License Plate Readers at Center of Legal Dispute in Fairfax County
Brought to you by………
John Foust. Because even moral cowards need a
job
“When the cops murdered unarmed
citizens, secretly recorded public officials and held the people of this county
in contempt, I said and did nothing. I was silent in the face of injustice. And
now I expect you idiots to reelect me”
About Supervisor John W. Foust
John was elected to the Board of
Supervisors in 2007 and re-elected in 2011. In all that time he has never, not
once, spoken out against the brutality, corruption, excessive power or bloated
budget of the Fairfax County Police.
However he did find time to run
for reelection several times and run a losing bid for congress.
Since joining the Board of
Supervisors, John has sought to provide effective, results-oriented, common
sense leadership for the residents of the Dranesville District and Fairfax
County…..in as long as providing effective, results-oriented, common sense
leadership doesn’t involve speaking out against the cops.
License Plate Readers at Center
of Legal Dispute in Fairfax County
ACLU is defending a Fairfax
County man who says police department is unlawfully collecting information on law-abiding
Virginians.
By MARY ANN BARTON (Patch Staff)
This week, a little known
technological advance used by police — automatic license plate readers — was
front and center after alleged killer Vester Lee Flanagan was caught on
Interstate 66 in Northern Virginia by a state trooper who used the technology.
The technology is at the center
of a case brought again the Fairfax County Police by a local resident who is
being represented by the ACLU.
Today, Fairfax County Circuit
Court Judge Grace Carroll denied the Fairfax County Police Department’s request
to dismiss the case, brought by the ACLU challenging the FCPD’s use of
automatic license plate readers to “unlawfully collect the personal information
of law-abiding Virginians,” according to a news release from the Virginia ACLU.
Filed in Fairfax County Circuit
Court, the lawsuit is being brought on behalf of Fairfax County resident
Harrison Neal, who, the ACLU says, discovered that his license plate had been
scanned twice in one year and stored in a database, even though he wasn’t part
of any police investigation.
Neal is represented by ACLU of
Virginia staff attorney Hope Amezquita and ACLU of Virginia cooperating
attorneys Edward Rosenthal and Christina Brown of the Alexandria firm Rich
Rosenthal Brincefield Manitta Dzubin & Kroeger, LLP.
“This case is simple,” said
Rebecca Glenberg, legal director of the ACLU of Virginia. “Our laws make clear
that law-abiding Virginians should be free to travel around the Commonwealth
without police departments tracking, storing, and sharing their vehicle’s
movements with other law enforcement agencies. We thank Judge Carroll for
allowing this case to move forward.”
The ACLU chapter noted in a news
release that: “Instead of reforming its policies to ensure against the passive
collection of the movements of law-abiding Virginians, the FCPD sought to have
the case dismissed by arguing that the information collected about our client
and his vehicle is not personal information, and therefore does not violate the
Virginia Government Data Collection and Dissemination Practices Act.”
“Fairfax County Police
Department’s use of automatic license plate readers to compile vast databases
of people’s movements in their vehicles is precisely the kind of intrusive
practice the Virginia Government Data Collection and Dissemination Practices
Act was meant to prevent,” said Claire Guthrie Gastañaga, executive director of
the ACLU of Virginia. “By compiling a history of your vehicle’s movements in
local and regional databases, law enforcement can use algorithms to predict
your movements and determine your friends, politics, and medical conditions.”
Modern technology can be used to
enhance public safety, but only if proper policies are in place, according to
the ACLU.
“As we saw on Wednesday when the
Virginia State Police used an automatic license plate reader to locate the
individual suspected of killing two Roanoke journalists, when used correctly
modern technology can be used to make us safer,” said Gastañaga.
“Our client is not asking for the
Fairfax County Police Department to stop using automatic license plate readers
for active criminal investigations or for Amber or Blue Alerts. In those cases,
the technology serves a valuable law enforcement purpose. He’s just asking that
the Fairfax County Police Department stop using automatic license plate readers
to collect everyone else’s data too.”
