Predator cop to ask for conviction to be overturned
Misha DiBono
SAN DIEGO – The San Diego
police officer who sexually assaulted women he pulled over for allegedly
driving while drunk may get out of prison on technicality, an attorney said.
Ex-SDPD officer Anthony
Arevalos was sentenced for bribing and sexually assaulting women he stopped in
the Gaslamp District for drunken driving and other offenses. (2-10-2012)
Newly released video of police
evidence presented during the criminal sexual assault trial against 18-year
police veteran Anthony Arevalos shows once of his victims talking with him on
the phone while being recorded by police investigators. In the conversation, he
admits that he groped and fondled her in exchange for not arresting her on a
charge of driving under the influence.
The video shows Officer Laurie
Adams asking the victim to write down everything she remembered about an
alleged assault from inside a 7-Eleven bathroom in 2011. The victim’s notes
were never brought up in the trial that convicted Arevalos of several sexual
assaults.
“The defense — paid for by the
police department for Officer Arevelos — is going to use [the notes] as a
pretext excuse for Arevelos to be turned out of prison and go back out on the
streets,” said the woman’s attorney Browne Greene.
During a hearing scheduled for
Friday, Arevalos is expected to ask for his criminal conviction to be
overturned based on the “notes” technicality, Greene said.
On Tuesday, Greene released
surveillance video of a private investigator hired by the city following the
victim in a store. Greene said the city
is re-victimizing the victim.
“[The City of San Diego is]
trying to make her the issue, when it should be about (Avelalos),” Greene said.
City Attorney Jan Goldsmith
said the surveillance is standard pre-trial procedure and it is inappropriate
for Greene to have released the video to the public.
“It’s supposed to be
confidential,” said Goldsmith. “I am not going to talk about the report or the
video.”
Greene said the victim, known
only as “Jane Doe,” will not settle unless the city agrees to implement a
monitoring or oversight system of its police department – which may never
happen.
Goldsmith said no such proposal
was ever put forth.
The civil case will go to trial
in May.
Del City Officer Convicted Of Manslaughter Sentenced To 4 Years
By Lisa Monahan, News 9 - b
OKLAHOMA CITY -
A convicted police captain will
spend the next four years behind bars.
Oklahoma County Judge Donald
Deason upheld the jury's recommendation and sentenced former Del City Police
Captain Randy Harrison to prison for manslaughter in the killing of Dane Scott
Jr., in March 2012.
"He did what he was
trained to do. Dane Scott was a violent felon and endangered numerous
lives," said Kenny Harrison after watching his brother hauled off to jail.
He also believes his brother's
punishment is too harsh.
"He could have got
probation. He's not a danger to the public."
Harrison's defense attorney
asked Judge Deason to consider a suspended sentence because he spent his life
serving the public as a veteran officer.
Oklahoma County District
Attorney David Prater argued it was a disservice and was pleased with the
outcome of the hearing.
"When people say ‘Hey you
convicted a cop. How do you feel?' Well, he's not a cop to me. That guy is not
a cop. He is so different from the rest of them out there," Prater said.
Prater said Harrison crossed
the line and killed Scott because he had a personal vendetta.
"The DA got up there and
depicted him as just as cold blooded as ever," Kenny Harrison said.
Kenny says his brother is
actually a Christian man, with two sons who will miss him while he is away.
In the victim's impact
statements made to the court, Scott's family said they are missing someone too.
The parents explained to the judge that their son's absence will be forever and
asked the judge to lock up his killer
"Both parents said that
two families lost that day. Two families lost during this trial. They
acknowledge Harrison's family lost as well and I think that's very telling of
what Dane's mother and father are all about," Prater said
The parents said they hope
Harrison's sentence will serve as a deterrent for law enforcement officers to
take a life again.
Harrison's brother believes
more officers will end up just like Randy.
"Just have to live with it
and deal with it."
Plainfield ex-cop faces 10 years in prison for sex crime
Sergio Bichao
PLAINFIELD — A former city police sergeant next month is
facing 10 years in prison when he is sentenced on a sex crime conviction.
Samuel Woody, 43, had been scheduled to be sentenced Monday
morning by a Superior Court judge New Brunswick on the charges second-degree
official misconduct and fourth-degree criminal sexual contact. The sentencing
was postponed because of the snow storm.
