Ex-Princeton cop arrested for allegedly helping hide runaway teen

By Travis Crum

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Police on Saturday arrested a Barbour County man after he allegedly helped a 15-year-old girl run away from her mother in Greenbrier County.
Christopher Scott Winkler, 27, of Union, and a former Princeton police officer, was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, a misdemeanor, according to a criminal complaint filed in Greenbrier County Magistrate Court.
On Feb. 1, police were called to the Lewis Terrace apartments and met Anna Bennett, who told officers she could not find her 15-year-old daughter.
Bennett said her daughter had not been at the apartment of her boyfriend, Dustin Bryant, as expected, according to the complaint. Police learned that Bryant was last seen getting into a black Toyota SUV.
Officers later located the SUV driving into the MedExpress parking lot in Lewisburg, police said.
Winkler, the driver, "became very nervous" and told police he did not know where the girl was, according to the complaint. When he stepped out of the SUV, he then told police that he had been at Lewis Terrace earlier that day to drop off some photos for his photography business.
Winkler said Bryant came to him and asked him to drop the girl off at a house in Caldwell and to drop Bryant off at Walmart in Lewisburg, according to the release.
Police asked Winkler if he knew that the girl's mother had been looking for her and he said he suspected something was wrong and that the girl seemed like she was trying to run from someone, according to the complaint. Winkler told police he did not want to accompany them to the police station to talk about the incident, according to the complaint. Police found Bryant at Walmart and brought him in for questioning. Bryant told police he asked Winkler to drive the girl to a house in Caldwell so her mother could not find her, according to the complaint. Bryant said Winkler knew the girl's mother was looking for her and that the girl was running away from her mother.
Winkler is currently being held in Southern Regional Jail without bail on Saturday.
Winkler is on probation after he pleaded guilty to a bribery charge in October 2012. Police said Winkler met a 17-year-old boy in the parking lot of a Mercer County supermarket in March 2011 and tried to get the youth to perform oral sex to pay off a debt. Winkler, a former Princeton police officer, was allegedly in uniform at the time.
Winkler first made news in April 2010, when he was knocked unconscious during a training exercise at the West Virginia State Police Academy in Institute. Winkler's mother said another instructor had to pull two troopers off of Winkler after they allegedly kept hitting him after he was down. Winkler was involved in a multiple-assailant training scenario at the time.
Both then-Gov. Joe Manchin and Kanawha County prosecutor Mark Plants requested investigations into the incident. Neither investigation found fault with the instructors' actions.

Reach Travis Crum at travis.c...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5163.

Suspended Paterson cop accused of sex assault has not worked in 7 years, could receive $70K in paid leave


By James Kleimann/ 

 A Paterson police officer who has been suspended for nearly seven years may receive a $70,000 payout for leave time.Facebook
PATERSON — The Paterson police officer who has been on paid administration leave for nearly seven years over allegations he forced a female prisoner to perform oral sex on him at police headquarters could receive $70,000 in paid leave time when his impending retirement becomes official, according to a news report.
The case of Officer Manuel Avila has cost the Silk City more than $1.6 million since he was first charged with forcing a female prisoner to give him oral sex in 2007, which allegedly occurred just days after a psychological evaluation concluded he should not carry a gun and was not fit to be a member of the department, according to the Paterson Press.
Avila was acquitted of criminal charges related to the sexual assault case in 2011, but the city later settled a civil lawsuit with the alleged victim's family for $710,000. The city has filed paperwork to terminate Avila on charges of conduct unbecoming of an officer and neglect of duty, but disciplinary hearings have dragged on for years, according to the report.
With more than 25 years on the force, Avila is eligible to retire with a full pension that includes lifetime medical benefits. Avila is one of eight police officers and nine firefighters whose impending retirements will cost the city $1.65 million in leave time alone.