Almost two years & the shameful cover-up continues in Fairfax County, Virginia
John Foust. Because even moral cowards need a
job
“When the cops murdered unarmed
citizens, secretly recorded public officials and held the people of this county
in contempt, I said and did nothing. I was silent in the face of injustice. And
now I expect you idiots to reelect me”
About Supervisor John W. Foust
John was elected to the Board of
Supervisors in 2007 and re-elected in 2011. In all that time he has never, not
once, spoken out against the brutality, corruption, excessive power or bloated
budget of the Fairfax County Police.
However he did find time to run
for reelection several times and run a losing bid for congress.
Since joining the Board of
Supervisors, John has sought to provide effective, results-oriented, common
sense leadership for the residents of the Dranesville District and Fairfax
County…..in as long as providing effective, results-oriented, common sense
leadership doesn’t involve speaking out against the cops.
Almost two years & the
shameful cover-up continues in Fairfax County, Virginia
From Statter 911.com
By Dave Statter
Aug 21, 2015
Just eight days away from the
two-year anniversary of the killing of John Geer and the Fairfax County Board
of Supervisors and Fairfax County Police Department continue their shameful
cover-up. Despitethe arrest this week of Officer Adam Torres, the appointment
of a commission to improve police practices (of which I am a member) and lots
of talk about lessons learned, the leadership in the County and the police
department still don’t understand a very important word — transparency.
Instead of finally telling us how
this debacle occurred (the cover-up — not the tragic shooting) and holding
those in charge accountable, it’s business as usual in Fairfax County. As has
been the routine since August, 2013, we watch as scandalous details very slowly
leak out under Tom Jackman’s byline in The Washington Post. Today’s news is
that a police captain secretly recorded a telephone conversation with a
prosecutor assigned to the Geer case.
In the same article, we are
reminded again that the Board of Supervisors still hasn’t come clean on exactly
what they knew and when they knew it in the efforts to withhold important
information and documents from the Commonwealth’s Attorney, the U.S. Attorney,
the Justice Department, a U.S. Senator, the Geer family and us.
The people we elect — the people
we put our trust in — continue to insult us. They hide behind a claim of
attorney-client privilege. The Supervisors think we should be satisfied with
redacted documents that mask their decision making and the decision making of
top Fairfax County officials.
As I pointed out in March, the
attempt by the Board of Supervisors to hold deputy county attorney Cynthia
Tianti responsible for this entire fiasco was laughable. The decision to fire
Tianti (since reversed) has brought a lawsuit that is slowly bringing us more
details of the misdeeds by those in charge. It was clear then that the Tianti
firing would blow up in their faces and it has.
Chairmen Sharon Bulova and the
Board of Supervisors continue to think just naming a commission to change
practices in the future will make us all forget this and soon restore
confidence in County leaders. It won’t.
Anything short of true
transparency will just allow the hits to keep on coming. It’s well beyond time
for all of this information to be released, with no or minimal redactions.
Real accountability is also a
requirement to finally put this to rest. Months after Cynthia Tianti was thrown
under the bus and her job marginalized, it’s extremely obvious the terrible
decision making that got us into this mess continues. While that fact says a
lot to me, for some reason Sharon Bulova and company refuse to publicly admit
Ms. Tianti is not the real problem. Instead, our elected leaders keep paying
big bucks to those actually responsible for this embarrassment and allow them
to take us deeper into this hole with no end in sight. Shameful.
Torres Trial Date Set for December
Brought to you by………
John Foust. Because even moral cowards need a
job
“When the cops murdered unarmed
citizens, secretly recorded public officials and held the people of this county
in contempt, I said and did nothing. I was silent in the face of injustice. And
now I expect you idiots to reelect me”
About Supervisor John W. Foust
John was elected to the Board of
Supervisors in 2007 and re-elected in 2011. In all that time he has never, not
once, spoken out against the brutality, corruption, excessive power or bloated
budget of the Fairfax County Police.
However he did find time to run
for reelection several times and run a losing bid for congress.
Since joining the Board of
Supervisors, John has sought to provide effective, results-oriented, common
sense leadership for the residents of the Dranesville District and Fairfax
County…..in as long as providing effective, results-oriented, common sense
leadership doesn’t involve speaking out against the cops.
Bond denied for former police
officer charged with murdering John Geer.