Woody was accused of wrongfully arresting a 27-year-old
woman on theft and burglary charges in July 2011. Later, he coerced the woman
into undressing while he masturbated in full uniform, officials said.
Authorities said Woody had threatened to put his victim in
prison for five years.
The 12-year veteran of the Plainfield force was convicted
last month by a Union County jury. Afterward, the case was transferred to
Middlesex County, where he remains in custody at the county jail.
The sentence requested by the Union County Prosecutor’s
Office may include five years of parole ineligibility on the official
misconduct conviction, and being barred from ever again holding a public job in
the state.
E. Haven cop convicted of stealing evidence money
EAST HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - A former East Haven police
detective has been convicted of stealing more than $1,300 from a police
evidence locker.
The New Haven Register reports (http://bit.ly/1k5fjmB ) a
six-member jury convicted Michael D'Amato on Monday of second-degree larceny
and tampering with physical evidence.
The theft occurred in March 2011. D'Amato retired from the
department in December 2011 and was charged in May 2012.
Prosecutors presented video evidence during the trial
showing D'Amato entering and leaving the evidence room the day the money
disappeared.
He faces up to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced.
Freed man gets $425,000 in settlement tied to Tulsa police corruption
The city of Tulsa settles a lawsuit with a former drug
defendant convicted amid police corruption.
By DAVID HARPER World Staff Writer
The city of Tulsa has settled for $425,000 the federal
lawsuit of a man who was freed from prison because of corruption within the
Tulsa Police Department, attorneys on both sides of the lawsuit confirmed
Wednesday.
Larry Wayne Barnes Sr., 63, was released from prison after
serving 16 months of a 66-month sentence he received after being convicted in April
2008 of two drug crimes, according to an opinion filed Friday by U.S. District
Judge Joe Heaton.
While Heaton ruled in favor of the city on some issues, he
found that Barnes offered sufficient evidence to dispute whether the city's
policymakers were "deliberately indifferent to the need for further
supervision" over its police officers.
Barnes had alleged that the city had notice of prior
misbehavior by former Officer Jeff Henderson and other officers who were
involved in his arrest yet failed to take appropriate steps to supervise them.
Henderson was convicted of violating suspects' civil rights
and committing perjury. He completed a 42-month prison term in October. He is
one of four officers who were convicted as a result of an investigation into police
corruption.
The officers' trials involved allegations of falsified
search warrants, perjury, witness tampering, selling drugs and drug conspiracy
by several Tulsa police officers and an ATF agent.
At least 48 people, including Barnes, have been freed from
prison or had their cases modified because of civil rights violations or
potential problems with their cases stemming from police corruption.
The judge in Barnes' civil suit decided that his case could
proceed to trial on his Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution claim, his First
Amendment retaliation claim and his negligence claims against the city.
On Wednesday, a settlement conference was held in Oklahoma
City before U.S. Senior District Judge Lee West. Besides attorneys on each side
of the lawsuit, city of Tulsa spokeswoman Michelle Allen confirmed that Mayor
Dewey Bartlett was in attendance.
Last month, Barnes' 37-year-old daughter, Larita Barnes,
reached a $300,000 settlement with the city. She was convicted in April 2008 of
two drug charges and was sentenced in October 2008 to 10 years in prison, but
she was freed July 2, 2009, as a result of a court order in the fallout of the
police corruption investigation.
Earlier this month, the city reached a $35,000 settlement
with 59-year-old Bobby Wayne Haley Sr., who had served four years of a 22-year
sentence in a federal cocaine case before being released when the corruption
was exposed.
In August, the city settled for $50,000 a lawsuit brought by
33-year-old Demario T. Harris, who had been convicted in Tulsa federal court in
April 2005 of possession of cocaine base with intent to distribute and being a
felon in possession of a firearm. He was sentenced in November 2005 to life in
prison but was ordered freed in October 2010.
Guy Fortney, an attorney representing the city in the
litigation filed as a result of the corruption's exposure, said Wednesday
evening that each of the cases has been evaluated on its own merits.
"Each case has been looked at independently,"
Fortney said. "Each of the plaintiffs is in a very different
position."
