Former Detroit homicide cop sentenced to 2-20 years in prison
Former Detroit Police Lt. William Rice was mum at his sentencing.
Clarence Tabb, Jr
Detroit— William Rice, a well-known former Detroit Police
Department homicide detective, was sentenced Thursday to 2-20 years in prison
for mortgage fraud and perjury for agreeing to provide an alibi for a relative
of his mistress under investigation for a quadruple murder.
Rice showed no emotion and declined to make a statement during his
sentencing before Wayne County Circuit Judge Gregory Bill. Also sentenced was
his co-defendant and girlfriend, Cheryl Sanford.
Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Christine Kowal said Rice’s
sentencing represents a sad day for Detroit’s Police Department.
“He has fallen far from grace,” Kowal said. “I don’t know what happened
to Bill Rice but it’s a sad day to see Bill Rice sitting at the defendant’s
table.”
The judge added that while Rice’s “reputation does precede” him,
his sentencing marked another infamous day for Detroiters when a noted officer
is found guilty of being on the wrong side of the law.
“This is another black mark in the history of the city of
Detroit,” said Bill, who added police officers are ranked high on the list of
people the public looks up to.
Rice’s co-counsel, Otis Culpepper ,said Rice is still a man of
character.
“People make mistakes and come back from them,” Culpepper said. “I
know the character of the man who stands beside me.”
Rice and Sanford were immediately taken into custody after their
sentencings.
In December, Rice pleaded guilty to two counts of perjury under a
plea agreement that calls for a sentence of up to 20 years on both counts, to
run concurrently. The perjury charge stemmed from the murder case of his
co-defendant’s nephew, Davontae Stanford, who pleaded guilty to a quadruple murder
in a local drug house in 2007. He was 14 at the time and is developmentally
disabled.
Stanford later withdrew his plea and and during a hearing Rice
testified he was with Stanford at the time of the murders. That was later
proven to be untrue.
The ex-lieutenant, who retired in 2005, also pleaded guilty on a
charge of continuing criminal enterprise. It was charged that he and his
co-defendant stole Section 8 housing money meant to help low-income residents
qualify for mortgages.
In addition, Rice will have to pay $100,196 in restitution as a
condition of possible parole in the future.
Sanford pleaded guilty to one count of continuing criminal
enterprise and one count of false pretenses ($1,000 to $20,000).
Her plea agreement calls for a sentence of up to five years of
probation, with the first year to be spent in the Wayne County Jail with no
work release or early release.
She must also pay $100,196 in restitution as a condition of
probation.