By Tim Peterson
Shortly after 10 a.m. on Aug. 19,
former Fairfax County Police officer Adam Torres entered the circuit courtroom
for his arraignment, dressed in a baggy, blue-green prison jumpsuit. Torres was
indicted the previous Monday by a special grand jury for killing Springfield
resident John Geer in August, 2013.
He was still an officer at the
time and one of several who responded to a call from Geer’s longtime partner
Maura Harrington that Geer was throwing her belongings out on to the lawn of
their Springfield home.
After the indictment, Fairfax
County Police said Torres surrendered himself that evening at the County Adult
Detention Center.
Circuit Court judge Judge Stephen
C. Shannon placed Torres’ arraignment first on his docket. The defendant’s
attorney John F. Carroll began by rebutting his client being held without bond
until the trial. Murder qualifies as an offense for which bond is denied in
Virginia, but it can be argued whether the person accused poses a flight risk
or is a threat to the community.
Carroll stated the case that
Torres, 32, immediately turned himself in, has no prior criminal record and has
a wife and two children. As Hayfield and George Mason University graduate,
Carroll said he doesn’t think “you can find anyone with greater ties to the
community.”
The attorney went on to summarize
the Geer shooting incident, beginning to justify Torres by saying a handgun
owned by Geer had been found on the scene “within reach, in our estimation,”
and that Geer had made “numerous erratic movements,” prior to Torres firing.
And because the shooting in
question was in Torres’ performance of duties as a police officer, Carroll
argued, “there’s no reason for anyone to be fearful.” Carroll then asked that a
bond for Torres be set at $25,000.
Commonwealth’s Attorney Raymond
F. Morrogh spoke after Carroll in opposition to the bond motion. “Not only did
he kill Mr. Geer,” Morrogh said, “but did so with malice.” Morrogh later added
that was the consensus of the special grand jury.
The prosecutor also referenced
evidence that Torres had been in a “deteriorating mental state,” saying the
former police officer had fought with his supervisor and with his wife because
he suspected her of infidelity.
Though Morrogh didn’t disagree
with Torres’ connection to the community and lack of flight risk, “It’s the
first time I’ve seen a police officer shoot someone who had his hands up,” he
said. “I think that makes him dangerous.”
Judge Shannon reminded that,
“We’re not here to decide the merits of the case today, solely the bond.”
Citing “some indications at the
time of the incident of a deteriorating mental state,” Shannon denied Carroll’s
request for a bond to be set.
Torres and the attorneys were
asked to stand while the details of his trial were negotiated. Carroll hoped to
start early in 2016 while Morrogh was intent to begin as soon as possible.
The two parties settled on Dec.
14 to begin the trial, which Morrogh said he expected would last about a week.
As the date was reached, Torres suddenly collapsed backward and fell to the
ground.
Judge Shannon cleared the entire
courtroom as the bailiffs rendered first aid and called a rescue team.
Torres was taken to a nearby
hospital, Morrogh said afterwards, and his vitals were said to have returned to
normal. The attorney said it’s not unusual for individuals to faint or pass out
in the courtroom.
Outside the courthouse, Morrogh
commented to reporters that though he’s prosecuted judges and lawyers in his
career, “It’s rare to see a case like this — there’s certainly no joy in it.”
As for Torres being the first
Fairfax County Police officer in 75 years to be charged with such an offense,
Morrogh said he thinks “it’s a really good thing that we don’t have many of
those.”
“It’s just the length of time
this case has taken, that’s not right,” Morrogh said. “We have to have a
finality to this.”
Fairfax County had withheld much
of the information about the case, including Torres’ name, until Geer’s family
filed a $12 million lawsuit against the Police Department. Torres had been
taken out of field work but remained employed by Fairfax County until he was
fired in July of this year.
The county justified not
releasing the information previously due to ongoing investigations by Police
Internal Affairs, the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office and the U.S. Department
of Justice.
Jeff Stewart, Geer’s best friend
who witnessed the shooting and became a member of the Fairfax County ad hoc
commission to review police practices, sat directly behind Torres during the
arraignment. He had never seen the man face to face prior to that morning, and
expressed sympathy for Torres and members of his family who were present at the
hearing.