Ex-East Haven cop who cooperated in fed probe seeks to avoid jail


By Evan Lips, New Haven Register

EAST HAVEN >> Former Sgt. John Miller, the last of four police officers to be sentenced following a U.S. Department of Justice civil rights probe, a federal indictment and resulting convictions, will learn his fate Wednesday.
He and his lawyer are hoping that his cooperation with investigators and post-traumatic stress disorder will keep him out of prison.
Miller, set to appear before U.S. District Judge Alvin Thompson in Hartford, pleaded guilty in September 2012 to an excessive-force count in a deal that wiped away a charge of engaging in a conspiracy with three other officers to violate the rights of members of the community.
In exchange, Miller agreed to talk to prosecutors.
“Mr. Miller has provided substantial assistance to the government in the investigation and prosecution of other persons who have committed offenses,” his attorney, Donald Cretella Jr. of Bridgeport, wrote in a pre-sentencing memorandum.
On Jan. 24, 2012, FBI agents arrested Miller and Officers David Cari, Dennis Spaulding and Jason Zullo. Miller was led out of the police station in handcuffs. The other three were netted in predawn raids at their homes.
The ensuing federal indictment referred to the three officers as “Miller’s Boys,” a moniker Miller takes umbrage with in his three-page pre-sentencing statement submitted last week to Thompson.
All four were originally slapped with the civil rights conspiracy count. Zullo, like Miller, pleaded guilty to an excessive-force charge that was unrelated to the racial-profiling allegations laid out in the indictment.
Miller’s excessive-force charge stems from an incident Jan. 3, 2010, in which he admitted to punching a handcuffed, detained suspect in the stomach. The charge carries a maximum 10-year sentence, but federal sentencing guidelines call for 1 to 1½ years in prison.
Cretella’s memorandum argues his client deserves probation.
“Amongst police officers there has always been a code of silence that exists and yet John (Miller) decided to do the right thing, knowing that he would be ostracized not just by those he was cooperating against, but the entire Police Department and many other law enforcement officers would look on him as a rat,” Cretella wrote.
The federal indictment accuses Miller, then head of the local police officers’ union, as the one who drew the outline of a rat on the department’s union bulletin board in September 2010 after suspecting there was another officer cooperating with the investigation.
In Miller’s three-page letter to Thompson, he apologized to the man he hit and said he was “sorry for embarrassing myself, my family and the East Haven Police Department.”
He points to his four police Medals of Honor and to three instances in which, during the line of duty, he fired his handgun. He recalled the time in March 2006 when he fatally shot Christopher Morro after a pursuit that ended atop the Pearl Harbor Memorial Bridge. Morrow had shot and wounded Cari and another officer during the standoff.
Miller also told of the time he fatally shot Brian Batten, 32, a town resident who led officers on a chase into New Haven in March 2008. A state police investigation determined Batten aimed a gun at officers seconds before Miller shot him.
Miller’s letter states the two shootings, as well as a third in 2010 when he killed a charging pit bull, led to PTSD.
“It changed me from within,” Miller wrote. “I became angry, numb, irritable, short-tempered, depressed, narrow-minded, suffered from anxiety, unable to sleep and eventually led me to push people away.”
According to Cretella’s memorandum, Miller began therapy for PTSD in 2011, a decision he made on his own.
“John (Miller) was allowed to return to work without treatment,” Cretella wrote. “He dealt with his feelings like a good ‘Irish cop’; he suppressed them and the East Haven Police Department fostered this neglect, this abuse.”
Miller does not address in his three-page statement an accusation in the indictment noting how he reprimanded an officer who saw the Jan. 3, 2010, assault and reported it to a supervisor. The indictment also sheds light on the relationship between Miller and former Police Chief Leonard Gallo.
Gallo, whose attorney has acknowledged appears in the indictment as “co-conspirator-1,” “refused to comply with the (Board of Police Commissioners’) request to investigate misconduct involving defendant Miller,” the indictment states.
“On or about Nov. 30, 2011, co-conspirator-1 ordered all EHPD personnel not to permit Police Commissioners on the premises of the EHPD station without his prior approval, and threatened discipline for failure to comply with the order.”
Gallo has not been charged.
Other accusations in the indictment state that it was Miller who supervised Cari, Spaulding and Zullo as they “conducted an illegal search of the back room of My Country Store in an effort to unlawfully seize the store’s video recording.”
The store was the site in February 2009 of Cari’s arrest of a New Haven priest whose complaints sparked the U.S. Department of Justice investigation. The Rev. James Manship, who testified for the government in the cases against Cari and Spaulding, filmed a brief encounter with Cari, evidence that a jury determined showed Cari unlawfully arrested Manship before filing a false report.
Miller’s letter criticizes prosecutors’ use of the term “Miller’s Boys” to describe his relationship with Cari, Spaulding and Zullo.
“I have never treated some of my co-workers different than anyone else I supervised,” he wrote. “The only time I have used the phrase ‘Miller’s Boys’ is when I am referring to my two sons who bring me great pride.
“It upsets me that it made its way into this investigation.”
Miller also disputes accusations of racism.
“Never in my life or career have I treated someone different because of their race,” he wrote.
During Miller’s Sept. 21, 2012, guilty plea filing appearance, U.S. Attorney Deirdre M. Daly said that if federal investigators determine Miller provided enough information, “the government will file a motion under Section 5k1.1 of the sentencing guidelines advising the court and probation of the nature and extent of defendant’s cooperation.”
Cretella makes several references in his sentencing memorandum to “the government’s 5k letter,” where “Mr. Miller has provided significant and useful assistance.”
The “5k letter” is sealed.
“Mr. Miller risked injury to himself and his family,” Cretella wrote. “His assistance has been timely.”
Zullo, the first of the four to be sentenced, is serving his two-year sentence at a federal prison in West Virginia. On Jan. 21, Thompson sentenced Cari to 30 months in prison. He is getting credit for time served, meaning he will serve a maximum of 27 months.
On Jan. 22, Thompson handed Spaulding the stiffest sentence of all. He will spend a maximum of five years in federal prison and is scheduled to report March 4 to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
Call Evan Lips at 203-789-5727. Have questions, feedback or ideas about our news coverage? Connect directly with the editors of the New Haven Register at AskTheRegister.com.


