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"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality


THP captain demoted



COOKEVILLE -- The top Tennessee Highway Patrol officer in this area, Capt. David Allred, has been demoted and one of his officers suspended, but state officials who made that decision remain secretive about the details.

Capt. Allred was demoted yesterday from head of the THP district here to lieutenant, and Sgt. Keven Norris was given a five-day suspension and is to be transferred out of the THP's Critical Incident Response Team and will become a road sergeant, according to an announcement on Thursday afternoon by the Department of Safety.

Allred and Norris were placed on administrative leave with pay on March 30 amid an internal investigation into "possible policy violations on the job," as state officials put it at the time.

And while THP Colonel Tracy Trott later issued a statement saying there was no evidence of criminal wrongdoing, no one in the THP would clarify exactly what the alleged violations were.

Now, after reportedly meeting with the two officers in Nashville yesterday, Col. Trott's decision to demote Capt. Allred and to recommend a five-day suspension for Sgt. Norris was announced in a press release, which gives very little information about the violations.

Yesterday's announcement does say that the internal investigators "discovered that Allred and Norris failed to properly report an incident involving Trooper Jonathan Reed on March 27."

The announcement also says that "the case file was also presented to the District Attorney, who found no evidence of criminal activity by Allred or Norris."

"It is in sensitive situations such as this when we must follow the rules to the letter," Col. Trott said in yesterday's announcement.

"While David and Keven acted out of concern for a fellow trooper, they compromised their integrity and that of the Tennessee Highway Patrol."

The announcement goes on to say that "details surrounding the incident cannot be disclosed at this time due to further review into Trooper Reed's actions by the District Attorney's office." The announcement also says that Trooper Jonathan Reed is currently on "approved medical leave."

But the announcement makes no mention of the fact that Reed is Allred's former son-in-law. Nor does it describe in any way what alleged actions by Trooper Reed are now under review by the district attorney.

"We have high expectations for all of our personnel and especially our District Captains," Col. Trott's announcement says.

"David is a good person. He unfortunately used poor judgment in neglecting to notify the chain of command of this incident in a timely manner and follow our policies."

Allred's demotion becomes effective Monday, April 16, and a search for his replacement will begin next week, yesterday's announcement says.

In the interim, Lt. Kendall Riley will continue to serve as commander of the Cookeville THP district.

The announcement also notes that under state regulations, Sgt. Norris, as a civil service employee, has the right to appeal his suspension.


 
Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.



“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”


RIALTO: Suspended officer charged with making criminal threats

Already facing federal charges, a 41-year-old suspended Rialto police officer was arrested last weekend by San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputies who found an undisclosed type of explosive in his home, according to jail records and officials of both police agencies.

Aaron Scott Vigil was arrested at 8 p.m. Saturday at his Highland home and booked for investigation of making criminal threats and possession of an explosive device, jail records show. He is being held on $500,000 bail.

On Tuesday, San Bernardino County prosecutors charged Vigil with two felony counts of making criminal threats against the lives of two Rialto police officials, Capt. Randy DeAnda and Lt. Andy Karol, court records show.

Vigil is being held on $500,000 bail, online jail records show.

He also awaits trial on a June 2011 federal indictment in an Orange County bribery case, federal officials say. That indictment accused Vigil of conspiring with an attorney to make false statements to help a defendant charged with assault.

“The indictment … alleges that Vigil, who served as a task force officer with the Drug Enforcement Administration, agreed to accept a $2,500 bribe in exchange for falsely telling the Orange County District Attorney’s Office that (the defendant) was a cooperator who had provided information to the DEA,” U.S. Attorney’s officials said in a written statement last June.

Vigil remains a Rialto police officer but is on unpaid administrative leave and has been stripped of all police powers, said Police Chief William A. Farrar, who declined further comment because of ongoing criminal and internal affairs investigations.

The weekend arrest came after Rialto police reported they were concerned about Vigil’s welfare, said sheriff’s spokeswoman Jodi Miller.

Deputies went to Vigil’s home about 4:30 p.m. Saturday and initially arrested him in connection with the threats, and then obtained a search warrant, which uncovered the alleged explosive device, Miller said.

The type of device was not specified, and Tuesday's criminal complaint only charges him with making criminal threats against the two police officials.

Also contributing to this report: Staff writer Steven Barrie, sbarrie@pe.com

 
Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.