He pointed out that the city has received favorable rulings
in several of the nearly 20 cases that have been filed as a result of the
corruption. None of the cases has made it to trial yet.
Art Fleak, one of the attorneys representing Larry Barnes
Sr., said Wednesday that police attempted to "cut corners" while
investigating his client. Fleak said he hopes the settlement "will change
the way our city does business."
Fleak, Fortney and Allen all confirmed the settlement amount
Woman punched by police officer has charges reduced: State investigation into incident continues
Woman punched by police officer has charges reduced: State
investigation into incident continues By Mike Simonson Wisconsin Public
Radio
A woman charged with assaulting a Superior police officer
had her charges reduced from a felony to a misdemeanor at a hearing on Friday
in Douglas County Court.
Natasha Lancour was charged with felony battery of an officer
in a Jan. 5 incident outside a Superior bar. Lancour, who is black, in turn
accused police officer George Gothner with racially motivated brutality. A
police dash cam video shows the pair scuffling, and Gothner punching her three
times.
This exchange came a few minutes later in the squad car:
Gothner: “Can I tell you something? You see this here? Your
whole actions were captured on camera.”
Lancour: “Exactly. Exactly. Your actions? Your number one
actions?”
Gothner: “Yeah, your number one action of hitting me first,
okay?
Lancour: “That’s not normal, sweetie. Keep it real though.
They were not normal … I don't give even a f---, I'm right.”
Gothner: “You're not right, so shut up.”
Superior Police Chief Charles LaGesse began an internal
investigation. When the video went viral, causing strong public reaction, and a
cell phone video emerged, LaGesse turned the investigation over to the state
Division of Criminal Investigations.
The NAACP and the Clayton Jackson McGhie Memorial Committee,
which memorializes a 1920 lynching in Duluth, Minn., rallied behind Lancour.
The memorial committee released this statement on Thursday condemning the
police action:
“No woman is safe from police abuse if the behavior of
Officer George Gothner is accepted as legitimate police behavior. In our
defense of Natasha Lancour, we send a message that no one, particularly our
mothers and daughters, should live in fear of the police in Superior.”
Lancour said she’s grateful for the support. “I’m one of
many faces of those whose rights were violated and this support system means a
lot to me,” she said.
Gothner remains on paid leave, a move LaGesse said is not a
disciplinary action.
Detective charged with lying to FBI seeks disability retirement
By John Diedrich and Gina Barton of the Journal Sentinel
A Milwaukee police detective charged with lying to an FBI
agent has applied for duty disability retirement, saying the stress of being
investigated, arrested and strip-searched has left him unable to be a police
officer, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has learned.
Willie Huerta has been on paid suspension since May, as the
department conducts an internal investigation into allegations the longtime
detective intervened to protect a drug dealer when he was stopped by Milwaukee
officers.
Huerta, 40, filed an application for duty disability in
July, contending he is totally disabled because of psychological and physical
injuries resulting from the investigation, according to his application filed
with the Employees' Retirement System.
"As a result of the duty-incurred injuries as described
above, I can no longer perform the essential duties or functions of a city of
Milwaukee police officer, detective or any position in a limited-duty
capacity," the application statement said.
If his application is approved, Huerta could be paid by the
city for the rest of his life. In most cases, duty disability provides such
retirees with 75% of their salaries, tax-free. His 2012 salary, including
overtime, was more than $85,000.
Huerta was first charged in May with obstruction of justice,
on allegations of helping the suspected drug dealer get out of a traffic stop.
That charge was dropped two weeks later without explanation by the prosecutor.
Last month, Huerta was indicted on a count of lying to the
FBI during questioning related to the same case.
Martin Kohler, whose firm is representing Huerta, declined
to comment. Huerta did not return calls.
Huerta is one of at least five officers who have applied for
or received duty disability during or after a disciplinary investigation since
2006, the Journal Sentinel found.
After the investigation by the Journal Sentinel, the board
of the city's Employees' Retirement System approved a series of changes
intended to make it harder for officers charged or under investigation to be
approved for duty disability.
