Search warrants in King City cop corruption case will remain sealed for now.


by Mary Duan

A Monterey County Superior Court judge has agreed to keep search warrants served on the King City Police Department, a police sergeant and a city technology contractor sealed for another 90 days as investigation into apparent widespread police corruption in that city continues.
The warrants, served on the Soledad home of Sgt. Bobby Carrillo, King City Police headquarters and the King City home of IT consultant Ken Tippery on Jan. 17 were due to be unsealed April 20. But Chief Assistant District Attorney Terry Spitz confirmed DA investigators requested the 90-day clock be reset on April 14, citing the ongoing investigation.
The Jan. 17 warrant service came more than a month before DA investigators, backed by Monterey County Sheriff's deputies, FBI agents and Salinas police, went on a pre-dawn raid Feb. 25 and arrested the acting police chief, the former police chief, the acting chief's brother and two King City cops—including Carrillo—on a variety of charges. A third officer surrendered later at the sheriff's office.
Carrillo, along with Acting Chief Bruce Miller and his brother, Miller's Towing owner Brian Miller, allegedly engaged in an ongoing scheme to tow and impound vehicles that Carrillo pulled over while on duty. Prosecutors allege Carrillo targeted impoverished, undocumented Latinos in the scheme—on the theory the victims would be too frightened of deportation or other backlash to complain—seizing their cars and swinging the towing and impound business to Brian Miller.
When the victims couldn't afford to retrieve their cars from impound, they were sold. Prosecutors claim that for every 10 or 15 cars Carrillo had towed, Brian Miller kicked one back to him for free. In all, they say Carrillo seized upwards of 200 cars.
Brian Miller has been charged with conspiracy and bribery, while Bruce Miller is accused of accepting a bribe—one of the towed and impounded cars. Carrillo is charged with conspiracy, accepting a bribe and bribing an executive officer.
Other officers arrested that day on charges unrelated to the towing scheme are Jaime Andrade (charged with possession of an assault weapon and illegal storage of a firearm); Mark Allen Baker (making criminal threats against a citizen); and Mario Alonso Mottu Sr. (embezzlement, related to a department owned vehicle allegedly transferred to him by former Chief Nick Baldiviez, who's also charged with embezzlement).
It remains totally unclear why investigators served a warrant on Tippery, the IT contractor, but the morning of the arrests, District Attorney Dean Flippo confirmed computers had been seized from Tippery's home. In a bizarre turn of events, Tippery was on a ride-along with former Soledad Police Officer Jesus Yanez when Yanez shot and wounded a man he claimed was armed with a firearm. Yanez, also a former King City officer, was dismissed from the Soledad Police Department in March. Tippery has previously been convicted of child molestation, but had the misdemeanor case that dated back to the late 1990s dismissed after successfully completing probation.
It's widely believed that the first round of arrests won't be the last one. The sealed warrants include statements of probable cause—the statement a law enforcement official crafts before seeking a search warrant—that lays out the facts of a case.
One thing likely still under investigation: money that went missing following a botched bank robbery at the Central Coast Federal Credit Union on March 25, 2013. King City police quickly arrested the suspects, who have all since pleaded no contest and started serving their prison sentences. But there was $6,000 missing by the time the stolen money—$24,352—was recovered, booked into evidence and then turned over to the FBI.