Former Greeneville Cop Sentenced


By Ken Little


A former Greeneville Police Department auxiliary officer who downloaded child pornography on a patrol car laptop was sentenced today in U.S. District Court to 39 months in federal prison.
Herbert Eugene Miller, 45, was sentenced by Judge J. Ronnie Greer. Miller had earlier entered a guilty plea to possession of child pornography.
Miller was a part-time, paid auxiliary officer from June 2000 until August 2013, when an investigation into his activities was concluded.
Miller, of Chuckey, was arrested by the FBI.
A criminal complaint said that on or about July 27 and 28, 2013, Miller “did knowingly receive child pornography (that) had been shipped and transported in interstate commerce, by computer” and “did knowingly possess child pornography.”
The complaint said that on Aug. 4, a patrol officer alerted a shift supervisor about a search history in the web browser on the computer in a Greeneville Police Department patrol car.
Those entries, the complaint stated, indicated “child pornography web searches.”
The FBI was immediately notified.
Miller was also placed on supervised release for 20 years after his prison term is complete, and must register on the sex offender registry.
Miller apologized before sentencing to his family and the public for his actions.
Greer painstakingly explained why he didn’t give Miller a harsher sentence. From all indications, Miller’s actions while on duty were an “isolated incident,” the judge said.
“I don’t know why Mr. Miller did this and frankly, I’m not sure if he knows why he did this,” Miller’s lawyer, Ben Sharp, told the judge.
 Miller’s having no prior police record and other factors contributed to the recommendation by prosecutors, accepted by Greer, that Miller be sentenced in a 37-to-46 month range, well below the 10-year maximum prison sentence he could have received.
Greer said he also had to consider that Miller’s actions were an abuse of a position of public trust that “undermines the public respect for law enforcement.”
“It’s such an incredibly stupid thing to do,” Greer said.