And an opinion from the city attorney's office said officers
already receiving the benefit may lose it if their applications include
potentially misleading information believed to be ghostwritten by "a
retired police detective" — a reference to former union boss and felon
Bradley DeBraska, who is known to have assisted at least 18 officers with their
applications.
Large portions of Huerta's application are identical to
other applications written by DeBraska. Huerta ends his statement by writing
that because of his "psychological trauma and my mental state, I required
a retired detective" to help with the statement.
Huerta's application remains under review, according to
Jerry Allen, executive director of the Employees' Retirement System.
"This application is being evaluated by the city
attorney, in light of the city attorney's opinion," Allen said.
Applications filed
Huerta is on full suspension — with no police powers,
department gun or badge — as an internal investigation continues, said Lt. Mark
Stanmeyer, Milwaukee police spokesman. Huerta continues to be paid, as required
under state law. His most recent assignment was in the department's sensitive
crimes unit.
Even if Huerta is fired or convicted, he still may be able
to get duty disability pay, because his application was filed while he was
still an employee and before the retirement system instituted the rule changes.
As an example, former Officer Dwight Copeland didn't show up
for work for the equivalent of half of his 14 years on the force and was
disciplined two dozen times for misconduct. Copeland was fired for lying about
an application claiming he was disabled because of a shoulder injury and
stress. His duty disability retirement was able to be approved last year
because he filed it before he was fired.
The rule changes also may not stop other officers who
applied for duty disability while they were being investigated. Rodolfo Gomez
Jr., who was fired from the department for hitting a handcuffed prisoner and
faces a felony charge over the incident, also has applied for duty disability.
Gomez has pleaded not guilty and is set to go to trial in May.
In a letter, Police Chief Edward Flynn wrote that he thinks
Gomez submitted a fraudulent application for duty disability retirement and is
not entitled to the benefit.
Gomez's application also is under review by the city
attorney, Allen said.
Traffic stop in 2011
Huerta was hired by the Police Department in 1996 and worked
in undercover drug operations. In 2006, he became a detective and later worked
on a joint drug task force with federal agents.
According to a federal criminal complaint, Huerta protected
Julio Cruz by intervening in a traffic stop of a tow truck in January 2011. The
stop ended with Cruz — allegedly a confidential informant for Huerta — and the
driver of the truck being released without the truck being searched, even
though it smelled like marijuana, the complaint says.
Records attached to the complaint show several calls were
made between Cruz's phone and Huerta's phone at the time of the traffic stop.
In the complaint, another detective told FBI agents that
informants are often stopped, and he would not ask for such a stop to be halted
because "additional charges on an informant would just make the individual
more motivated to work and be a better informant."
In his duty disability statement, Huerta wrote that he
received a call from Cruz's cousin during the traffic stop of the tow truck.
Huerta said he called the uniformed police officer doing the stop "to
advise the officer that the HIDTA (federal drug task force) unit was
investigating the driver of the tow truck for serious crimes."
Huerta's disability statement did not indicate whether he
told the uniformed officer what to do about the situation. He said he later
learned that two undercover officers arrived at the traffic stop, and they were
the ones who asked the uniformed officer to let the men in the tow truck go.
An informant later told FBI agents that Huerta was
protecting Cruz, helping him get out of traffic stops and providing inside
information.
Huerta said in his statement that the man gave unreliable
information to the FBI.
Cruz has pleaded guilty to drug counts in federal court. He
is scheduled to be sentenced next month.
A visit from the FBI
On May 1 of last year, Huerta said he was putting his trash
outside his house when he heard the sound of tires racing. A half-dozen FBI
agents and Milwaukee police officers rushed up to him. They searched his house
and took his department gun, badge and keys, his disability statement says.
Huerta was questioned at FBI offices for 21/2 hours and he
said he chose to answer questions, without calling a lawyer.
According to the indictment, it was during this interview
that Huerta told an FBI agent that "J.C. Jr." had never been his
informant while he worked at the Milwaukee Police Department and he had never
paid "J.C. Jr." for information.
"The statement and representation were false because,
as Huerta then and there knew, he paid J.C. Jr. $300 in official funds on or
about Sept. 16, 2010, for information provided by J.C. Jr. during an official
investigation," the indictment says.
