We called the Fairfax County police for help....the punks they sent threatened to arrest us. One cop tells my wife that if she keeps crying he'll arrest her and the other cop, La Forge or something, says to me "You call the police this what you get" I said that was wrong and he said "Go ahead, say more fuck'n thing prick" and I thought "Well if you insist".
Former Mission cop arrested for taking cash to "fix cases"
A former Mission police officer found himself on the other side of the law after being accused of taking bribes in order to "fix" court cases.
Hidalgo County Sheriff's Office deputies arrested 40-year-old Carlos Celedon on state jail felony theft charges on Friday evenving.
Investigators told Action 4 News that the former Mission Police Department corporal is accused of taking bribes on at least two occsasion.
Court records obtained by Action 4 News show that Celedon no longer worked with the police department but told both victims that he had "connections" in the courts.
One victim told deputies that he paid Celedon $1,582 to make a prior DWI and a traffic ticket "go away" but that never happened.
Another victim told deputies that he paid Celedon $3,546 to expunge his three DWI's from his criminal record.
Deputies reported the man came forward because Celedon refused to give him his money back after he failed to deliver what he promised.
Investigators reported that Celedon once worked for the Mission Police Department but was convicted on theft charges in a 2010 case where he promised to deliver large screen televisions and other items for discount prices but never delivered.
Celedon appeared before Hidalgo County Justice of the Peace Ismael "Melo" Ochoa where he was issued $15,000 in bonds.
Former Philadelphia police officer convicted of corruption
PHILADELPHIA - December 3, 2013
(WPVI) -- A 23-year veteran of the Philadelphia Police force was found guilty
Monday of interfering with a federal drug investigation.
52-year-old Rafael Cordero of
Philadelphia was convicted by a federal jury for passing along sensitive
information about a drug investigation to his half-brother, David Garcia, who
is an alleged member of the Christian Serrano/Edwin Medina Drug Trafficking
Organizations.
Prosecutors say Cordero tipped
Garcia off to a surveillance camera installed by the DEA to monitor drug
related activities at a garage, located at 538 East Indiana Street in
Philadelphia.
In addition, when the FBI and DEA
executed search warrants at several locations, including the garage, Cordero
showed up at the locations without having any official reason to be there -
allegedly informed of the raids by his half-brother. Authorities found him
looking in the windows of the garage, and when asked what he was doing, Cordero
allegedly lied about his reasons for being there, and even offered to assist in
the search.
Cordero then called Garcia
immediately after leaving the garage to share with him details about the
search. In a subsequent phone call Cordero allegedly told Garcia, "When
you get home take my picture down."
Garcia also removed a recording that
law enforcement missed during the search which captured footage of Cordero at
the garage at the time of the search. Prosecutors say Cordero never informed
law enforcement of the video tape's existence.
In addition, prosecutors say that
between January and July of 2011, David Garcia was permitted to store money at
Cordero's home, which Cordero apparently knew were the proceeds of illegal drug
sales. After DEA agents arrested David Garcia on July 27, 2011, Cordero
allegedly had his brother, E.C., take the money, thereby obstructing justice.
Cordero faces a maximum possible
sentence of 20 years in prison. A sentencing date has not yet been set.
longtime Chicago police lieutenant pleads guilty
By Jason Meisner, Chicago
Tribune reporter
December 6, 2013
A former longtime Chicago
police lieutenant pleaded guilty Thursday in connection with a mortgage fraud
scheme involving a Northwest Side real estate mogul and a crooked former
suburban police chief.
Erroll Davis, 52, choked up as
he entered his guilty plea in federal court to one count of making false
statements in a tax return. Prosecutors told U.S. District Judge Samuel Der-Yeghiayan
that Davis faces 12 to 18 months in prison under federal sentencing guidelines
but that they would recommend a lighter sentence if he continues to cooperate.
Davis, a 27-year police veteran who spent years with the marine unit, resigned
from the department after the charges were announced last month.
Robert Michael, 62, a former
CEO of the now-defunct Citizens Bank and Trust, has pleaded not guilty to
charges he hoodwinked his own bank into illegally lending $650,000 to Davis for
the fraudulent purchase of an apartment building in the South Chicago
neighborhood.
The building was actually owned
by Regina Evans, the former police chief of Country Club Hills, who owed
Michael's bank and realty company more than $300,000 in mortgage payments on
the building and rent for a nightclub. But the bank loan instead went to pay
off Evans' debt, and Davis was given a $30,000 check for his troubles,
according to court records.