Former Garland County Sheriff’s Deputy Sentenced to 45 Months for Prostitution Offense

U.S. Attorney’s Office February 03, 2014
  • Western District of Arkansas (501) 340-2600                         

HOT SPRINGS, AR—Conner Eldridge, United States Attorney for the Western District of Arkansas, announced today that Neil Parliment was sentenced to 45 months in prison and five years of supervised release for enticing an individual to engage in prostitution. At the time of the offense, Parliament, age 39, was a marine patrol officer with the Garland County Sheriff’s Office. United States District Court Judge Susan O. Hickey presided over the sentencing.
United States Attorney Eldridge commented, “Mr. Parliment abused his position of public trust to engage in illegal activities involving prostitution. We remain dedicated to holding those accountable who use similar positions to perpetrate crime.”
According to documents filed in the case, from January to June 2013, Parliment arranged for and facilitated the travel of a prostitute working out of Memphis to come to Hot Springs for the purposes of exchanging sexual activity for money. Over the course of the investigation, it was discovered that Parliament had not only engaged the services of the prostitute himself but also facilitated meetings and introductions between the prostitute and others for sexual activity. Parliament pleaded guilty to the offense on July 29, 2013.
This case was investigated by the FBI Denied Innocence Task Force. Assistant United States Attorney Dustin Roberts prosecuted the case for the United States.

Former Tennessee Police Officer Sentenced for Assaulting an Arrestee


U.S. Department of Justice February 05, 2014
  • Office of Public Affairs (202) 514-2007/TDD (202) 514-1888
Christopher Eugene Reynolds, 39, a former police officer of the Selmer, Tennessee Police Department (SPD), was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge J. Daniel Breen to serve one year and one day in prison following his conviction for violating the civil rights of an arrestee, the Justice Department announced. Reynolds pleaded guilty November 6, 2013. Judge Breen also sentenced Reynolds to a period of two years’ supervised release and a $100 special assessment.
“The majority of law enforcement officers do not abuse their authority; however, the defendant has admitted that he wrongfully assaulted an arrestee,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Jocelyn Samuels for the Civil Rights Division. “The Justice Department will continue to vigorously prosecute officers who use their official position to violate the civil rights of those in their custody.”
Reynolds admitted that on April 28, 2011, while using his authority as a SPD officer, he slammed a handcuffed arrestee to the floor of the McNairy Regional Hospital and struck him once in the face. According to information presented in court, Reynolds acknowledged that this assault was unreasonable, did not serve a legitimate law enforcement purpose, and was not made by accident, mistake, or inadvertence.
Reynolds was permitted to remain on bond and voluntarily surrender to a U.S. Bureau of Prisons facility to be determined in the near future.
This case was investigated by FBI Special Agent Christopher Miller, with the assistance of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. The case was prosecuted by Trial Attorney Ryan J. MurguĂ­a for the Civil Rights Division and Special Litigation Counsel Gerard V. Hogan, with the assistance of Assistant U.S. Attorney Victor L. Ivy for the Western District of Tennessee.

Former Garland County Sheriff’s Deputy Sentenced to 45 Months for Prostitution Offense

Former Garland County Sheriff’s Deputy Sentenced to 45 Months for Prostitution Offense

U.S. Attorney’s Office February 03, 2014
  • Western District of Arkansas (501) 340-2600
HOT SPRINGS, AR—Conner Eldridge, United States Attorney for the Western District of Arkansas, announced today that Neil Parliment was sentenced to 45 months in prison and five years of supervised release for enticing an individual to engage in prostitution. At the time of the offense, Parliament, age 39, was a marine patrol officer with the Garland County Sheriff’s Office. United States District Court Judge Susan O. Hickey presided over the sentencing.
United States Attorney Eldridge commented, “Mr. Parliment abused his position of public trust to engage in illegal activities involving prostitution. We remain dedicated to holding those accountable who use similar positions to perpetrate crime.”
According to documents filed in the case, from January to June 2013, Parliment arranged for and facilitated the travel of a prostitute working out of Memphis to come to Hot Springs for the purposes of exchanging sexual activity for money. Over the course of the investigation, it was discovered that Parliament had not only engaged the services of the prostitute himself but also facilitated meetings and introductions between the prostitute and others for sexual activity. Parliament pleaded guilty to the offense on July 29, 2013.
This case was investigated by the FBI Denied Innocence Task Force. Assistant United States Attorney Dustin Roberts prosecuted the case for the United States.