Lying to a federal agent can bring a maximum penalty of five
years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Twitter: twitter.com/john_diedrich
Off-duty officer charged with drunken driving after accident in Queens
Officer Albert Robles, 37, was charged after he allegedly
crashed into another car 7:10 a.m. Sunday at 47th Ave. and 69th St. in
Woodside.
BY ROCCO PARASCANDOLA / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
An off-duty cop was charged with driving drunk after he got
into an accident in Queens, police said Monday.
Officer Albert Robles, 37, was charged with driving while
intoxicated.
He allegedly crashed into another car 7:10 a.m. Sunday at
47th Ave. and 69th St. in Woodside.
Police said there were no injuries.
On-duty UAPD officer charged with DUI
By Amanda Hurley
TUCSON, AZ (Tucson News Now) -
An on-duty UAPD officer was charged with a Super Extreme DUI
last night after running the wall on an I-10 frontage road last night.
Tucson Police Department responded to a single vehicle crash
on the Speedway Blvd frontage road at 9:38 p.m. last night. Sergeant John
McGrath was on duty at the time of the accident. Officers noticed possible
signs of intoxication.
They performed a DUI investigation and Sgt. McGrath was
arrested with multiple charges, including criminal damages and Super Extreme
DUI, which indicated a blood alcohol level over .20.The UAPD car was impounded for 30 days.
Protesters rally in Superior over controversial arrest caught on video
About two dozen people
rallied Wednesday in the Douglas County Courthouse to ask that criminal charges
be dropped against Superior resident Natasha Lancour, who was punched
repeatedly by a Superior police officer during an arrest earlier this month.
By: Maria Lockwood,
Superior Telegram
About two dozen
people rallied Wednesday in the Douglas County Courthouse to ask that criminal
charges be dropped against Superior resident Natasha Lancour, who was punched
repeatedly by a Superior police officer during an arrest earlier this month.
A video taken
from a squad car’s dashboard camera showing Lancour’s arrest by Officer George
Gothner has sparked controversy in the community about his use of force.
Gothner has been put on paid administrative leave and an investigation into the
incident has been turned over to the Wisconsin Department of Justice, according
to Superior Police Chief Charles LaGesse. The chief on Tuesday said the
department would have no further comment on the incident during the
investigation.
Claudie
Washington of Duluth, president of the local NAACP, did offer an assessment of
the events, saying Gothner approached the situation with hostility.
“Within seconds
after he arrived, the incident escalated into the beating, the slamming of the
face of Mrs. Lancour on the hood of the car and the subsequent beating her as
though she was a rag doll,” he said.
Gothner’s
behavior, Washington told those gathered at the courthouse, was deplorable.
Rogier Gregoire, co-chairman of Duluth’s Clayton Jackson McGhie Memorial
Committee, expressed a similar sentiment.
“We really want
to point out the fact that nobody should be allowed to punch a woman; a strong
man, over 200 pounds, punch a frail, 4-foot, 5-foot-tall woman, a young woman,
in the face for any reason whatsoever,” he said.
Lancour, 28,
faces one felony charge of battery of a peace officer and a misdemeanor
disorderly conduct charge in Douglas County Circuit Court stemming from the
incident.
“Along with the
investigation that is currently being led by the state of Wisconsin, we ask for
these trumped-up charges against Natasha Lancour to be dropped,” said Stephan
Witherspoon of Superior, a community activist and friend of Lancour’s. “It is
my hope that the Superior Police Department hold this officer accountable for
his actions and practice zero tolerance for this kind of behavior.”
Lancour herself
attended the event, with her mother and youngest child.
“I’m grateful to
walk in the door and see all the support of people in the community that came
out to support me,” she said. “I’m also excited that the state is taking over
the case. It’s not in closed department hands.”
It shows the
beginning of something new, Lancour said.
“People are
tired of being, having their rights violated, and the community’s stepping out
and speaking up. And I’m just one of many faces,” she said.
Also in the
crowd was Mike Almond, who works with the Superior Police Department as a
member of the Citizen Watch. When he first saw the video, the Superior man said
he was surprised and angered.
“At some point I
even thought, ‘Could this be my kids 10 years down the road?’” Almond said.
Working with
Community Policing Officer Bonnie Beste, Almond has set up child safety events
and is in the process of planning a basketball game between officers and community
residents of color to improve communication.