Davis admitted in his plea
agreement he lied on the loan application and failed to claim the $30,000 as
income on his 2008 tax return. Evans, who was not charged, is scheduled to be
sentenced next week in a separate case for stealing state grant money.
police officer arrested on child sexual assault charges
A former Rio Grande City Police
Officer has found himself on the other side of the law.
Rodolfo Hinojosa was arrested
this morning on two charges of sexual assault of a child.
Hinojosa appeared before Judge
Zarrate around 7:00 p.m. and his bond was set at $200,000 for the two counts.
The case is currently
investigated by the Starr County District Attorney’s office and the Texas
Rangers.
City Manager Matt Ruszczak told
the McAllen Monitor that Hinojosa resigned from the department on November 21
and had been working with the department since 2006.
Investigators told Action 4
News that Hinojosa worked as a supervisor and had sexual contact with a teenage
girl who had enrolled in the police department's Explorer program.
Coroner Testimony Crushes Cop Lawyer Claims That Kelly Thomas Killed Himself
By R. Scott Moxley
Four days into the sensational
Kelly Thomas murder trial, it's clear that defense lawyers for two Fullerton
cops accused of criminal conduct in the gory July 2011 police killing will rely
largely on half-truths, complete distortions and semi-cleverly spun nonsense to
win.
I reported after the Dec. 2
opening statements that John Barnett and Michael Schwartz, lawyers for Manuel
Ramos and Jay Cicinelli, declared that a severe, five-minute attack by a group
of cops was not even a minor factor in the death of the unarmed, comparatively
small, homeless man.
As if somehow exculpatory for
their clients, Barnett and Schwartz proclaim that Thomas (blood-covered,
unconscious and horrifically mauled) still had a pulse at the immediate
conclusion of the beating.
Though the defense claims
Thomas killed himself during the attack by overexerting an enlarged heart and
suffering a heart attack, the coroner who performed the autopsy ruled that out
as a possibility during today's testimony.
"He died with an enlarged
heart," said Dr. Aruna Singhania. "But he didn't die because of an
enlarged heart."
Singhania directly attributed
the cause of death to what everyone but apologists for police brutality knows:
The length and severity of the unnecessary physical attack--including numerous
crushing blows to his face--restricted Thomas' oxygen supply.
Orange County District Attorney
Tony Rackauckas quickly followed up, asking that at the very time Thomas needed
more oxygen during the incident, was his supply "getting less and
depleted"?
"That's correct," the
veteran coroner replied.
Digital audio records made by
police at the scene document the 37-year-old Thomas repeatedly and with
ever-increasing exasperation telling the much-heavier officers pummeling him
with punches, kicks, baton slams, stomps and Taser gun blasts, "I can't
breathe."
The defense team has tried to
use the declarations to, at best, underscore their laughable assertion that
Thomas' complaints of pain at the scene had no merit, and, at worse, to mock the
dead man's statement as a lie.
They've even secured testimony
that if a person can say he can't breathe, then he's breathing.
But to view Thomas' statement
without context is as absurd as holding someone accountable for the literal
meaning of the following type of utterances: "I lost my head,"
"You crack me up," "I have a chip on my shoulder" and
"Lend me your ear."
Under an attack that would kill
him, Thomas voiced an urgent expression that was ignored by the cops. He wasn't
uttering a lie. He was communicating that he felt the horrific sensation of
losing critical oxygen.
Guess what, folks?
Despite the defense team's
premature freeze-framing of events to when Thomas was alive, he ultimately fell
unconscious while hog-tied at the feet of joke-cracking cops, who rendered no
aid and fretted about minor scratches they suffered.
Shortly thereafter, the
man--who'd committed no crime and certainly no act to justify his execution by
the Fullerton Police Department--lost his breath forever.
During the three-minute
ambulance trip to a hospital trauma unit, Thomas' heart stopped beating, and
according to paramedics, he flatlined on the electrocardiogram.
(During the preliminary hearing phase in the
case, Barnett and Schwartz strongly implied that Thomas might have died because
of medical incompetence after he'd been moved from the cops.)
Over the objections of the
defense before the noon recess, Rackauckas showed the jury multiple autopsy
photographs of a badly beaten corpse.
The defense team will work to
undermine Dr. Singhania's findings beginning this afternoon and will likely
continue to press its claim that Rackauckas coached the coroner on the cause of
death, an assertion Singhania testified is groundless.
