In Teen’s Death: TOWSON, Md. (WJZ) — An emotional day in court, as a Baltimore County police officer is tried on manslaughter charges. Supporters on bot...
Idiots at work
Board
Upholds Suspension For Facebook Posting cop
The Dothan Alabama Personnel
Board voted Thursday to uphold disciplinary action taken against cop RaeMonica
Carney for posts she made to her personal Facebook account. Carney was
suspended ten days and placed on her on probation for two years.
Carney posted comments
regarding the death of Christopher Dorner, the cop who is believed to have
killed four people and wounded others. Investigators say Dorner shot himself to
death as the cabin in which he holed up burned.
Judge
rejects, condemns plea deal offered to Morris sheriff's officer
Superior Court Judge Edward Gannon said a plea
offer made to suspended Morris County Sheriff's cop Jason Campbell would have
resulted in Campbell pleading guilty to "trivial offenses," while
ignoring arson charges. Campbell is accused of flashing his badge at a state
trooper to beat a drug rap.
For
cops, disrespect is only a one-way street
http://www.trentonian.com/article/20130620/OPINION03/130619604/for-cops-disrespect-is-only-a-one-way-street
Sheriff
to fire narcotics deputy charged with lying about drugs
The L.A. County Sheriff's
Department is seeking to fire Francisco Enriquez, a
narcotics deputy charged with
lying about finding drugs after detaining a couple, whom the county will pay
$550,000 to settle a false-arrest lawsuit, officials said.
Enriquez has pleaded not guilty
to one count of perjury in a probable cause declaration and one count of filing
a false report in connection with the October 2009 arrests of Tatiana Lopezand
Miguel Amarillas. The county Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved the
settlement for Lopez and Amarillas at the recommendation of the county
attorneys, who cited the "risks and uncertainties" of fighting the
couple's civil rights lawsuit at trial. The couple accused Enriquez, a member
of a narcotics task force, of lying and planting drugs after he claimed he had
driven Lopez to a sheriff's station and discovered several bags
ofmethamphetamine in the patrol car after she was taken out.
Dorner
Review: Rogue Cop's Dismissal Justified
http://www.kabc.com/common/page.php?pt=Dorner+Review%3A+Rogue+Cop%27s+Dismissal+Justified&id=10373&is_corp=0
Judge
dismisses suspended Cliffside Park officer’s harassment complaint against
retired captain
A judge in Hackensack dismissed
a harrassment complaint brought by a suspended Cliffside cop John Lemkinr
against a retired captain and his family. Lemkinr
alleged that retired Capt. Michael Russo and
his children posted libelous comments about him online — including that he was
“mentally deficient,” “a little girl who plays with a fake cop car” and a
“mommys boy.” Central Municipal Court Judge Roy F. McGeady said these were
protected free speech. The judge said, these weren’t part of any type of series
or campaign, which could rise to the level of a criminal offense. Rather, he
said, they were all written the same day.
Lemkin already is appealing an April ruling by Superior Judge Eugene
Austin upholding McGeady’s conviction of him for trying to make his personal
car look like an undercover police cruiser without authorization. The decision
includes an order that Lemkin resign and never hold a public job again,
although that’s on hold while Lemkin appeals it to a higher court.
Lemkin’s lawyer said he aims to
determine “who the real culprit is.”
D.C.
cop to plead guilty in drug ring
A Washington, D.C., cop named Jared
Weinberg charged with laundering money for a California-to-Pittsburgh drug ring
has scheduled a plea for next month. Weinberg was arrested in May at his
precinct house in Washington on a complaint filed by the U.S. attorney's office
in Pittsburgh. Weinberg agreed to plead guilty on July 25 in U.S. District
Court here. He is accused of conspiracy to commit money-laundering for a
cocaine ring that is believed to have sold up to four tons in the last decade.
MPD
cop charged with DUI
Memphis cop Kobena Cash is out
of jail on bond this morning, accused of drinking and driving. Cash was pulled over Saturday night for
running a stop sign and having expired tags.
New
Britain Ct. Loses Police Brutality Suit
A federal jury earlier this
month awarded $80,625 to the man who accused a city cop Jeffrey Walsh of
excessive force during an arrest in 2007. Walsh was subsequently fired, and
then lost a bid to get his job back through arbitration. Christopher Roguz had
accused Walsh of slamming his head into a wall and then hitting him with a
nightstick while he was handcuffed. Walsh has maintained that he was stopping
Roguz from attacking another officer during the arrest. Roguz was satisfied that
the jury sided with him, said David W. Bush, his attorney.