Fairfax County Police officer Irene M. Boyle “Opps! Gee gosh it was loaded?” awards


New Haven cop arrested in gunplay incident denies being there



NEW HAVEN — One of the police officers arrested for off-duty and possibly alcohol-fueled gunfire repeatedly denied being anywhere near State Street at the time of the shooting, police said.

But the state forensic lab confirmed five shell casings recovered near the corner of State and Clark streets were fired from the .40-caliber department handgun issued to Lawrence Burns, 38.

In all, three police officer were on paid leave and facing criminal charges in the April 1 incident outside Christopher Martins restaurant.

“You need to come back to State Street because we need to talk about what happened,” Sgt. Steve Teague told Burns in a cell phone call about 15 minutes after the incident.

The three officers were present when on-duty officers first arrived but left while the officers were speaking to witnesses.

“Naw, I wasn’t on State Street, Sarge,” Burns said. Teague asked him several more times.

“I’m going to ask you again, were you on State Street 10 minutes ago?”

“No, no. I was on State Street maybe an hour and (a) half ago,” Burns said.

The conversation didn’t last much longer. Teague asked Burns where he was. Was he home? Was he heading home? He didn’t get a straight answer, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

Before he hung up, Teague said, “If that’s how you want to handle it, that’s fine.”

Burns and Officer Charles Kim, 35, both are charged with firing weapons just after closing time outside the popular State Street bar. Officer Krzysztof Ruszczyk, 31, didn’t fire a weapon but was charged with interfering with police.

All three were released after signing a written promise to appear in court.

Court records provided the most detailed account of the event yet. Officers arrived at about 2:40 a.m. and were flagged down by two witnesses who said people were shooting at the corner. While they were speaking to one officer, another on-duty patrolman approached the three off-duty officers a block down.

“It’s nothing. It’s 55s,” Burns allegedly told the officer, using the police code for fireworks.

The on-duty officer told them to stay there and drove to the witnesses to get a description of the shooters. In the interim, police said, Burns drove off.

“That’s the guy who was shooting and (you’re) letting him go,” the witness said as a yellow sports car sped off.

Despite also being told to stay, Ruszczyk and Kim also left in a vehicle., police said.

In the next half hour, Burns called an on-duty officer several times asking what was happening.

“This incident is not going away, you need to come back, you need to call Ruszczyk, you guys need to come back here,” the officer recalled telling Burns.

Detectives recovered six shell casings at the scene, one from a .380-caliber pistol and five others from a .40-caliber.

Under order, the three officers turned in the guns, ammunition and badges later that afternoon. One of Burns’ magazines was missing seven rounds of ammunition. A day later, Kim surrendered a .380-caliber handgun.

On Thursday, the same day police secured arrest warrants for the three officers, a forensic technician confirmed for police that the shell casings recovered at the scene and been fired from the .380-caliber belonging to Kim and the .40-caliber issued to Burns.

The three men are due in court on April 20.



Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.






The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality


A Selma police officer and a former officer are in jail in Virginia on suspicion of smuggling marijuana into the state.

Officer Frederick Sayles, 34, was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of transporting more than five pounds of marijuana into Virginia. He is being held at the Alexandria Detention Center in Alexandria.

Former Selma police officer Gabriel Sepeda, 38, was jailed in the same incident. They are being held without bail, said Lt. Tom Dumproff, jail watch commander.

Selma Police Chief Myron Dick said Friday that he learned of Sayles' arrest Wednesday from Virginia authorities.

"I'm obviously disappointed," Dick said.

Sayles is a patrol officer who joined the force six years ago after working as a jail correctional officer, he said. Sayles is on leave, Dick said. He said the department will investigate Sayles' role in the alleged drug transportation, adding that he expects to learn more next week about what happened in Virginia.

Sepeda left the department two and half years ago, Dick said. He declined to discuss why Sepeda left, citing personnel policies.

Alexandria police made the arrests, according to jail records. A preliminary hearing for both men has been scheduled for May 21 in Alexandria General District Court.



Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.




The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality


Flagler sheriff's sergeant suspended with pay

By JULIE MURPHY, Staff writer



BUNNELL -- A Flagler County sheriff's sergeant and former "officer of the year" has been placed on administrative leave following an internal affairs investigation but officials remain closed-lipped about the disciplinary decision they say is still under review.