Officer suspended after video surfaces of alleged abuse
CALIFORNIA, Pa. —
A police chief in Washington
County has suspended one of his officers after he viewed surveillance video
allegedly showing the officer abusing a handcuffed suspect.
California Boro Police Chief Rick
Encapera said he felt he had to report the actions of Officer Justin Shultz.
According to Encapera, the
video showed Shultz assaulting a handcuffed man, Adam Logan, who was simply
sitting on a bench after getting arrested for an alleged purse snatching.
“He grabbed the detainee, shook
him, threw him against the wall and then the floor. You could tell by the guy’s
face he caused substantial pain,” Encapera said.
Encapera said in his police
report that Shultz, 29, defended his actions.
“He said he was attempting to
calm down a prisoner who was unruly and aggressive. I didn’t see that in the
video,” Encapera said. “I couldn’t live with myself if I let this go without
any action.”
Channel 11’s Cara Sapida
reported Shultz has been placed on leave while the district attorney’s office
investigates.
Shultz was previously placed on
leave in May after a number of complaints were filed against him for using
excessive force.
Cop punished for drunken behavior at Seahawks game in trouble again
Posted by John de Leon
A Bellevue police officer who
was disciplined for his drunken off-duty behavior at Seattle Seahawks game in
September 2012 has been charged with misdemeanor drunk driving in an incident
in which a fellow Bellevue officer stopped him for erratic driving and then
allowed him to go home with a relative.
The officer who was pulled over
has been identified as Andrew Hanke.
Bellevue police say on Nov. 20,
an unidentified off-duty Bellevue police officer was driving home in his patrol
car when he stopped a car on Interstate 90 near Issaquah to investigate the
driver for possible DUI. The driver of the vehicle that was pulled over was
Hanke, according to Bellevue city Prosecutor Lynn Moberly, who filed the DUI
charge Thursday in King County District Court in Issaquah.
The off-duty officer did not
arrest Hanke and instead allowed him to be driven home by a relative, police
said.
The investigating officer
notified a supervisor of the incident.
The following morning, Bellevue
police Chief Linda Pillo was notified of the incident and Hanke was immediately
placed on administrative leave, said Bellevue police public information Officer
Seth Tyler. The department has also
opened an internal investigation into the officer who stopped Hanke but did not
arrest him.
“While officers are allowed
some discretion during a traffic stop, the officer’s decision in this case not
to make an arrest is undergoing a thorough and objective internal
investigation. That investigation will determine whether the on-duty officer
used poor judgment and/or failed to perform their duties,” police said in a
news release.
Police say details of the
internal investigations will not be released until they are completed.
“I expect our officers to abide
by our guiding principles of respect, accountability, integrity and service,
and to abide by the laws of the state of Washington both on and off duty,”
Pillo said in a statement. “If these allegations are sustained, the involved
officers will be held accountable for their actions.”
Hanke was one of two Bellevue
officers punished last year for their off-duty behavior at a Seahawks game,
when they drunkenly confronted a female Seattle police officer and got into a
profanity-laced altercation with a fan and his family.
During the investigation into
that incident, which was first reported by The Seattle Times, Hanke was
suspended for 30 days without pay and removed from the Bomb Squad. Hanke had
told investigators that he was too drunk to remember driving home to Snoqualmie
from CenturyLink Field.
Officer Charged with Stealing Money
MAYSVILLE, Ky. (WKRC) -- A Maysville
police officer is now charged with stealing money from a federal drug task
force. A grand jury today indicted Timothy Fegan on charges of stealing from
the Buffalo Trace-Gateway Narcotics task force.
It's based in Maysville and investigates drug crimes in northern and
eastern Kentucky counties.
The 52-year-old Fegan served as
executive director of the task force for two-and-a-half years. According to the indictment, Fegan took money
agents seized during drug raids and money task force members kept on hand for
controlled drug buys.
Fegan faces up to ten years in
prison and a fine of up to 250,000 dollars.
Officer Charged with Stealing Money
MAYSVILLE, Ky. (WKRC) -- A Maysville
police officer is now charged with stealing money from a federal drug task
force. A grand jury today indicted Timothy Fegan on charges of stealing from
the Buffalo Trace-Gateway Narcotics task force.
It's based in Maysville and investigates drug crimes in northern and
eastern Kentucky counties.