Vegas
police officer facing dismissal in drug case
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A Las Vegas
police cop named Ramin Allen Amely is suspended without pay pending dismissal
after being accused of unlawfully obtaining prescription painkillers. Amely was
accused of obtaining Percocet, hydromorphone and hydrocodone from several
doctors between May 2011 and last February.
Cop
charged after leaving accident scene
MIAMI (WSVN) -- A Miami-Dade cop
Alberto Perez has been charged after he allegedly rear-ended a vehicle and left
the scene. The driver of a Honda Civic stopped suddenly after she said she was
rear-ended. According to the Florida Highway Patrol report, the colliding
driver got out of his vehicle and asked if the woman was OK. As both cars were
pulling over to the side, the victim said the black Ford Explorer took off.
Crystal
Lake cop Brian Burr Suspended after Incident
A Crystal Lake cop Brian Burr
has been given a three-day, unpaid suspension for not following department
protocol . Burr did not follow
department procedure when he responded at 2:30 a.m. to Autumn Drive, after a
neighbor reported a suspicious vehicle parked outside a residence. Burr found
Mendoza sitting in the back seat of his Honda Pilot, parked seven houses from
his home, and smelling of alcohol and appearing intoxicated, according to the
article. Burr never gave Mendoza a field sobriety test, gave the school
superintendent a ride home and did not search him before allowing Mendoza into
the squad car, as he should have, the article said.
Charges dropped against officer
charged with DUI
WESTMINSTER, Md. (AP) — Carroll
County prosecutors have dropped DUI charges against aBaltimore County cop.Matthew
McElwee of Hanover, Pa who was cited March 16 when he was stopped at a sobriety
checkpoint in Hampstead. He was accused of driving a vehicle while under the
influence of alcohol and driving while impaired by alcohol. Those charges were
dropped Monday in Carroll County Circuit Court. State's AttorneyJerry Barnes
tells the Carroll County Times (http://bit.ly/17WHAG7) that there was not
enough evidence to prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt. Barnes said McElwee lawfully
refused to take sobriety tests.
Cop
charged for theft, lying
A Holly Springs cop named Shane
Ladner, has been charged with four counts of misdemeanor theft by deception, as
well as one count each of false swearing and making a false statement, both
felonies under the law. Ladner is accused of using that alleged falsified
document to obtain a Purple Heart vanity plate that exempted him from paying ad
valorem tax on his vehicle between 2009 and 2012.
Memphis
police officer charged with DUI
Memphis police cop Kobena Cash,
38, has been arrested after he was pulled over on charges he was driving under
the influence, ran a stop sign, was driving with tags that expired in 2011 and
that he refused to submit to a field sobriety test.
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Ohio’s top court upholds police officer’s convicti...
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Ohio’s top court upholds police officer’s convicti...: The Ohio Supreme Court ruled yesterday that cops are not exempt from prosecution under the state’s witness-intimidation law. In a 6-1 de...
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Ohio’s top court upholds police officer’s convicti...
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Ohio’s top court upholds police officer’s convicti...: The Ohio Supreme Court ruled yesterday that cops are not exempt from prosecution under the state’s witness-intimidation law. In a 6-1 de...
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Arrested Macon cop Out on Bond
KIDS AND COPS: GEE, WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?: Arrested Macon cop Out on Bond: A Macon cop arrested for drug and child endangerment charges in Monroe County Thursday is out on bond and currently placed on administ...
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Tremonton Police Chief David Nance
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Tremonton Police Chief David Nance: TREMONTON Utah — Jeremy Rose, a veteran cop with the Tremonton Police Department has been arrested for investigation of sexual explo...
Former Suburban Police Chief and Husband Charged with Hiding Business Income and $500,000 from State Grant in False Tax Returns
U.S. Attorney’s Office June 11,
2013 • Northern District of Illinois(312) 353-5300
CHICAGO—Regina Evans and her
husband, Ronald Evans, the former police chief and the former inspector
general, respectively, of suburban Country Club Hills, were each charged today
with three counts of filing false federal income tax returns for allegedly
failing to report all of their income during calendar years 2007-09. They were
charged in a felony information filed today in U.S. District Court in Chicago.