“We’re trying to
do stuff and I’m not going to stop doing stuff because some knucklehead, you
know, did something he wasn’t supposed to do or could have handled it
differently,” Almond said. “We all have bad days but you have to be accountable
for what you do.”
Event organizers
said one way to improve communication citywide would be to form a Citizen
Review Board like one the Duluth Police Department launched in 2012. Duluth
pastor Gabriel Green, the executive director of the Wolffe Cultural Center, is
a member of that board.
“My job is to
build a relationship with the Duluth Police Department and the citizens,” and
it’s working, he said. “Not only do I feel like we’re being listened to, I feel
like the officers are more conscientious of the decisions and choices that they
make, not because they are fearful from us, but because of oversight.”
LaGesse said
that Superior’s Police and Fire Commission serves the same purpose as Duluth’s
Citizen Review Board. The commission is a group of citizens selected by the
mayor and approved by City Council who have the power to hear complaints from
citizens and to bring charges against members of the police and fire
department.
Gregoire told
the crowd it was important to remember that there are many good police officers
who do a great job, a sentiment echoed by Lancour.
“This doesn’t
change my view on the police department,” she said. “It does change my view on
Gothner himself.”
The release of
the arrest video and events like Wednesday’s ensure the incident will not get
swept under the rug, Almond said, something he’s grateful for. Although he
feels things may get worse before they get better, the Superior man said he
hopes something good will come out of it.
“I want it to get
better,” said the father of four. “I’m going to keep trying. We gotta do
something.”
Currently,
Lancour’s case is set for a court appearance Friday. Her attorney, Rick Gondik,
said because of the video evidence that came to light after Gothner’s report was
written, the police department could push for dismissal of the charges against
her. During a Tuesday news conference, LaGesse indicated prosecution decisions
are in the hands of District Attorney Dan Blank. The district attorney was out
of the office Wednesday and unavailable for comment.
NOPD officer charged with malfeasance after investigators say she harassed romantic rival
By Naomi Martin, The Times-Picayune
A New Orleans
police officer has been suspended and charged with malfeasance
in office after investigators determined she used an official police database
to look up a woman's address for personal reasons, according to a department
news release.
Internal investigators found that Officer Carolyn
Dalton, a 16-year veteran, used the computer in her patrol car to look up the
home and business addresses of a woman who was dating a man Dalton was also
dating. Dalton used the database without having been assigned an investigation
that would require such a search, police spokeswoman Remi Braden said.
She is also accused of going to the woman's Chalmette
home, following her around in her car, demanding she stop dating the man and
threatening she would "get her," Braden said, noting Dalton is
believed to have used profanity.
The woman filed a complaint with the St. Bernard
Parish Sheriff's Office on Jan. 8, 2013, and the NOPD's Public Integrity Bureau
reassigned Dalton to desk duty that day. The woman secured a restraining order
against Dalton in St. Bernard Parish.
Dalton declined to provide a statement April 23 during
the department's internal criminal investigation, police said. She was read her
Miranda rights but not booked, records show. The investigation at that point
was handed over to the Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office, police said.
District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro's office notified
the Public Integrity Bureau on Jan. 6 that it had determined Dalton violated
state law by using the mobile computer system for unofficial business. The
office charged Dalton Jan. 16 in a bill of information for malfeasance in
office, a felony.
Public Integrity Bureau Chief Arlinda Westbrook said
in an interview Friday officers chose not to book Dalton immediately in April
because investigators were consulting with federal and state prosecutors to
make sure charges "would stick," and did not want to "barrel
in" only to end up with a weak case.
"My goal is to have a larger hammer and make sure
if I really have a criminal here or somebody who has serious issues that I, on
top of terminate them, I put them away and for a long time, if I can,"
Westbrook said.
Criminal District Court Judge Benedict Willard set
Dalton's arraignment for Thursday (Jan. 30), but records show she did not
attend, so it was re-set for Feb. 13.
Westbrook placed Dalton on emergency suspension
without pay Thursday. Dalton was most recently assigned to the NOPD's 3rd
District, which covers Gentilly, Lakeview, Lakeshore and parts of
Mid-City.