The 52-year-old Fegan served as
executive director of the task force for two-and-a-half years. According to the indictment, Fegan took money
agents seized during drug raids and money task force members kept on hand for
controlled drug buys.
Fegan faces up to ten years in
prison and a fine of up to 250,000 dollars.
Fort Wayne officer charged with raping woman
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) —
Prosecutors have filed rape charges against a Fort Wayne police officer, saying
he attacked a woman he had arrested for drunken driving.
Allen County prosecutors added
the two counts of rape on Thursday to the charges against Officer Mark Rogers.
He had first been charged in September sexual and official misconduct.
The Journal Gazette reports
(http://bit.ly/1bmNqkM ) the new charges allege Rogers stopped the woman and
took her to a hospital for treatment because of her high level of intoxication.
Prosecutors say that after she was release from the hospital Roger took her to
a city park and had sex with her.
Defense attorney David Zent
didn't immediately return a telephone message from The Associated Press seeking
comment.
Internal affairs questions chief
Police Chief John Tedesco was
questioned by the police department's internal affairs unit Monday afternoon,
city officials confirmed Tuesday.
Tedesco was interviewed about a
letter he sent to a person who filed a complaint regarding alleged police
brutality. Tedesco said in the letter that the complaint was upheld by the
internal affairs investigation.
Mayor Lou Rosamilia said
Tedesco faced internal affairs after he had postponed the meeting several
times.
"I will have the findings
after it's over," Rosamilia said.
Tedesco is the city's first
police chief to be the target of an internal affairs probe.
Deputy Chief Richard McAvoy and
Capt. Terrance Buchanan of internal affairs met with Tedesco for about 30
minutes in an office that was cordoned off.
Tedesco had said the media were
invited to attend his interview, but no reporters were present.
The chief faces the
investigation after a complaint was filed saying that the letter he sent was
written before the officer under investigation had exhausted the appeals
process.
Tedesco's questioning came as
city officials learned that the chief asked the City Council to investigate the
police department's operations and internal affairs unit under Police
Commissioner Anthony Magnetto.
Tedesco also has called for the
FBI to investigate the department's internal affairs cases.
The City Council and members of
Rosamilia's administration received an eight-page letter Friday night from
Tedesco's attorney outlining the need for the inquiry.
"Recent events have again
made clear the need for a properly trained and autonomous ISB (Inspectional
Services Bureau) officer who remains free from the influence of any outside
sources, especially the PBA," wrote Brian Premo, Tedesco's lawyer.
Premo's letter alleged that
Buchanan is influenced by the Troy Police Benevolent Association due to having
received off-hours employment through the union.
Rosamilia said the latest
letter from Tedesco, which he reviewed Monday, is "the same thing."
He called the chief's actions a distraction to the police department.
Premo's letter was widely
circulated throughout the police department Monday.
Since Magnetto was appointed
earlier this year, Tedesco has been pushed aside in managing the police
department. Magnetto has moved ahead with implementing programs, such as school
resource officers, that Rosamilia promised he would deliver if elected mayor.
Premo's letter attacks
Magnetto's appointment as illegal and highlights the influence that the Troy
Police Benevolent Association has in the department.
"Chief Tedesco firmly
believes that a zero-tolerance policy against egregious misconduct must be
strictly enforced to prevent future incidents of brutality and that his other
'best practices' and policies must be reinstated for effective and efficient
management of the Police Bureau," Premo wrote.
Columbus Settles Police Misconduct Case
BY JIM LETIZIA
Columbus City Council last night
approved a 35 thousand dollar legal settlement with a man whose constitutional
rights were violated by Columbus police.
Earlier this year, a three
judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati reversed a
judge's decision to dismiss a civil rights lawsuit filed in 2008 by Tremaine
Nelms against the city and two police officers. The panel said it appears the
officers violated Nelms' constitutional right against unreasonable search and
seizure. Nelms claimed the officers and his North side apartment complex
manager entered and searched his apartment unlawfully and without reason. City
attorney Rick Pfeffier.
Jury chosen for ex-officer in Katrina shooting
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Opening
statements are set to begin Wednesday in the retrial of a former New Orleans
policeman who shot and killed a man four days after Hurricane Katrina.
David Warren is charged with
violating 31-year-old Henry Glover's civil rights and with using a weapon in a
violent crime.
Warren was guarding a police
substation from a second-floor balcony when he shot Glover in 2005. He
testified that he thought Glover had a gun. He was convicted of manslaughter in
2010, but a federal appeals court overturned the conviction.