Regina Evans’ attorney has
authorized the government to disclose that she will be pleading guilty to the
tax charges after the government files a request to transfer the case against
her to the Central District of Illinois in Springfield for disposition. Regina
Evans, 50, who was Country Club Hills police chief from 2009 to 2011, and
Ronald Evans, 46, are scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court in Springfield
on June 18.
The defendants were charged
with failing to report all of their income in 2009, when they allegedly converted
to personal income more than $500,000 of a $1.25 million state grant. They also
allegedly failed to report all of their income in 2007, 2008, and 2009 from
Prime Time Limousine, a Chicago transportation and security services company
that they jointly owned and operated.
According to the charging
document, Regina Evans founded and ran an organization called We Are Our
Brother’s Keeper that, in 2009, received a $1.25 million employment
opportunities grant from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity to provide pre-apprenticeship educational and vocational training
for people employed in building trades, such as bricklayers and electricians.
The couple allegedly used more than $500,000 for non-grant-related personal
purposes, making that money personal income.
On their federal income tax
return for 2009, the couple stated that Prime Time’s gross receipts were
approximately $150,000, knowing that its gross receipts totaled more than
$201,297. They also allegedly stated that they did not have any other income,
knowing that they had converted at least $500,000 in grant money.
In 2007, the defendants
allegedly filed a false tax return by reporting Prime Time’s gross receipts
were approximately $205,290, when the business actually had gross receipts
totaling more than $360,649, and they allegedly filed a false 2008 tax return
stating Prime Time’s gross receipts were approximately $150,630, when it
actually had gross receipts of more than $291,414.
The charges were announced
today by Gary S. Shapiro, United States Attorney for the Northern District of
Illinois, and James C. Lee, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal Revenue
Service-Criminal Investigation Division in Chicago. The Chicago Office of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation participated in the investigation.
Filing a false federal income
tax return carries a maximum penalty of three years in prison and a $250,000
fine. In addition, a defendant convicted of tax offenses faces mandatory costs
of prosecution and remains civilly liable to the government for any and all
back taxes, as well as a potential civil fraud penalty of up to 75 percent of
the underpayment plus interest. If convicted, the court must determine a
reasonable sentence to be imposed under federal statutes and the advisory
United States Sentencing Guidelines.
The government is being
represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Joel Hammerman.
The public is reminded that an
information contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendant
is presumed innocent and is entitled to a fair trial at which the government
has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Nashville cop pleads guilty on child porn charge
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Nashville cop pleads guilty on child porn charge: Nashville William J. Patterson pleaded guilty to distribution of child pornography in federal court this week. Patterson was taken into f...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Rape trial of Garden Grov cop underway
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Rape trial of Garden Grov cop underway: A jury trial starts today in the case of a Garden Grove Calf. cop Jesse Andrew Green, who faces charges not only of rape, but also of ...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Dallas cop charged with sexual assault turns himse...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Dallas cop charged with sexual assault turns himse...: DALLAS -- Dallas cop Edward Antunez, charged with one count of sexual assault, turned himself in to the Mesquite Police Department . Acc...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Suspended Cranford NJ Police Officer Pleads Guilty...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Suspended Cranford NJ Police Officer Pleads Guilty...: A 12-year veteran Cranford cop named Brian Thomas pleaded guilty to harassing a woman while he was on duty two years ago, officials said...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Cop charged with forcing fugitives to perform sexu...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Cop charged with forcing fugitives to perform sexu...: A Memphis cop named Brandon Berry is accused of forcing men to perform sexual acts in exchange for not arresting them on warrants. Poli...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Central Floridacop suspended after he asks woman t...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Central Floridacop suspended after he asks woman t...: LAKELAND, Fla. -A Central cop Dustin Fetz allegedly instructed Zoe Brugger to lift her shirt and shake out her bra to see if she was hidi...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Michael Vagnini, former Milwaukee cop, gets over 2...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Michael Vagnini, former Milwaukee cop, gets over 2...: June 22, 2013 (MILWAUKEE) – A Milwaukeecop named Michael Vagnini was convicted of performing illegal strip searches and body-cavity searc...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)