Sgt. Jamie Roster, a K-9 handler and assistant shift supervisor with Charlie Squad and Crime Suppression Team supervisor, was placed on leave with pay March 22, according to a memorandum issued by Chief Deputy David O'Brien.

"After careful review of all documentation and final information presented at the pre-disciplinary conference held on March 13, 2012, the decision has been made to place you on administrative leave with pay, until further notice, to commence on March 22, 2012," O'Brien wrote.

O'Brien's memo was issued to Sheriff Don Fleming, administrators at the Sheriff's Office and the attorney for the Central Florida Police Benevolent Association.

Sheriff's officials won't say what the "documentation" and "final information" are that prompted the disciplinary action.

"The IA (internal affairs investigation) is not complete," sheriff's spokeswoman Debra Johnson said. "There are many different steps. I can't even get the report until all those steps are completed."

Roster, who joined the Flagler Sheriff's Office in 2001, has received several commendations and promotions, including from corporal to sergeant on Aug. 24. He earns $51,867 in base annual salary plus $700 insurance, according to the status change form that accompanied his promotion.

He was named "officer of the year" for the agency in May 2010. Roster was presented then with the Deputy George Durrance Law Enforcement Officer of the Year Award in honor of Durrance, who was killed in the line of duty in 1927.

"(Roster) was recognized for his individual excellence, teamwork and professional service in many facets of the agency," officials announced at the time.

The sergeant has received 16 letters of commendation during his career, according to his employee file.

Roster was given a "temporary reassignment" on Jan. 12 to the Alpha Squad. The reason given was "due to a member's scheduled medical leave."

Johnson was unable to say how long the investigation would continue.

"His (internal affairs investigation) is not completed yet, so I can't confirm the topic of the investigation," she said in a written statement dated April 2.

Roster's employee file was made available to The News-Journal on Monday.




Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.









Fairfax County Police Officer “Crazy Moe” Mohammed Oluwa Jihad on your ass. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality


Brockville police officer still suspended with pay



A Brockville police officer who pleaded guilty earlier this year to four criminal charges will have to wait more than a month before he can fight to keep his job.

The man pleaded guilty last October to damaging property and three counts of breach of an undertaking in connection with a confrontation with a woman on March 4, 2010, in a trial during which more serious charges against him were withdrawn.

The officer's disciplinary hearing under the Police Services Act was put over Friday morning to a later date as the prosecution and defence proceed with disclosure of evidence.

In the meantime, the officer remains suspended with pay, as he has been since early March, 2010.

The Recorder and Times is not identifying the officer because the misconduct charges he faces under the Police Services Act relate to a criminal court case that is the subject of a publication ban.

The man faces a total of 18 counts of discreditable conduct and one count of insubordination in connection with the alleged events resulting in the court case.

At an initially scheduled hearing Friday morning at the city police station, Lynda Bordeleau, co-prosecutor in the disciplinary matter with Brockville Police Staff Sgt. Ed Stone, said that, barring any unexpected developments, the prosecution plans to withdraw a number of those counts in keeping with the outcome of the court case.

If things unfold the way she outlined, the accused officer will face seven counts of discreditable conduct and one count of insubordination.

The officer, who was initially also charged with assault, sexual assault and forcible confinement, received a conditional discharge in Superior Court in February.

He was given two years of probation and community service requirements after a trial in which it was revealed the complainant provided unreliable evidence and, in the judge's words, "had little or no credibility left," leading to the Crown's withdrawal of all charges relating to sexual assault, assault, unlawful confinement and uttering threats and death threats, as well as one breach of undertaking charge.

Superior Court Justice John McMunagle also noted at the time that a verbal argument "escalated to the point where (the guilty party) lost control," causing damage to a bathroom door, wall and toilet paper holder.

The breach of undertaking charges stem from the accused's contacts and attempted contacts with the complainant, all subsequent to his arrest in March 2010.

Friday's session took place before retired Ontario Provincial Police Supt. Morris Elbers.

The officer, who is represented by Ottawa lawyer Karin Stein, remained silent throughout the brief session other than to tell the superintendent, when asked, that he understood the charges against him.

Elbers and the two sides have scheduled a teleconference call on Wednesday, May 30 to discuss disclosure, with a new hearing date to be set at that point.

CHARGES AGAINST OFFICER

Charges likely to remain on the books against a Brockville Police officer:

* Four discreditable conduct charges relate to a guilty verdict on four criminal charges.