Dalton's attorney, Eric Hessler, of the Police
Association of New Orleans, said the St. Bernard Sheriff's Office investigated
the matter and did not find sufficient evidence of a crime to arrest her.
"I don't know if they didn't find (the woman) credible, or what
happened," he said.
Hessler said he could not comment further because he
was not sure what prosecutors are alleging Dalton has done. He said Dalton's
bill of information contained no details on the allegations other than the
malfeasance in office charge and the date the crime was believed to have been
committed.
"It's supposed to give you enough notice on what
you're being held accountable for," Hessler said. "It can't just say
'armed robbery' it has to say with a gun or knife. If it's theft, you have to
say the amount. This says literally nothing. ... I don't feel comfortable
commenting until I know what the DA's Office is actually alleging."
Chandler detective suspended for misusing records
Chandler detective suspended for misusing records
By Jim WalshThe Republic | azcentral.comFri Jan 31,
2014 11:33 PM
A Chandler police detective who violated policy by looking
up information about his wife’s lover in a police databank was suspended
without pay for four days, or one workweek, records show.
Garrett Dever told police investigating his actions that he
suspected “something was going on” between his wife, former Tempe Detective
Jessica Dever-Jakusz, and the man he looked up in the Arizona Criminal Justice
Information system databank.
Officers are not allowed under law to access the system for
personal use, but Dever admitted that’s exactly what he did.
“Dever said he kind of went into a ‘panic’ and ‘his world
got flipped’ ” as he attempted to learn more about the man, according to a
Chandler police internal investigation.
Dever-Jakusz, once a highly respected officer, resigned
after a suspect who was the target of a drug investigation revealed that he had
an affair with her.
The drug suspect — who was under investigation for selling
“Molly,” a street drug similar to Ecstasy, at Mill Avenue clubs — said he was
stunned when Dever-Jakusz told him she was an undercover officer and identified
two other undercover officers. Police halted the investigation for fear that
the officers’ safety was compromised.
Dever-Jakusz was indicted Nov. 30 on charges of hindering
prosecution and conflict of interest as a public official. Prosecutors have
filed notice that they intend to use her employment as a police officer as an
aggravating factor in sentencing if she is convicted, according to court
records.
“At the time of the commission of the offense(s), the
defendant was a public servant and the offense(s) involved conduct directly
related to the defendant’s office or employment,” according to a court document
filed by prosecutor Kalon Metz.
A judge granted her defense attorney additional time to file
a motion to remand the case to the grand jury for reconsideration of charges,
according to the court records.
Garrett Dever told Chandler police that he wanted to “see
what he looked like,” according to the internal investigation, and that he was
distraught and in a “cloud.”
Police concluded Dever accessed the drug suspect’s
driver’s-license photo and performed a warrant check from a computer on his
desk on Sept. 12. He said he did not use the information for any purpose and
deleted it.
A suspension notice said the investigation sustained two
counts of conduct unbecoming an officer. One related to violating a criminal
statute of the state or the U.S. The second was for using police electronic
systems for personal benefit.
Lyle Mann, executive director of the Arizona Peace Officers
Standards and Training Board, said that it’s not uncommon for officers to abuse
the system for personal reasons and that he has no problem with Dever’s
discipline.
“It certainly makes sense,” Mann said. “It sounds like it’s
in the parameters of normal discipline in such circumstances.”
Sgt. Joe Favazzo, a Chandler police spokesman, said that
Dever was emotionally overwhelmed and that the key to the case was that he took
no actions against the drug suspect.
“If they do something with the information, we will
terminate them and possibly prosecute,” Favazzo said.
Convicted ex-Flagler Beach cop will be on close watch in prison
Convicted ex-Flagler Beach cop will be on close watch
in prison
Nathaniel Juratovac glances around
the room during testimony in Judge James R. Clayton’s DeLand courtroom on
Tuesday May 20, 2008.
By Tony Holt
PALM COAST — It was the long hours
of isolation that shook Nathaniel David Juratovac.
At one point he was rushed to a
hospital, according to court records.
Administrators at the Clay County
Jail made sure to keep Juratovac away from the general population because he is
a former police officer married to an active St. Johns County sheriff’s deputy.