The court ruled he should have
been tried separately from officers charged in a cover-up designed to make
Glover's shooting appear justified.
Suit spotlights AC police brutality complaints
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — A
federal judge is raising questions about the Atlantic City police department's
handling of brutality complaints against its officers.
U.S. District Judge Joel
Schneider in Camden is presiding over a 2010 excessive-force lawsuit against
two Atlantic City officers who have faced nearly 80 complaints between them.
None has been upheld by the department's internal affairs.
The city previously provided
summaries of the complaints against the officers, Sgt. Frank Timek and Officer
Sterling Wheaten. But the judge has ordered the city to turn over the full
internal affairs reports, The Press of Atlantic City (http://bit.ly/18izzKU )
reported.
The judge said the reports are
needed to determine if the city has been, as alleged, "deliberately
indifferent to the violent propensities of its police officers."
He noted that no complaints
against Timek and Wheaten were ever upheld in internal affairs investigations
even though the two "regularly appear in this court as defendants ... in
excessive force cases, several of which are remarkably similar to the instant
one."
Beyond the allegations made
against the two officers, Schneider noted, not one of hundreds of excessive
force complaints against any city police has been upheld through internal
review.
The city police union's
president, Paul Barbere, said it's wrong to judge the officers by the number of
complaints received. He called such complaints an occupational hazard for
officers and the work of defendants looking to improve their chances in court.
In the case now in federal
court, Matthew Groark alleges that he and his girlfriend were at a nightclub at
Caesars Atlantic City on Aug. 7, 2010, when they approached Wheaten and Timek,
who were working a security detail there, for assistance.
When the officers shined a
light in the couples' eyes, Groark said, he asked why and then alleges he was
thrown down the stairs, punched and kneed by the officers. He alleges the
attack was unprovoked, and that he then was charged with obstruction of
justice, resisting arrest and aggravated assault.
Court records show Groark has
no criminal record and that the 2010 charges were dismissed.
Timek had 52 complaints filed
against him over 11 years, and Wheaten had 26 over nearly four years, the
summaries of the cases against them showed.
Las Vegas police officer indicted for sexual harassment
By FRANCIS McCABE
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
A Las Vegas police officer was
indicted by a grand jury on charges he sexually intimidated and harassed women
he met on duty, prosecutors said Friday.
Solomon Coleman faces two
counts each of oppression under color of law and gross lewdness and one count
each of indecent exposure and taking pictures of a person’s private area, all
gross misdemeanors.
Authorities said Coleman
developed a pattern of starting “relationships” with women he met at crime scenes
and on routine calls, using his authority as an officer to gain their trust.
Coleman’s misdeeds were
uncovered in June after a woman complained about his behavior. The
Review-Journal does not publish the names of alleged sex crime victims.
After other officers took her
boyfriend to jail following a domestic disturbance, Coleman stayed behind.
A female officer had already
taken photos of bruises on her neck, arms and back, but Coleman said he also
needed to “check for bruises on her ass,” according to a police report.
The woman told Coleman she
didn’t have bruises there, but he “insisted on checking anyway,” the report
said. She said Coleman pulled down her shorts and underwear to her knees and
asked her to bend over on the bed.
The woman said Coleman stayed
behind to give her paperwork, but then followed her into her bedroom to help
her look for missing house keys.
She felt forced to comply when
Coleman pulled down her pants.
At one point, her son walked
into the bedroom before being ushered out by the officer.
Coleman later exposed himself
to her in her bathroom.
When the officer came back
after his shift, the woman saw him through the blinds but wouldn’t open the
door, she said.
Detectives checked Coleman’s
patrol log, which showed the officer left her home 36 minutes after his fellow
officers.
After the first complaint,
investigators dug through Coleman’s cellphone records and patrol logs. They
found another victim, but she was not even aware of what happened.
Coleman used his phone to
record more than 20 minutes of a personal sex video the woman had stored on her
phone, the report said. The video had been on Coleman’s phone for a year when
detectives found it.
Coleman’s defense lawyer Josh
Tomsheck declined to comment.
Coleman remains on house arrest
pending an arraignment hearing set for Jan. 16 before Judge Valorie Vega.
Police officers suspended for cursing at a school bus full of children
DALTON, Ga. (WXIA) -- Two
Dalton police officers were suspended for cursing at a bus full of children,
and the entire incident was captured on video.