* Another count refers to a breach of bail conditions, while a sixth refers to discreditable conduct "by way of your actions towards L.R.," all of which allegedly happened between May 1 and August 20, 2010.

* The seventh discreditable conduct charge alleges that, on February 11, 2010, and March 10 of that year, the subject officer breached an officer-in- charge undertaking "by failing to surrender all firearms."

* The insubordination count alleges that, on February 5, 2010, the officer booked a day off sick when he was in fact "seeking out a meeting with L.R."

The subject officer faces a penalty of demotion or dismissal.


Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.






 

The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality


Centerville Police Officer Fired

CENTERVILLE, Tenn.- A Centerville police officer facing charges of official misconduct and bribery has now been fired.

Investigators say 61-year-old Jerry Simmons manipulated a case involving his teenage daughter, her child and the child's father.

Simmons's wife 42-year-old Pamela Simmons and his step-son 23-year-old Cory Chandler were each indicted on counts of filing a false report.

Investigators said they first began to examine Simmons in December 2011 after they learned that Simmons had allegedly manipulated a case involving his teen daughter, her child and the child's father. The case began with a domestic incident at the local McDonalds. No arrests were made at the time, but later a police report was filed which turned out to be false.

The false report claimed that the child's father had pulled a gun on Pamela Simmons, Chandler, and the daughter.

The Fairfax County Police officer Walter R. Fasci/ Sean McGlone award for sober living. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality


HPD officer faces federal charges in pot case

Michael Steven Chu allegedly grew marijuana
By Nelson Daranciang

A Honolulu police officer is in federal custody, charged with running indoor marijuana-growing operations in a Kapiolani Boulevard apartment and a home in Mililani Mauka.

U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents arrested Michael Steven Chu on Monday and charged him with conspiring to possess and distribute 48 marijuana plants and one pound of proc¬essed marijuana.

Chu is scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court this afternoon on the government’s request to keep him in custody pending trial without the opportunity for bail.

DEA agents arrested and charged Athena Sui Lee with the same crime. The prosecutor also wants her to remain in custody without the opportunity for bail.

The DEA said the case against Chu and Lee started Thursday when a FedEx security manager seized a suspicious parcel that was sent from San Lean¬dro, Calif., and addressed to a Kapiolani Boulevard apartment. The parcel contained eight juvenile or starter marijuana plants.

The following day, the DEA said its agents spoke with the building manager, who told them Lee lives in the unit to which the parcel was addressed.
The DEA said it found 20 marijuana plants growing inside the apartment and large amounts of cash. As its agents were conducting the search, Chu and Lee arrived at the apartment. Chu was carrying a bag containing plant nutrients and other material used for growing plants indoors, and Lee was carrying a bag containing about $12,000 in $2,000 bundles, the DEA said.
Agents found in Chu’s vehicle a pound of marijuana and Chu’s police-issued handgun and a supplemental weapon, both loaded.

The DEA said Chu told the agents he just works for Lee and helps her carry things for the indoor growing operation. He gave them a Young Street address as his residence, the same address at which DEA agents intercepted a parcel containing 14 pounds of marijuana in July.

The manager for the Young Street building told the agents Chu did live in the unit where they intercepted the 14 pounds of marijuana, but had moved out a few months ago.

Chu also told the agents he has a medical marijuana card.

The DEA said its agents checked the medical marijuana certification rec¬ords maintained by the state Narcotics Enforcement Division and found that Chu listed a Mililani Mauka address as his residence. They went to the home and found 10 to 20 marijuana plants of about 3 to 4 feet tall growing inside. They also found a pickup truck registered to Lee parked in the driveway and documents in the home indicating that Chu and Lee reside there.

The Police Department said Chu is a 13-year police veteran assigned to the Wahiawa/North Shore patrol district.

Honolulu Police Chief Louis Kea¬loha said the charge against Chu is a very serious allegation and that the department is cooperating with the DEA. He said HPD is also conducting its own internal administrative investigation. In the meantime, the department has removed Chu’s police powers and placed him on leave without pay.

Kealoha also said using marijuana is a violation of HPD policy. He said a medical marijuana permit does not exempt an officer from drug testing and that an officer who tests positive is in violation of the policy.