Stewart described having “mixed
emotions” since the indictment. “I feel good for the process, and bad for the
man,” he said.
Torres’ wife and family members
declined to comment after the hearing.
Editorial: Police transparency needed in officer-involved shootings
BROUGHT TO YOU BY:
John Foust. Because even moral cowards need a
job
“When the cops murdered unarmed
citizens, secretly recorded public officials and held the people of this county
in contempt, I said and did nothing. I was silent in the face of injustice. And
now I expect you idiots to reelect me”
About Supervisor John W. Foust
John was elected to the Board of
Supervisors in 2007 and re-elected in 2011. In all that time he has never, not
once, spoken out against the brutality, corruption, excessive power or bloated
budget of the Fairfax County Police.
However he did find time to run
for reelection several times and run a losing bid for congress.
Since joining the Board of
Supervisors, John has sought to provide effective, results-oriented, common
sense leadership for the residents of the Dranesville District and Fairfax
County…..in as long as providing effective, results-oriented, common sense
leadership doesn’t involve speaking out against the cops.
BY THE FREE LANCE-STAR EDITORIAL
King George County Sheriff Steve
Dempsey had never had to deal with a deputy fatally shooting someone in the 36
years he’s been with that department.
That changed Saturday evening
when a deputy shot and killed a 64-year-old man who was coming at him with a
knife, Dempsey said.
Police-involved shootings have
been in the news in the past year, and often that news has reflected poorly on
the law enforcement profession. Too often, police agencies provide scant
information about the circumstances of the shootings and refuse to respond to
questions about the incidents.
As a result, the public is left
in the dark about what occurred, and silence invariably breeds suspicion and
speculation.
Dempsey, sheriff since early
2011, didn’t follow that path. Instead, he provided details about what led up
to the shooting and the step-by-step confrontation between the deputy and the
man he shot in his home following a standoff with police. Dempsey even provided
background about how many 911 calls his office had previously received
involving that man, including details of earlier dealings that deputy had with
64-year-old Kenneth Henry Morgan.
And most important for
credibility is the decision Dempsey made to immediately call in the Virginia
State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation to investigate the shooting.
The state police has a team of
agents trained for such investigations in each of its seven divisions. They’ve
investigated 11 officer-involved shootings so far this year.
Whether it’s fair or not, there
is a natural skepticism, especially for a small department, about objectivity
when officers investigate their fellow officers.
Contrast Dempsey’s response to
several fatal shootings by officers of the Fairfax County Police Department.
The August 2013 incident involving John Geer, an unarmed Springfield man who
was shot to death by a Fairfax officer as he stood in the doorway of his
residence.
After a press release was
provided shortly after the shooting, Fairfax police went 16 months without
providing any additional information. Even Fairfax’s chief prosecutor was
unable to get the details he needed to make a decision about the case.
Geer’s family eventually filed a
civil lawsuit and a Circuit Court judge ordered files in the case turned over
to them. The officer who did the shooting is no longer with the department and
has been charged with murder.
That isn’t the first time Fairfax
has stonewalled information about officer-involved shootings. In 2009, a
Fairfax police officer shot and killed a Fredericksburg man during a traffic
stop because he was suspected of stealing a plant from in front of a business.
David A. Masters, a former Green
Beret, was unarmed and in his car when he was shot. Reports said the officer
who pulled the trigger thought Masters was in a stolen car and was reaching for
a gun, neither of which was true. No charges were filed but the officer was
fired about 18 months after the shooting. In May, nearly five years later,
Fairfax released the dashboard camera video of the shooting.
Earlier this year, a police
review commission was appointed to study Fairfax police procedures and its
communication policy.
The report from a communications
subcommittee calls for a culture change to favor releasing more information,
adopting a predisposition to disclose, with records presumed to be public and
exemptions strictly and narrowly construed. That approach essentially mirrors
state law, which states:
“The affairs of government are
not intended to be conducted in an atmosphere of secrecy since at all times the
public is to be the beneficiary of any action taken at any level of
government.”
It’s not too much to ask that the
state law be followed. The King George Sheriff’s Office has done its part so
far in the case of Saturday’s shooting.
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