aw...how cute...now read this and see if you still think the cops are cute
(letter to the editor) Mount Vernon — I am writing once again to express my dismay that Fairfax County still does not have an independent Police Oversight Review Board despite numerous past recommendations for the creation of such an organization.I no longer live in the county, but I am the father of David Masters. David was shot to death by a Fairfax County police officer on Nov. 13, 2009 while sitting in his truck at a stop at the intersection of Route 1 and Fort Hunt Road. I don’t know any more about the circumstances of this grim fatality now than I did then and now, as then, the records of this tragedy are not available to anyone outside the police department. The officer who shot my son was ultimately and I must say secretly fired b. But even that was done without any admission of culpability by anyone in the county.
Idiots at work on your tax dollar
U.S. District Court judge has
released a Baltimore cop Ashley Roane caught in a drug dealing and tax-fraud
investigation from federal custody until trial. Judge Stephanie A. Gallagher
allowed the cop a pre-trial release with conditions. She faces charges of
attempted possession with intent to distribute one kilogram or more of heroin,
possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, aggravated
identity theft and identity theft.
A Muscle Shoals cop named Greg Scoggins was
found guilty Tuesday of killing a deer on TVA property. Scoggins was charged with killing the deer while on duty in
December and was fired from the Muscle Shoals Police Department. Scoggins was
ordered to pay a $1,000 fine and court costs.
A lawyer for a San Francisco
police officer says his black client was the victim of racial profiling when he
was arrested last week when three white San Francisco cops pulled over cop Lorezno
Adamson they asked whether he was on probation and parole. Adamson said he
replied by saying he should have instead been asked for his driver's license
and registration. Adamson said he was choked, thrown to the ground and arrested
after telling the trio that he was an officer and that he was armed.
Misconduct claims against NYPD
soar 22% between 2011 and 2012: report
Claims against police were up
7% — from 8,941 in fiscal year 2011 to 9,570 in fiscal year 2012 — but a report
released by Controller John Liu’s office said accusations against NYPD officers
of improper conduct, false arrests and using excessive force rose 22%, while
they were down an average of 19% for other city agencies.
Bal Theatre owner Dan Dillman
has filed a federal lawsuit against Alameda County seeking more than $15
million in damages, alleging that he was falsely arrested and beaten last
October by two, out-of-uniform Sheriff’s Department cops Michael D. Carroll and
Terrence H. Montigue as the cops who “severely and mercilessly beat, punched
and kicked (him) while he was on the ground in handcuffs.”
John. P. Wolfinbarger, an
Oswego cop was in custody after a standoff in a plaza off Route 6 in Channahon
New York. He was charged with disorderly conduct, obstructing a police officer
and DUI alcohol. Wolfinbarger is an 11-year veteran of Oswego Police
Channahon police responded to a
call from patrons at Chicago Pizza & Catering Company that a man was inside
arguing with someone and that he had a gun.
Since 2006, the Minneapolis
Police Department has paid out almost $14 million to the “alleged” victims of
police misconduct and abuse. Last month,
the department broke, settled a $3 million suit with the family of a mentally
ill man who died after being forcibly restrained at the local YMCA. It was the
largest payout in the city’s history to the family of a civilian alleged to
have been harmed by the Minneapolis police. But there’s been no discipline. “Attorneys
who have sued the Minneapolis police say the department is reluctant to
discipline wayward officers,” reports the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.
Cops beat up their own
Jabbar Campbell of Brooklyn NY found
not guilty of assault charges stemming from gay pride party. Cambell’s home was
raided by cops during a gay pride party at his house, was found not guilty of
attempted assault and disorderly conduct charges stemming from an alleged
altercation that took place with a sergeant overseeing the raid. Campbell plans
to sue the NYPD for the allegedly homophobia-fueled arrest.“I’m scared of the
fact that these officers will go to the lengths of breaking into my home and
assaulting me like it was a daily business for them,” said Campbell, 32.
the word we were looking for is idiot.
IRVINGTON, N.J. - Four northern
New Jersey police officers face internal affairs charges because of rap videos
they appeared in while off duty. Maurice Gattison, president of the city's
police union, and three other cops were recently charged with conduct
unbecoming a police officer. If found guilty, they could lose their jobs. The video for the song
"Temper Like an Alcoholic" features him rapping homophobic lyrics and
promoting violence. In another, Gattison refers to himself a "felon for
life."
..and of course the usual pile of drunk cops society has to put up with
Battle Creek Michigan cop Willaim
Gensch was sentenced to pay more than $1,000 in fines and court costs for a
drunk driving crash that occurred in July 2012. Gensch was driving mare than
100 miles per hour and lost control of the car. He then hit two mailboxes and
two signs. Gensch had a blood-alcohol level of .235 percent.
FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- Suspended
Indianapolis cop David Bisard accused of causing a fatal crash while driving
drunk will go on trial Oct. 14 as originally scheduled after his attorneys and
prosecutors could not agree on another date. He was charged nearly three years
ago with reckless homicide, criminal recklessness and operating a vehicle while
intoxicated following the crash while on duty and driving a squad car, killing
30-year-old Eric Wells. The trial was moved to Allen County because of media
attention.
ASHEVILLE NC — Woodfin cop Michael Salley was
suspended after he was charged with driving while impaired. Salley was also
cited for speeding. In 2007, Salley was injured when his car overturned during
a chase
Dearborn cop Arrested for DUI
after allegedly struck three vehicles. He has been charged with operating a
vehicle under the influence and leaving the scene of an accident.
The mother of a man killed in 1998 by a New Milford Ct. cop says she's pleased the cop who
The mother of a man killed in
1998 by a New Milford Ct. cop says she's pleased the cop who shot her son has
committed suicide. Cop Scott Smith was
found dead in a bedroom of his Danbury home last week of carbon monoxide
poisoning. Smith received probation after pleading no contest in 2004 to
a misdemeanor negligent homicide charge in the death of 19-year-old Franklyn
Reid, who was shot after a foot chase.
Reid's mother, Pearlylyn Reid,
tells the News Times of Danbury Tuesday that she feels the suicide was justice
and we agree with her.
This weeks cops in the drug business
Baltimore cop Ashley Roane has
been arrested and is accused of standing watching in uniform while what she
believed was a drug deal was conducted. Roane arranged with an informant to
stand watch while the informant made a supposed drug deal at a west Baltimore
shopping center. The complaint alleges that Roane was on duty, in uniform and
armed and watched the transaction from a marked police vehicle.
Birmingham, Alabama – Jeffrey
Lynn Snyder Narcotics Task Force cop Charged with Embezzling Seized Money. Federal prosecutors have charged the former commander
of the West Alabama Narcotics Task Force with stealing at least $125,000 from
suspected drug proceeds seized by the multi-agency task force.
The average cop is a common thief and here's why
READING, Pa. - May 31, 2013
(WPVI) -- A former Berks County police officer is under arrest, accused of
stealing from his fellow officers at the Fraternal Order of Police. John
Masciotti served as treasurer for F.O.P. Lodge 71 in Temple. He's accused of
bilking the organization out of $92,000.
Bladensburg cop Ridwan
Osanyinpeju is being accused of credit card fraud in Prince George's County
Maryland. Osanyinpeju was arrested on Thursday.Osanyinpeju is charged in the
District Court of Maryland with theft of money having a value of at least
$1,000 but not more than $10,000.
Philadelphia cop Jonathan Lazarde
is ccused of extorting a suspect he'd arrested.
Lazarde arrested a man on a gun
charge - and then offered not to attend any court proceedings to ensure an
acquittal if the suspect paid him $3,000.
Come on! Everybody sing along!
Happiness is a warm gun
Bang Bang Shoot Shoot
Happiness is a warm gun, momma
Bang Bang Shoot Shoot
When I hold you in my arms
Oooooooooh, oh yeah!
And when I feel my finger on your trigger
Oooooooooh, oh yeah!
I know nobody can do me no harm
Oooooooooh, oh yeah!
Because
Happiness is a warm gun, momma
Bang Bang Shoot Shoot
Bang Bang Shoot Shoot
Happiness is a warm gun
Bang Bang Shoot Shoot
Yes it is, gun!
Happiness yes, it's gun!
This weeks weasel cops
Apparently
cop unfamilair with the word “No”
Edmund
Ansara police officer has filed a lawsuit against the City of Millville NJ
claiming that he was wrongfully suspended for over a year. .The lawsuit stems
from an incident on or about Nov. 7, 2011, when a Millville police captain
allegedly ordered Ansara to void an otherwise valid traffic summons, according
to the suit.Ansara’s attorney. He said that the woman who received the ticket
is connected to either a Millville elected official or a former police officer,
and the voiding of the ticket was done “as a favor for a connected friend.”Ansara
did not name the official.
Federal
authorities have charged another former Jackson Miss. Cop with bribery.Robert Nikita Shegog was
charged in a criminal information, a type of charge usually filed when a
defendant plans to plead guilty. It says Shegog solicited and accepted bribes
valued at more than $5,000 in transactions related to the department from
December 2009 to September 2010.
Joletta
Vallejo a Wichita cop and two other people were charged with conspiracy and
wire fraud after an internal investigation by police concluded that they were
involved in scheme to keep the officer from losing her job, according to U.S.
Attorne.
A
New York City cop named Edwin Vargas hired computer hacks that he was supposed
to arrest to break into email accounts on his behalf. He used the network of
hackers to obtain the login information of at least 43 different accounts that
were tied to some 30 people; this included 19 cops he worked with.