Source: Star Advertiser (Honolulu, HI)
Publish date: April 11, 2012

The Fairfax County Police Officer Jeffrey Hand Award for Creative Income Production. Fairfax County Police. Police Brutality

Centerville Officer, Wife, Step-Son Indicted
NASHVILLE, Tenn.- A Centerville Police officer, his wife and step-son have been indicted by a grand jury in Hickman County.
Officials from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said that 61-year-old Centerville Police Officer Jerry Simmons was arrested and indicted on charges of official misconduct and bribery. Simmon's wife 42-year-old Pamela Simmons and his step-son 23-year-old Cory Chandler were each indicted on counts of filing a false report.
Investigators said they first began to examine Simmons in December 2111 after they learned that Simmons had allegedly manipulated a case involving his teen daughter, her child and the child's father. The case began with a domestic incident at the local McDonalds. No arrests were made at the time, but later a police report was filed which turned out to be false.
The false report claimed that the child's father had pulled a gun on Pamela Simmons, Chandler, and the daughter.
Jerry Simmons, Pamela Simmons and Cory Chandler were all being held in the local jail.

Fairfax County Police Officer Amanda Perry award for Safe Driving. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (WSVN) -- A former Hollywood police officer charged in an alleged crash cover-up faced a judge, Monday.
Joel Francisco entered a guilty plea to falsifying an accident report during a DUI traffic stop.
A judge sentenced Francisco to 90 days in jail.
A police dashcam caught the incident in February of 2009. Francisco had rear-ended a suspected drunk driver, but a responding officer said he would word the report to absolve Francisco of any blame.
The other officer was recently convicted of falsifying records and was also sentenced to 90 days behind bars.


Cops and dogs...a strange, strange relationship

A Louisville family has filed a lawsuit against a Metro Police officer alleging that he shot and killed their dog without cause last year while chasing a burglary suspect in the Shawnee neighborhood.
Michelle Damron and her son, Austin Pike, filed suit last week in Jefferson Circuit Court against Officer Joseph Pence, claiming that he shot their 7-year-old Doberman pinscher, Rocco, on April 6, 2011, while the dog was “lawfully tethered” in their backyard in the 600 block of Madelon Court.
The suit claims Rocco posed no threat and Pence fired his weapon “without probable cause or justification,” shooting the dog twice in the upper torso and neck.
Rocco, according to the lawsuit, retreated to his doghouse where he lay “bleeding and screaming for a period of time” before bleeding to death.
Pence’s conduct was “beyond the bounds of human decency” and caused the family emotional distress, according to the lawsuit.
Claims made in filing a lawsuit present only one side of a case.
Police spokeswoman Carey Klain said the department has not yet seen the lawsuit and couldn’t comment.
Last year, Klain told the newspaper that officers had responded to an apartment break-in in the 600 block of Lindell Avenue and saw a man running who matched a description of the suspect.
The man ran three blocks to Madelon Court, where he entered a backyard. An officer followed him, and both were approached by a large Doberman, Klain said.
The dog leaped onto the suspect, and the officer tried to wrestle the man to the ground before the dog started attacking the officer, Klain said.
The officer shot and killed the dog, while the suspect ran to the back of another house. He was found a short time later and arrested.
Police policy allows officers to shoot domestic animals if they are being threatened by the animal, Klain had said.
The lawsuit, which is claiming that the shooting of the dog “constituted an unlawful seizure and taking” of property without proper cause or justification, is seeking damages and a jury trial

Fairfax County Police officer Irene M. Boyle “Opps! Gee gosh it was loaded?” awards

SHELBY COUNTY, Ohio —
A former part-time Port Jefferson police officer appeared in court on Monday morning and was sentenced on charges of vandalism and discharging a firearm in a motor vehicle.
Michael Blankenship, 31, of Bellefontaine, appeared in Shelby County Common Pleas Court and was given five years probation.
The judge also ordered Blankenship to pay restitution to the village of Port Jefferson and to the Shelby County Sheriff's Department that totals more than $10,000.
On the morning of Labor Day 2011, Blankenship called Shelby County Dispatch and reported that he had exchanged gunfire with a passing motorist and that he crashed his cruiser west of Port Jefferson on Route 47. Blankenship also asked for a medic, claiming that he was injured.
According to investigators, several hours later after being flown by CareFlight to Miami Valley Hospital, he admitted that he made the story up and lied about his injuries.
While in court on Monday morning, Blankenship apologized for the "dark cloud" he placed over law enforcement in Shelby County.
If he violates his probation, Blankenship could face up to 30 months in prison.

