Sentencing delayed for ex-N.O. cop who burned body


NEW ORLEANS —A federal judge has agreed to postpone a resentencing hearing for a former New Orleans police officer who was convicted of burning the body of a man who was shot and killed by another officer following Hurricane Katrina.
Two former New Orleans police officers have asked a federal appeals court to throw out their convictions on charges stemming from the fatal shooting of a man whose burned body turned up in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath.
A federal appeals court has scheduled a hearing for the case against three former New Orleans police officers convicted of charges stemming from a man's fatal shooting and the burning of his body in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath.
Gregory McRae's July 25 sentencing was moved Wednesday to Jan. 9, 2014, at the request of his attorney, Frank DeSalvo. The lawyer argued McRae should be sentenced after the December 2013 retrial of former officer David Warren, who shot and killed 31-year-old Henry Glover outside a police substation less than a week after the 2005 storm.
U.S. District Judge Lance Africk sentenced McRae to more than 17 years in prison before an appeals court reversed one of his convictions last year and ordered him to be resentenced for his remaining convictions.
City settles lawsuit for $20,000 in case of cop convicted of sex with minor
City settles lawsuit for $20,000 in case of cop convicted of sex with minor Nogales International  | 0 comments
A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit against the City of Nogales after it agreed to pay $20,000 to the victim of a sex crime by former Nogales Police Office Mariano Garibay.
Garibay was sentenced to 2.25 years in state prison in February 2011 after pleading guilty to three of 11 counts of sexual conduct with a minor. The conviction stemmed from a sexual relationship he had with a 16-year-old member of NPD’s Explorer program. He was 28 at the time.
The lawsuit filed by attorneys James D’Antonio and Luis Parra in November 2012 alleged negligence and intentional harm, and said the girl had sustained and would continue to sustain healthcare expenses as a result of Garibay’s actions. The complaint also alleged that she had suffered physical injury, pain, suffering, emotional distress and a loss of enjoyment of life.
City Attorney Jose Luis Machado confirmed that the city had agreed to settle the lawsuit for $20,000, and that the sum would be covered by the city’s insurance.
Department of Correction records show that Garibay was released from prison on Jan. 14, 2013.