The national epidemic of drunk and drugged up cops

Off-duty cop arrested for drunkenly driving wrong way on freeway
NYPD cop Ronald Holmes of Belmont was busted for smashing into five cars for his Saturday morning joyride, which sent one person to the hospital. The Brooklyn NYPD officer was suspended without pay, according to an official. Authorities said he was driving drunk.

Police report: Officer accused in a drunken house break/ Cops has since been fired.
A witness at a home in Warwick claims a Johnston police officer has a serious drug problem and that's why she came barging into his house.  Officer Marisa Ciccone was charged with assault and breaking and entering. According to the police report, a homeowner on Byron Boulevard told officers that Ciccone came into his house uninvited Monday and punched his niece in the face.
The witness said when Ciccone came in, she started yelling and swearing, "Where is my (expletive) money?" and "Where is my drugs?" while she was apparently looking for someone who had lived in the house.
The homeowner said he had kicked out the person Ciccone was apparently looking for.
The homeowner said Ciccone was highly intoxicated and kept repeating that she was going to get her gun and blow everybody away.
Ciccone then allegedly started throwing things off a dresser and punched the homeowner's niece in the face when the niece tried to protect her mother from Ciccone.
The homeowner told NBC 10 that Ciccone was looking for her drug partner.
According to the police report, he told officers that Ciccone has a serious cocaine problem, that his former roommate and Ciccone made drug deals, and that the former roommate was holding Ciccone's share of the profit and that's why she was looking for him.

Hughestown officer suspended indefinitely after federal drug arrest
Hughestown Police Officer Robert F. Evans Jr. has been suspended indefinitely without pay following his arrest last week on a federal drug charge, the borough council said Thursday. Federal agents charged Evans, of Moosic, after he allegedly sold the powerful painkillers oxycodone, Percocet and Vicodin out of his cruiser while in full uniform.

IMPD officer suspended after DUI arrest
MORGAN CO., Ind. (WISH) - An IMPD officer was suspended without pay Tuesday after he was arrested in Mooresville for driving while intoxicated. Officer Kevin Brown, 41, was arrested around 3 a.m. Tuesday morning. Brown was a patient of the St. Francis Hospital emergency room for an injury to the right hand he received during a bar fight.While at the hospital, Brown admitted he was drinking alcoholic beverages Monday night and said he had seven beers.

Officer charged with DWI on desk duties
Sergio Reyes a 16-year veteran Laredo police officer has been assigned to desk duties following his suspected drunk driving arrest early Sunday in the Del Mar Hills Area C neighborhood, according to authorities. He’s been charged with driving while intoxicated.

Soddy Daisy Officer Suspended After Early Morning Drunken Road Rage Run In
Soddy Daisy Police Officer Ryan Patterson has been suspended in connection with an early morning road rage incident that led to gunfire and a female fight. He is on administrative leave without pay pending an internal investigation, Chief Phillip Hambrick said. The sheriff's office said the incident shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday involved Officer Patterson, who had been to a birthday celebration at Charlie's Lounge with two women, Carrie M. Rogers and Bridget Frederick. Deputy William Ben Johnson said he determined that Officer Patterson had been drinking but was not too intoxicated to drive after he was given field sobriety tests. Ms. Frederick was too drunk to give a statement.

3 Minneapolis officers investigated for bar fight
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Days after responding to allegations that two off-duty white Minneapolis police officers used profanity and racial slurs. The department is investigating a bar fight involving three other off-duty white Minneapolis officers in Apple Valley last November. Two of the officers, Christopher John Bennett and William C. Woodis, pleaded guilty in June to charges of disorderly conduct in Dakota County.Apple Valley police initially cited Bennett, Woodis and another Minneapolis officer, Andrew R. Allen, for assault, damage to property and disorderly conduct following the fight at Bogart's Place on Nov. 19, 2012. After the plea agreement by Bennett and Woodis, the other charges were dismissed.
Tyrone Franson, Rodney Spann, Michael Spann and Lovell Gamer, who are black, told Apple Valley police that a group of white men glared at them when they entered the bar that evening. Franson said when he and a friend went out to the patio to smoke, at least four men followed them and told them they shouldn't be at the bar, according to the incident report.
"My little brother was left inside with the gentlemen," Franson said. "And they started hard mugging him. I told him to come outside with us. I came outside [and] as he came outside the four gentlemen followed him outside. The next thing I know all hell broke loose."
Franson said the Minneapolis officers told him and the other black men "You ain't supposed to be here. Your kind ain't welcome. Get out of here, you don't belong here."
The four men told police that when they tried to leave, Woodis grabbed Michael Spann and started hitting him. They told police that a group of about eight white men started punching and kicking Michael Spann. Franson said his group didn't fight back and that Woodis also punched Rodney Spann when he tried to break up the fight.