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”


Woman Beaten By Police



These are the pictures of Michelle Lane, a victim of Maryland post police beating by Carroll County Sheriff Deputy Zepp which left Michelle with a moderate to severe traumatic brain injury. hysicians at University of Maryland’s Shock Trauma Center confirmed a poor prognosis of Michelle Lane, that she will never return to normal living conditions, status post head trauma and loss of consciousness beating by Carroll County, MD Sheriff Deputy Zepp.

Dep. Zepp used near lethal force, using his body parts and a weapon against and unarmed woman with a known spinal cord injury, on an animal control issue where her daughter’s pony escaped their fence due to Dep Zepp’s friends setting off professional grade, rocket propelled, illegal fireworks. Wreckless endangerment is also noted on charging document requested felony assault and battery due to Zepp efforts to engage in, then cover up his attack of Michelle Lane.

 
Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.

The officer Christian Chamberlain Award for “Fuck you, I’ll get away with it anyway” Fairfax County police . Police brutality


Newly Acquired Audio Tapes may be Key in Police Brutality Case
Chicago - Newly-acquired audio tapes made during an arrest in North Chicago provide key evidence in a police brutality case there.
The incident happened in November and the recordings only recently became available. They were not part of the original police report, but the attorney for the victim says that these audio tapes prove that North Chicago police used excessive force against 35-year-old Darrin Hanna.
The family filed a federal lawsuit against the department saying that brutality is a pattern in the town, only this time, it resulted in someone's death.
Police were called to Hanna's home for a domestic disturbance. He was allegedly fighting with his girlfriend.
North Chicago Police say they used a taser but it malfunctioned. They admit to punching him in the face and striking his legs but insist they used reasonable, non-lethal force.
The audio tapes were recorded during the altercation over the arresting officers radios.
"And you hear Darrin Hanna pleading for his life saying, 'Put me down, put me down. They hit me when I'm down. They're going to kill me," said Kevin O'Connor, Hanna's attorney. "And then the tape goes off."
O'Connor provided photographs of a wounded Hanna that shows that he was struck 20 to 30 times.An independent autopsy revealed that Hanna's death was caused by trauma inflicted by the police taser weapon along with pre-existing health conditions.
O'Connor says the firm is handling 12 brutality complaints against the North Chicago Police Department that happened allegedly in the last two years.
The community is calling for the arresting officers to be removed and for the entire department to be retrained.

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”


Former Portland police officer running for Wheeler County sheriff no longer collecting disability benefits
Published: Tuesday, April 10, 2012, 7:00 PM Updated: Tuesday, April 10, 2012, 8:01 PM