Chicago
cop Harold Rodriguez has been accused of illegally arresting four men after they
refused to pay him a bribe. The complaint says Rodriguez stole money from their
wallets after they were arrested.
West
Orange NJ police Lt. Richard Levens has been charged with theft and suspended.
UNION
SPRINGS, Sgt. Nathan Williams pulled over a Hispanic driver Williams suspected
was drunk. During the course of the traffic stop, Sgt. Williams allegedly took
the man's billfold and stole hundreds of dollars. Williams faces two charges;
third degree theft and an ethics violation, a misdemeanor and a felony.
Rick
Earl a Pittsburgh cop, charged with
insurance fraud almost two years ago lost some of his police powers, but he
didn’t lose his job. Earle is being paid his full salary while serving
probation.
St. Charles County Mo. sheriff’s deputy
Christopher E. Hunt was found guilty in August of felony burglary for entering
the home and misdemeanor counts of assault and property damage. He was
sentenced to five years in prison
Logansport Ind. cop Carlos Leal was
sentenced to house arrest after misusing a city-issued gas card. The judge
sentenced Leal to one year and 180 days on house arrest. Leal can petition to
serve the final 180 days on probation. He will also pay $1,630.30 in
restitution to the Logansport Police Department.
Steven
Buglio one of the two Vineland NJ
cops who stole funds from the local police union they helped oversee has been
sentenced to two years of probation. Vineland will also will pay $40,000 in
restitution to Police Benevolent Association Local 266.
Antonio
C. Martinez a Chicago cop who
committed robberies with gang members while in uniform was sentenced to 12
years in federal prison. He pleaded guilty in November 2011 to racketeering,
drug and robbery conspiracies, and was sentenced in Hammond, Ind. Court records
show Martinez and another officer committed robberies on behalf of the Latin
Kings — sometimes while in uniform and while driving police vehicles. They
stole drugs, weapons and cash, and would sometimes get a cut of the money they
stole, a written statement from the Department of Justice said.
A
New Orleans police captain named Michael
Roussel was convicted of plotting to arrange a contract to provide security for
Entergy at inflated rates and then skim off the top has had his prison sentence
reduced by more than three years.
Drugged up and drunk cops
An
Atlanta cop was arrested for disorderly conduct while under the
influence. According to reports, Officer Ronald Polzin was arrested while out
with his friends after an alleged dispute with an Atlantic Station security
employee. Officer Polzin has been relieved of duty and on paid suspension. The
incident is being investigated.
A
U.S. Virgin Islands police officer has been charged with drug trafficking. The
case against Angelo Hill is part of an investigation into the director of the
island's Department of Planning and Natural Resources, who was arrested on the
same charge last week.
He was
buying illlegal drugs BUT he had a reason, so there you go.
The
Milwaukee County District Attorney's office says that Anthony Bialecki, a
Milwaukee cop faces a charge of possession of
a prescription drug without a prescription. A criminal complaint says that
officers saw Bialecki buy Percoset for $40 from someone.Officers arrested
Bialecki minutes later.The complaint says Bialecki admitted to buying the pills
without a prescription, and that he was buying the Percoset to supplement his
prescription for Vicodin.
Anchorage
Police Department officials say a cop named Mark J. Moeller is facing misconduct
charges after improperly trying to have a DUI case dismissed against a
23-year-old woman with whom he was having a relationship.
Adam
Conway, an off-duty Dallas cop was jailed in Rockwall on a DWI charge Saturday
evening.
Springdale
Ill. cop Jeremy Liotta is charged with possession of drugs and stealing his own
police badge. Cops charged him with theft of the badge, impersonating a public
servant, possession of pills and several vehicle registration violations. According to the affidavit, Liotta told Harmar
police his badge and other items were among his personal belongings “thrown
into the bag by Chief (Joseph) Naviglia of Springdale Borough” when Liotta
resigned from the force.
Jeffrey
Walker, a Philadelphia cop has been suspended with intent to dismiss after
being charged in a scheme to rob drug dealers. Walker allegedly planted an
ounce of cocaine in a drug dealer's car, had the car pulled over, took the drug
dealer's house key, and later went to the jailed man's house where Walker
allegedly stole $15,000 as the informer took five pounds of marijuana.
The
firing of Miami Beach cop Rolando Gutierrez who admitted drinking before work
has been upheld by an arbitrator.
Michael
Seadler, a Santa Clara cop was arrested after officers allegedly found him with
cocaine inside his Dodge pickup. police were called by the mother of Seadler's
son to check on Seadler because he was acting strangely when he dropped off his
young son.
Paterson weighs $200K settlement in police brutality case involving go-go dancer
Municipal officials have reached a tentative
settlement in the lawsuit that a go-go dancer filed against Paterson earlier
this year after a city police officer allegedly slammed the handcuffed woman to
the floor in a holding cell at headquarters. The incident was taped by a police
headquarters surveillance camera.
