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"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

Sandwich officer charged with drunken driving


By George Brennan

FALMOUTH — A Sandwich police officer is being charged with drunken driving in connection with an off-duty crash Nov. 30 in Mashpee.
Daniel J. Perkins, 38, of Sandwich, emerged from Falmouth District Court on Wednesday morning after a closed-door review of the evidence before a magistrate. "They did issue the complaint," Perkins said as he left the courthouse. He declined further comment.
His attorney, Jens Bahrawy, also declined to comment on the case.
Neither Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O'Keefe's office nor the Falmouth District Court clerk's office could say when Perkins would be arraigned.
Mashpee police filed for a criminal complaint in December — two weeks after the crash, in which Perkins was injured — seeking to charge him with operating under the influence of alcohol. The crash occurred shortly after 11 p.m. at 759 Route 130 near the Sandwich town line. Perkins had to be freed from a truck, which had rolled on its side, using the Jaws of Life hydraulic tool. He was taken to Cape Cod Hospital, where he was treated and released.
According to police, Perkins was the lone occupant of the vehicle at the time of the crash.
To date, police have declined to comment on what evidence they have that Perkins was drunk.
When police don't make an arrest and instead file a criminal complaint, as they did in the case of Perkins, the accused is summonsed to court and is entitled to request a show-cause hearing before a magistrate, according to the Massachusetts Trial Court website. At that hearing, which is private, police lay out the evidence against the accused and the magistrate decides whether the prosecution has shown enough to proceed to arraignment.
"It's to determine whether a crime was committed and who did it," David Frank, managing editor of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly, said of a magistrate's show-cause hearing.
According to a 2007 ruling by the Supreme Judicial Court, a show-cause hearing "allows the clerk magistrate to screen out baseless complaints with minimal harm to the accused's reputation."
While a magistrate's hearing is used to determine whether there is probable cause, it is different from a probable-cause hearing. That occurs after someone has been arraigned on a criminal charge that is outside of the purview of a district court, Frank said. Probable cause hearings are open to the public because criminal charges have already been filed and an arraignment held, but typically grand jury indictments are returned before a district court case gets to the probable-cause stage, he said.
That won't happen in this case because drunken-driving cases are under the district court's jurisdiction.
Perkins is a five-year veteran of the Sandwich Police Department and had worked for the Barnstable County Sheriff's Office before joining the force.
An internal affairs investigation into the crash concluded this week, Sandwich Police Chief Peter Wack said.
The Times has requested a copy of the investigation and any discipline, but the town has not yet officially responded to that public records request.