Christopher Humphreys, a Portland officer who was collecting stress-related disability benefits on and off for more than three years since his involvement in the controversial in-custody death of James P. Chasse Jr., was found fit for duty this month as he runs for sheriff in Wheeler County.
He was medically laid off from the Portland Police Bureau Nov. 23, 2010, because of the length of time he was off work collecting disability payments – a move the city is taking more often to ensure officers or firefighters on long-term disability don't remain on city staffing rolls forever.
Yet, as allowed, he continued to receive disability checks, recently collecting monthly checks of $1,546.86.
But as of April 7, Humphreys -- who recently announced his run for sheriff -- "no longer meets the eligibility criteria" for disability benefits after a medical report confirmed he's "now able to perform the required duties of his job," according to Portland's public safety fund.
Humphreys said Tuesday he used the time off to obtain counseling, and now is feeling good and eager to give back to the Wheeler County community, home to five generations of his family.
"I'm more than capable of being an officer, but I do not want to be an officer in Portland," Humphreys said.
Linda Jefferson, director of Portland's Fire and Police Disability and Retirement Fund, said the public safety fund had the medical re-evaluation done as part of its "routine claim-management activities." It also came as word spread of Humphreys' plan to run for sheriff.
Humphreys said he scheduled the medical evaluation, an annual requirement, before the fund notified him to do so.
The fund cut off Humphreys' disability benefits on April 7, which means he can no longer accrue time toward his pension since he's no longer an active member of the Portland police bureau or a disabled member. He'll be eligible to collect his pension Nov. 30, 2024.
According to the city's public safety fund, Humphreys was off duty from the Portland Police Bureau and collecting disability benefits between Jan. 27, 2006, and Jan. 3, 2007, and again from Nov. 27, 2009, through April 6, 2012.
The benefits were connected to a stress-related claim.
"Every time, I used that to protect myself and do what needed to be done, to seek counseling," he said. "No one is ever going to say I abused it."
Humphreys gained notoriety for his involvement in the city's record $1.6 million settlement stemming from a federal wrongful death lawsuit brought by Chasse's family. He faced public scrutiny and internal police review for two separate on-the-job incidents: Chasse in 2006 and another in 2009. Humphreys spent a year off duty on disability, starting about four months after the death of Chasse, a 42-year-old man who suffered from paranoid schizophrenia, in his custody Sept. 17, 2006. Chasse was knocked to the ground after he ran from officers who suspected he was urinating in a street. He died from blunt force trauma to the chest. In November 2009, then-police commissioner Dan Saltzman and former chief Rosie Sizer proposed Humphreys be suspended for two weeks for failing to insist that Chasse be taken by ambulance to a hospital after police stunned him with a Taser and after the jail refused to book him because of his physical condition. Saltzman also found that Humphreys failed to provide paramedics at the scene with a full account of the violent struggle. Humphreys later filed another stress-related disability claim when the bureau began an internal investigation into his Nov. 14, 2009 shooting of a 12-year-old girl with a beanbag shotgun on a Northeast Portland MAX platform. Former police union president Scott Westerman told The Oregonian then that Humphreys was devastated when the commissioner on Nov. 19, 2009, ordered he be removed from the street, with his gun and badge taken pending the investigation. The move led to a police union protest, with members wearing , "I am Chris Humphreys" shirts in his support. In September 2010, Chief Mike Reese found Humphreys acted within policy.
Humphreys, 37, had worked as a Wheeler County sheriff's deputy for three years before joining Portland police in February 1999. He was the first to file paperwork on Feb. 10 for the position of Wheeler County sheriff. Wheeler County Deputy Sheriff Mike Garibay will run against him as a write-in candidate.
Of the Wheeler sheriff's office, Humphreys said, "They really need good leadership. Somebody like me." He described himself as a highly qualified candidate, with experience in a small sheriff's office and a large police agency where he worked patrol, in the transit division and emergency management unit. He also has a master's in criminal justice from Boston University.
"I have a concern and abiding love for that county," he said.
Should he lose the election, Humphreys would have until November 2015 to decide to return to work at the Portland Police Bureau– the five-year period allowed for return-to-work after a medical layoff.

Had enough?  Write to the Speaker of the House, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC 20515 and demand federal hearings into the police problem in America.  Demand mandatory body cameras for cops, one strike rule on abuse, and a permanent  DOJ office on Police Misconduct.





Fairfax County Police Officer Larry A. Jackson award for false arrest. Fairfax County Police. Police brutality

Former Texas death-row inmate begins fight for exoneration
Credit: The Texas Tribune