It began when a stressed out
bus driver pulled over and warned students she would call police if the
students on board didn't quiet down. Two Dalton police officers responded.
"You want to act like a
bunch of hellions and she can't f****** focus on what she's doing,"
Officer John Gurrieri can be heard saying to the students.
Officer Steven Collins talked
to one student off the bus, using one swear word. Officer John Gurrieri talked
to the rest of the kids, cursing multiple times.
"You want to act like
crazy a**holes, do it at home," Gurrieri is heard saying on the school bus
video.
The Dalton Police Chief Jason
Parker calls this a "serious mistake of judgement."
Officer who shot at van with kids is suspended
Updated: Friday, December 6
2013, 04:57 PM CST
A New Mexico police officer is
off the job for now -- after shooting at a minivan full of kids. This is the
dashcam video that sparked outrage around the world. Police say the chaos
started when officers pulled over a woman for speeding. They say she wasn't
cooperative and when she began driving away an officer opened fire. New Mexico
police say the officer was trying to shoot at the tires. For now he has been
suspended with pay pending a disciplinary investigation
Police: Delayed death notification an 'oversight'
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — New
Haven police say the three-day delay in releasing information about the death of
a Yale professor while in detention was an oversight.
Police announced last Wednesday
that Samuel See had been found unresponsive in his cell at the detention
facility the previous Sunday.
Assistant Chief Archie Generoso
tells the New Haven Register that the delay was not sinister, but an oversight.
He said the announcement would
likely have been made on Nov. 25, the day after See's death. But police and
other authorities were preoccupied that day with an anonymous report of a
gunman that prompted a lockdown at Yale University.
The 34-year-old See was an
assistant professor of English and American studies and was on leave.
He had been charged with
violating a protective order, threatening and interfering with police.
Police union head suspended over bee-sting death
By Shawn Regan
sregan@eagletribune.com
HAVERHILL — The patrolman's
union president has been suspended for 15 days without pay for mishandling a
call from an elderly woman who was concerned about her son — a 57-year-old
Silsby Farm beekeeper found dead from bee stings.
Police Chief Alan DeNaro
previously suspended Patrolman Rick Welch for five days without pay and
recommended that Mayor James Fiorentini suspend the officer without pay for
another 175 days. A five-day suspension is the maximum the chief can impose on
his own.
In his Dec. 3 ruling, the mayor
upheld DeNaro's original five-day suspension and added 10 more for a total of
15 suspension days. Fiorentini said he relied on Welch's clean record in
rejecting DeNaro's recommendation to suspend the officer for six months.
The case focuses on Welch's
decision not to send a patrol car to check on beekeeper Alan Schwartz, after
his mother called police at 2 a.m. on June 11 to report that her son did not
come home that night and was not answering his cell phone.
Welch took the mother's call,
which was made to the Police Department's non-emergency line, while he was
working in the public safety dispatch center.
Police said Ina Schwartz told
Welch that her son was working with bees, that she feared for his safety, and
that she wanted Welch to send an officer to check on him.
Instead of dispatching a
cruiser to the farm on Salem Street in Bradford, Welch sent an email-style
message to the patrolman assigned to patrol that part of the city that night.
Welch told him to be on the lookout "during his travels" for
Schwartz's white Tacoma truck, according to the message.
But Welch did not include other
information provided by the caller, such as her son's last known location at
the end of the dirt road at the farm. Schwartz was found dead by Marlene
Stasinos, a Silsby Farm caretaker, around 8 a.m. six hours after the mother
called police.
Stasinos found the body after
she received a phone call that morning from Schwartz's mother. The state
medical examiner ruled that Schwartz died from an allergic reaction to bee
venom.
Fiorentini's decision mirrors
the recommendation of a hearing officer who presided over Welch's appeal of
DeNaro's recommendation. The hearing took place in September at City Hall and
included testimony from Welch, several other officers, city officials and
witnesses.
"A 10 tour suspension (in
addition to the previous five day suspension) is a significant level of
discipline," the mayor's decision said. "Officer Welch's actions fell
well below those required of a professional police dispatcher ... and
contravened policy and regulations of the Haverhill Police Department. The
public must have confidence that their calls will be taken seriously and acted
on judiciously. In this instance, Officer Welch actions frustrated an essential
component of effective policing."
Welch, a nine-year patrolman,
told The Eagle-Tribune he believes his punishment is excessive and that it is
payback for his union activities. He also said he believes the hearing
officer's report is biased and that he intends to appeal the mayor's decision
to the state Civil Service Commission.