They did so to ensure his safety, according to jail officials.
Juratovac, a former Flagler Beach
police officer, was convicted Jan. 24 after pleading no contest to one count of
attempted manslaughter. He was sentenced to 51 months behind bars. Soon it will
be up to state prison officials to ensure his protection.
Because of his law enforcement
background, Juratovac is expected to be under close watch while he serves his
time in a state facility, said Misty Cash, a spokeswoman for the Florida
Department of Corrections.
“They will house him in an area that
is (closely) watched by the officers,” Cash said. “They will put him where the
institution feels he will be the most secure.”
The protective management protocols
vary when it comes to former police officers going to prison and those
decisions are made by administrators at the institution, and sometimes at the
highest levels in the agency in Tallahassee, Cash said.
For starters, protective measures
have to be requested by the inmate. On occasion, they don’t ask for it. When
they do ask for it, their situations are carefully evaluated before a decision
is made.
“It can sort of vary and run the
gamut,” Cash said of the possibilities. “If necessary, they could be in a
solitary cell where they’re not co-mingling with other inmates.”
The state has 55 correctional
institutions ranging from high-security facilities to prison camps.
‘COURTESY
HOLD’ took Juratovac to different jail
Originally charged with first-degree
attempted murder, Juratovac was held without bail. He was arrested for shooting
Flagler County firefighter Jared Parkey during a March 29, 2013, road rage
incident in St. Augustine Shores. He was arrested in St. Johns County, but was
transferred to the Clay County Jail as a “courtesy hold,” said Clay County
Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Mary Justino.
Some regional sheriff’s agencies
have an understanding with each other to step up and allow for such
arrangements when law enforcement officers are arrested.
“It’s not unusual for St. Johns to
ask us to do that,” said Justino.
The courts typically don’t get
involved with out-of-county courtesy holds, said Ludi Lelis, a spokeswoman with
the 7th Judicial Circuit.
“Those kinds of security matters are
dealt with at the jail level,” she said.
Dave Byron, a Volusia County
spokesman, said the inmate facility in Daytona Beach rarely receives requests
for courtesy holds and each one is weighed carefully. He also said he doesn’t
recall Volusia ever making a request to a neighboring county to house one of
its inmates.
“The more you move an inmate, the
greater the chance of a problem of security,” Byron said. “It’s also expensive
to hold an inmate. We have rarely, if ever, requested a courtesy hold. If we
were to do that, security and safety would be the reason to do that.”
County officials in Volusia make a
point not to allow for special treatment, said Byron. He recalled an incident
in 2010 involving rape suspect Adam Silver, a Daytona Beach firefighter who was
released from the jail and allowed to use a different exit of the facility to
avoid being seen by the media, who were waiting outside the front door. A shift
commander at the jail made the decision to let Silva use a different exit.
When word got out about what
happened, there were consequences.
“County Manager (Jim Dinneen) was
very upset about it,” Byron said.
Dinneen wrote a letter to the media
apologizing for the gaffe.
The incident also led to a change in
policy.
“All inmates are treated the same
way from the time they come in to the jail to the time they are released,” said
Byron.
wife:
Jail treatment was ‘less than humane’
About four weeks after he was
arrested last spring, Juratovac wrote a six-page letter to the judge begging
for bail.
“Your honor, I am housed in a 10x10
enclosed cell for 23 hours and 40 minutes a day,” Juratovac wrote. “I receive
30 minutes a week for exercise.”
In a letter to the same judge,
Juratovac’s wife also pleaded for his release, stating his treatment at the
jail was “less than humane.”
In the same letter, she disclosed
her husband had been admitted to Orange Park Medical Center after suffering a
medical condition.
Details were removed from the public
record, but his wife stated that the physician who treated her husband
concluded he had a pre-existing condition that required future follow-up visits
with a doctor.
In June, the judge in the case set
bail at $300,000, which was soon posted. Juratovac returned home and wore a
tracking device. Nine days ago, he was sentenced and back in jail.
As of Friday, Juratovac still had
not been transferred to a state prison. The date of his transfer could not be
released for security reasons, said Cash.
He will be credited with 84 days he
served in jail last year. With good behavior, Juratovac is expected to serve
less than three years.
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