Former Texas death-row inmate begins fight for exoneration
Kerry Max Cook's three-decade-old case will once again take center stage in Smith County Tuesday as he begins a new fight to clear his name of the 1977 murder of Linda Jo Edwards.
Cook, who was released from prison more than a decade ago after spending about 20 years on death row, was convicted at age 22.
"All I want is my innocence,” Cook said in a phone interview from his Dallas-area home on Thursday, his 56th birthday. “That’s all I want out of this.”
Cook is seeking to test more DNA — as much as investigators can find in the three-decades-old evidence file — to prove to the court that he is innocent and to have the murder charges officially dismissed. But, he said, he doesn’t stand a chance if he has to fight in Smith County, where the courts have said that prosecutors broke the rules to secure his conviction. Today, Cook will ask an administrative judge to move his case to another county. Smith County prosecutors, though, say that things have changed there since Cook’s trials, and that he can get a fair hearing.
Cook’s case is one of the most tortured sagas in Texas’ long history of unusual courtroom dramas. In 1978, he was convicted of murder after prosecutors convinced the jury that he bludgeoned and stabbed Edwards to death, cut out her genitalia and stuffed them in the leg of one of her stockings. He professed his innocence, and the guilty verdict was ultimately overturned. A second trial ended in a mistrial, and he was again found guilty and sentenced to death in a third trial. But an appeals court overturned that decision, finding “egregious prosecutorial misconduct” in the case. When Smith County offered him a plea deal in 1999 before what was to be his fourth trial, he agreed.
Though prosecutors who tried Cook have denied wrongdoing, the court found in 1996 that “prosecutorial and police misconduct has tainted this entire matter from the outset.”Edwards lived in the same apartment complex as Cook at the time of her murder. According to court records, she had been involved in an extramarital affair with James Mayfield, who had also been her boss. Before Edwards’ death, he had left his wife to move in with her. When he returned to his wife, Edwards attempted suicide. That made their affair public and resulted in Mayfield being asked to resign from his job at what was then Texas Eastern University and is now the University of Texas at Tyler. On the night of the murder, Mayfield told authorities, he was with his wife and daughter.
Among other things, prosecutors did not reveal that Mayfield’s daughter was known to police to be mentally unstable and had made death threats against Edwards. According to the court ruling, prosecutors also misrepresented a deal they made with a jailhouse snitch who testified that Cook confessed to the crime. And, the court found, prosecutors pressured a police sergeant to give misleading and unscientific testimony that Cook’s fingerprints in Edwards' apartment were fresh.
Prosecutors have disputed the findings of misconduct, and they proceeded with a fourth trial. Shortly before the trial was to begin, though, they offered Cook a plea deal. He could plead guilty, be sentenced to the time he had served and then be released. Cook refused to plead guilty, though, and instead entered a plea of no contest.
He avoided the risk of another trial, but Cook was still legally considered a murderer. Only after Cook signed the agreement with prosecutors did DNA testing reveal that Mayfield’s semen was on the victim’s panties. Mayfield has never been charged in relation to the crime, and Smith County prosecutors have said the DNA results don't mean Cook didn't commit the crime.
“Given the history of this case, there is no chance that the resolution of Kerry’s case can have any legitimacy or appearance of impartiality if it remains in Smith County,” said Marc McPeak, a lawyer with Greenberg Traurig in Dallas, who is working pro bono on the case.
Former Smith County District Attorney Jack Skeen, now a state district judge in Tyler, did not return phone calls seeking comment. And his predecessor, A.D. Clark III, who presided over Cook’s original trial and now works in Tyler for the Texas attorney general’s office, declined to comment on the record. Both have maintained that Cook is guilty.
Michael West, an appellate lawyer in the Smith County district attorney’s office who has done research on the case but is not directly handling it, said Cook’s request for the recusal of every judge in the county, some of whom were in high school during Cook’s original trial, is “just ridiculous.”
“Everything about Smith County is different from that time,” West said.
West, was not involved in Cook's previous trials, also questioned Cook’s motives for pursuing his innocence claims more than a decade after he was released from prison.
“To me, it’s suspicious,” he said. “It seems like if I was all fired up and gung ho about being innocent, I wouldn’t have waited so long.”
If he is exonerated, Cook could apply for compensation for the two decades he spent on death row. He could be eligible for more than $1.5 million in a lump sum payment and a monthly annuity equal to the same amount over the course of his life.
Cook said he doesn’t care about the money. He would waive the compensation if the county would simply declare his innocence.
“Between money and justice, I’ll take justice,” he said.
Money, though, is a major reason why Cook said it has taken so long for him to begin this phase of his legal battle. Getting and keeping a job and a home as a convicted murderer is no easy feat, so he has lived paycheck to paycheck.
Additionally, the DNA laws in Texas have evolved since Cook was released from prison in 1999. Texas adopted its law allowing for post-conviction DNA testing in 2001. It required defendants to meet strict requirements before testing was granted. Over the years, those have been eased.
And McPeak didn’t take Cook’s case until 2009. He has worked since then to compile evidence and testimony from a complex set of records spanning three decades, four trials and a host of lawyers. It took six months to get all of the public documents he requested from Smith County, McPeak said.
Cook, he said, already has enough evidence from the 1999 DNA results to prove his innocence. But because this could be his last chance to prove it in court, he wants to gather every piece of evidence that remains to determine who did kill Edwards.
“This is a big deal and it takes a long time, and it’s not an easy decision,” McPeak said.
Cook is married now and has a son named Kerry Justice, who is 11. But every day, he said, is a struggle for survival. He has been out of prison and away from the repeated rape and physical abuse on death row that pushed him to attempt to take his own life, but Cook said he is not truly free.
“I’m so tired; I’m so beaten up now,” he said. “Man, I struggle with suicidal tendencies.”
This fight, he said, could be his last chance to finally prove his innocence and remove the cloud of conviction from his life.
“I keep coming back like Lazarus from the dead,” he said. “I’m not going to quit because I was innocent.”