"This decision to decrease
my punishment from the chief's suggestion of a six month suspension reveals the
serious internal issues that the patrolman's union members have faced for
several years now," Welch said in a written statement to the paper.
"The administration has made it evident that it's not about presenting a
fair and reasonable punishment for officers who make a mistake or allegedly
violate our many rules, regulations, policies and procedures. And though I
recognize my case is an extreme example, I know that many more officers have
faced the oppressive and harsh work environment created by this very
behavior."
DeNaro called Welch's claims
about unfair treatment and political retribution "misleading and
self-serving."
"It is blatantly obvious
that he (Welch) has used and continues to use his union position in a feeble
attempt to exonerate himself from all wrongdoing regarding his actions in
dispatch on the night in question," DeNaro said in an email to newspaper.
"For a community to have confidence in its police department it must have
confidence in the department’s ability to objectively police itself and take
corrective action when warranted. "
DeNaro cited Welch for
violating department rules for making field reports and handling requests for
assistance, as well as neglect of duty and unsatisfactory work performance.
The report by hearing officer
David Connelly said his findings were based on "undisputed evidence that
Officer Welch failed in his duties and responsibilities as a police
dispatcher."
"Mrs. Schwartz's phone
call provided clear and concise information to Officer Welch," the report
said, in part. "The information gave exact areas of Mr. Schwartz's
suspected location (e.g. a dirt path, the beekeeping area, Salem Street, Silsby
Farm) ...The call was at 2:30 in the morning from an elderly woman who was
understandably concerned about the well-being of her adult son because of his
non-response to her calls to his cell phone."
Connelly's report said the call
should have provoked a vigorous response from Welch, but that the officer
determined it was not a priority call.
"Officer Welch suggested
that because Mr. Schwartz was an adult, a more serious response was not
warranted," the hearing officer wrote.
It is up to DeNaro to determine
when Welch begins to serve the suspension. He said he expects the city's
decision will prevail on appeal.
Police union head suspended
over bee-sting death
By Shawn Regan
sregan@eagletribune.com
HAVERHILL — The patrolman's
union president has been suspended for 15 days without pay for mishandling a
call from an elderly woman who was concerned about her son — a 57-year-old
Silsby Farm beekeeper found dead from bee stings.
Police Chief Alan DeNaro
previously suspended Patrolman Rick Welch for five days without pay and
recommended that Mayor James Fiorentini suspend the officer without pay for
another 175 days. A five-day suspension is the maximum the chief can impose on
his own.
In his Dec. 3 ruling, the mayor
upheld DeNaro's original five-day suspension and added 10 more for a total of
15 suspension days. Fiorentini said he relied on Welch's clean record in
rejecting DeNaro's recommendation to suspend the officer for six months.
The case focuses on Welch's
decision not to send a patrol car to check on beekeeper Alan Schwartz, after
his mother called police at 2 a.m. on June 11 to report that her son did not
come home that night and was not answering his cell phone.
Welch took the mother's call,
which was made to the Police Department's non-emergency line, while he was
working in the public safety dispatch center.
Police said Ina Schwartz told
Welch that her son was working with bees, that she feared for his safety, and
that she wanted Welch to send an officer to check on him.
Instead of dispatching a
cruiser to the farm on Salem Street in Bradford, Welch sent an email-style
message to the patrolman assigned to patrol that part of the city that night.
Welch told him to be on the lookout "during his travels" for
Schwartz's white Tacoma truck, according to the message.
But Welch did not include other
information provided by the caller, such as her son's last known location at
the end of the dirt road at the farm. Schwartz was found dead by Marlene
Stasinos, a Silsby Farm caretaker, around 8 a.m. six hours after the mother
called police.
Stasinos found the body after
she received a phone call that morning from Schwartz's mother. The state
medical examiner ruled that Schwartz died from an allergic reaction to bee
venom.
Fiorentini's decision mirrors
the recommendation of a hearing officer who presided over Welch's appeal of
DeNaro's recommendation. The hearing took place in September at City Hall and
included testimony from Welch, several other officers, city officials and
witnesses.
"A 10 tour suspension (in
addition to the previous five day suspension) is a significant level of
discipline," the mayor's decision said. "Officer Welch's actions fell
well below those required of a professional police dispatcher ... and
contravened policy and regulations of the Haverhill Police Department. The
public must have confidence that their calls will be taken seriously and acted
on judiciously. In this instance, Officer Welch actions frustrated an essential
component of effective policing."