Haverhill cops blame West Newbury officers for ex-trooper avoiding arrest
HAVERHILL — Legal arguments by two Haverhill police officers — Lt. William Leeman and patrolman Christopher Pagliuca —fighting suspensions for giving special treatment to an ex-state trooper show the officers blame West Newbury police for not charging him with drunken driving.
The Haverhill officers were suspended without pay for ten and five days, respectively, for violating police rules and ethical standards, as well as unsatisfactory performance. Harry Miller, another Haverhill officer at the scene of the crash involving the retired trooper, previously agreed not to fight his 10-day suspension. He accepted a demotion from sergeant to patrolman to save his job.
According to the legal briefs, here’s what the Haverhill officers said happened:
Pagliuca, the first Haverhill officer on the scene of the Mach 2012 crash, said West Newbury and Merrimac police officers were already investigating the accident near the Rocks Village Bridge involving former state trooper Charles Noyes when Pagliuca arrived at the scene. Noyes, who lives in Haverhill, was a lieutenant colonel with the State Police when he retired in 2006.
Police reports show West Newbury Sergeant Daniel Cena was first on the scene, that he spoke to Noyes through the driver’s side window of his vehicle, and that he told other officers that Noyes was intoxicated. Reports said Cena asked Noyes to take a field sobriety test, but that Noyes refused.
Miller and Pagliuca testified at a local Civil Service hearing that they believed Cena was in charge of the scene. Pagliuca testified that Cena told him that he smelled “booze” on Noyes.
Miller testified that he said to Pagliuca, “What do you think?” Pagliuca responded that Noyes “cannot stand up, his eyes are glassy, and I think he is intoxicated.”
Miller then went back to Cena and asked him, “So are you charging him with leaving the scene and OUI?” Cena responded, “No, I am charging him with leaving the scene, but not OUI.” Miller then said, “Why aren’t you charging him with OUI if you are charging him with leaving the scene?” Cena responded, “My chief and the district attorney will get mad at me.”
Miller then called Leeman at the Haverhill Police Station and told him what was happening at the scene. Leeman was the senior Haverhill officer on duty at the time.
While they were deciding what course of action to take, Miller said Noyes started speaking to him about how they all work the same job and that if this was the good old days, the officers would just let him go.
At that point, Miller said he told Noyes, “If I get the green light to charge you, you are getting charged.”
A few moments elapsed and then Miller called Leeman back. Leeman told Miller that he researched case law, but could not find any case that would justify Haverhill officers charging Noyes with drunken driving based on the facts presented to him by Miller.
Miller then discussed with Cena which department was going to charge Noyes. It was at the point that Miller realized that Noyes was not going to be arrested nor charged with drunken driving.
Eventually, Noyes agreed to get into an ambulance and go to the hospital to be checked out.
The legal brief goes on to describe a tense discussion between Cena and Noyes as Noyes boarded the ambulance.
“It was at this point that Cena began yelling at Noyes,” the brief said.
It went on to explain what happened next.
Cena accused Noyes of giving officers the run-around, claiming they could not prove Noyes was the operator of automobile.
“Are you really going to play this (expletive) game,” Cena asked Noyes. “You are lucky you made it to Haverhill because if you didn’t you’d be going to jail right now.”
The brief also said Cena told Noyes that he was almost killed by a drunken driver in a previous incident and that Noyes’ “failure to take ownership of what happened was ridiculous.”
In its decision to uphold the suspensions of the Haverhill officers, Civil Service chairman Christopher Bowman accused Noyes of lying to police at the scene of the accident as well as to the commission at a disciplinary hearing for the two Haverhill officers earlier this year. Bowman said Noyes’ testimony to the commission was “wildly unbelievable and tarnishes the image of the Massachusetts State Police.”
The rest of the 41 page legal brief goes on to document how police handled the subsequent investigation and testimony at the Civil Service hearing.
In a statement on the Civil Service Commission’s recent decision to uphold the city’s decision to suspend Leeman and Pagliuca, the police patrolman’s union claimed the commission failed to consider key factual and legal issues in the case.
“The true issue before the commission was not whether Charles Noyes was actually intoxicated, which is what one may assume after reading the decision, it was whether Officer Pagliuca and Lieutenant Leeman had violated their duties as police officers. They did not,” the statement reads, in part.
“Perhaps the most important overlooked fact was West Newbury Sergeant Daniel Cena’s role in how this matter was handled,’’ the statement continues. “Sergeant Cena did have the authority to lawfully summons Noyes for operating under the influence but failed to do so. In fact, Worcester County Assistant District Attorney John Hartmayer told the city during their investigation of this matter that “if Mr. Noyes was to be charged with OUI, the charge should have been brought by West Newbury.
“Unfortunately, that fact appears nowhere in the city’s nor the commission’s decisions and, instead, unjustified blame is placed on Officer Pagliuca and Lieutenant Leeman as a means of addressing the public’s legitimate concerns with how this matter was handled as a whole,” the statement says.
According to police reports, Noyes crashed his Cadillac Escalade in West Newbury on March 30, 2012, then kept driving with his air bags deployed until police found him in the travel lane just over the Haverhill line. The crash snapped a utility pole on Route 113 in West Newbury, cutting power to the surrounding area for almost 11 hours.
An internal Haverhill police investigation concluded that Noyes was given special treatment by West Newbury and Haverhill police officers due to his previous state police position, and that officers acted to cover up their actions in investigating the incident.