Welch, a nine-year patrolman,
told The Eagle-Tribune he believes his punishment is excessive and that it is
payback for his union activities. He also said he believes the hearing
officer's report is biased and that he intends to appeal the mayor's decision
to the state Civil Service Commission.
"This decision to decrease
my punishment from the chief's suggestion of a six month suspension reveals the
serious internal issues that the patrolman's union members have faced for
several years now," Welch said in a written statement to the paper.
"The administration has made it evident that it's not about presenting a
fair and reasonable punishment for officers who make a mistake or allegedly
violate our many rules, regulations, policies and procedures. And though I
recognize my case is an extreme example, I know that many more officers have
faced the oppressive and harsh work environment created by this very
behavior."
DeNaro called Welch's claims
about unfair treatment and political retribution "misleading and
self-serving."
"It is blatantly obvious
that he (Welch) has used and continues to use his union position in a feeble
attempt to exonerate himself from all wrongdoing regarding his actions in
dispatch on the night in question," DeNaro said in an email to newspaper.
"For a community to have confidence in its police department it must have
confidence in the department’s ability to objectively police itself and take
corrective action when warranted. "
DeNaro cited Welch for
violating department rules for making field reports and handling requests for
assistance, as well as neglect of duty and unsatisfactory work performance.
The report by hearing officer
David Connelly said his findings were based on "undisputed evidence that
Officer Welch failed in his duties and responsibilities as a police
dispatcher."
"Mrs. Schwartz's phone
call provided clear and concise information to Officer Welch," the report
said, in part. "The information gave exact areas of Mr. Schwartz's
suspected location (e.g. a dirt path, the beekeeping area, Salem Street, Silsby
Farm) ...The call was at 2:30 in the morning from an elderly woman who was
understandably concerned about the well-being of her adult son because of his
non-response to her calls to his cell phone."
Connelly's report said the call
should have provoked a vigorous response from Welch, but that the officer
determined it was not a priority call.
"Officer Welch suggested
that because Mr. Schwartz was an adult, a more serious response was not
warranted," the hearing officer wrote.
It is up to DeNaro to determine
when Welch begins to serve the suspension. He said he expects the city's
decision will prevail on appeal.
Cases tossed because of tie to arrested Philly cop
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Twelve drug
cases involving a Philadelphia narcotics police officer who is facing federal
corruption charges are being dismissed by the district attorney.
Friday’s move came a month after
a judge overturned 53 convictions based on the testimony of former Officer
Jeffrey Walker.
Bradley Bridge of the Defender
Association of Philadelphia tells the Philadelphia Daily News that more drug
cases could be dismissed next month, as prosecutors and Bridge’s organization
continue examining Walker’s involvement in them.
The 22-year veteran of the
force was arrested in May following an FBI sting and accused of plotting to rip
off drug dealers. He has yet to stand trial.
Bridge says some of the defendants
are out on probation or parole, while others are still behind bars because of
drug arrests that involved Walker
Pittsburgh officer charged with DUI after
PITTSBURGH —
A Pittsburgh police officer is
facing DUI charges after showing up to work drunk Friday night.
According to the criminal
complaint, Vernon Gibson, 38, of Mount Washington, was seen by a fellow officer
driving into the parking lot of the Municipal Courts Building about 11 p.m.
After exiting his SUV, Gibson
was told by Sgt. Sean Duffy to get into his unmarked police vehicle to be taken
to UPMC Mercy Hospital for mandatory, random drug and alcohol testing.
The complaint said Duffy
“immediately noticed his [Gibson’s] eyes were bloodshot, glassy and watery.”
It was also noted in the
complaint that Duffy observed Gibson smelled of alcohol and had slurred speech.
Two breath tests were
administered to Gibson upon arrival at Mercy Hospital. The lower of the two
tests read .128, exceeding the legal limit of .08.
Richard Stanley, Gibson’s
neighbor, said, “You got people out here that look up to officers, kids that
want to be a cop. To hear about this allegation, or whatever, people are going
to start looking at everybody differently now.”
Gibson was released on summons
and is charged with two counts of driving under the influence. He has been
placed on administrative leave.
A preliminary hearing is
scheduled for Feb. 12, 2014.
Gibson has previously been in
trouble with the law for insurance fraud. He served a suspension and was
ordered to clerical work, among other punishments.