Among other six-figure
settlements in the past three years were:
$710,000 for a lawsuit filed by
a woman who said a police officer forced her to perform oral sex on him while
she was in custody at police headquarters.
$400,000 for two lawsuits filed
by men who said they were beaten by police wen they tried to collect a reward
for returning a firefighter’s lost cell phone.
Green Bay pays man $20,000 in police brutality settlement
The City of Green Bay has
agreed to pay $20,000 to settle a police brutality case. Anthony Basler, 34,
accused officers of using batons, shackles and bodily force to injure his head,
face, neck and other parts of his body in a 2010 incident inside his apartment.
Basler was charged with
resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and pepper-spraying officers. But the
Brown County district attorney's office later dropped the charges
Second Galesville officer suspended, demoted
The second cop accused of
misconduct will be suspended, demoted and receive a pay cut, the judge assigned
to the case announced Wednesday.
“There is substantial and
credible evidence to terminate officer John Kamrowski,” judge Benjamin Proctor
wrote in his ruling, but he should not be because of his “long and credible
service.”
The case involving Kamrowski
and officer James Brudos, who resigned last week, dragged on for a year —
during which both officers were on paid leave, costing the city nearly $100,000
— and was based on several allegations of insubordination and other misconduct.
Kamrowski was accused of seven
instances of misconduct, and Brudos was accused of 10 after an independent
investigation into their actions in recent years. The accusations include
repeated violations of city policies, refusal to follow orders or cooperate
with superiors, overstepping authority and other offenses.
Windermere cop: I 'was told to stop vehicles based on the color of the driver's skin'
A Windermere cop named Alejandro
Rivera is charged with conducting racially based traffic stopped used the term
"Bravo vehicle" to describe cars driven by black motorists, another
officer told prosecutors in documents released Friday.
Rivera said his field-training
officer, Jason Darnell, told him to pull someone over because he was driving a
"Bravo vehicle," court documents show.
When Rivera asked what that
meant, Darnell replied, ""Bravo stands for 'black, stop it,' "
"I was told to stop
vehicles based on the color of the driver's skin and some preconceived notions
I guess he had of race," Rivera said.
Rivera said he made three such
stops that month under pressure from Darnell and wrote speeding tickets even
though the in-car radar was turned off, records show.
Darnell was charged in April
with official misconduct and making threats against a public servant.
Windermere police are investigating Officer Ryan Miller, who has been suspended
but not been charged.
FBI informant payments derail sentencing hearing for 'best cop money can buy'
Donald Abraham Solomon, the
former police chief in Washington County who called himself "the best cop
money can buy" won a reprieve from sentencing on extortion charges when
his attorney suggested that the key informant had been bought for even more. Solomon
admitted to taking around $8,800 from an FBI agent he thought was a drug dealer
in return for standing guard over two meetings and supplying two Tasers.
Chicago cop to be sentenced in gang case
Antonio Martinez, a Chicago cop who pleaded
guilty to committing armed robberies for a street gang could be sentenced to 12
years in prison. He admitted committing armed robberies for the gang in
Illinois and northwest Indiana. Another Chicago cop, Alex Guerrero, was sentenced to
19 years in prison. Guerrero also admitted committing armed robberies for the
Latin Kings.
Galveston Police Seized Wrong Phone in Attempt to Destroy Evidence of Brutality, Lawsuit Claims
The city of Galveston, Texas is
facing a lawsuit from Jarrett Anthony Neu over an allegation of police
brutality that includes cops seizing the wrong cellphone.
Neu claims that Galveston
police arrested him at 4:45 p.m. on March 11, without a warrant, at a Galveston
apartment complex. He claims they lied about it in the police report. He claims
they subjected him not only to threats, intimidation, insult and humiliation,
but severe and cruel physical abuse and punishment by both physical beating and
the repeated unnecessary and unwarranted deployment of a less-than-lethal Taser
weapon on plaintiff. Plaintiff, who suffers from a pre-existing cardiac
ailment, suffered permanent and debilitating injuries as well as permanent
disfigurement and scarring at the hands of these police officers. During this
police administered beating, officers realized that a citizen was filming the
beating via cell phone and the officer's involved without a legal reason seized
(the wrong) cell phone. Counsel for plaintiff has the cell phone that recorded
the beating. The conduct of defendant violated plaintiff's rights under the
1st, 4th, 8th and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution."
Courthouse News notes it’s the
first time they’ve reported a claim that police took a wrong cellphone while
trying to seize video evidence of brutality, a growing trend with the rise of
phone cameras.
Cop Accidentally Shot and killed Hofstra Student
A Nassau County cop
accidentally shot a Hofstra University student Friday morning as a robbery
suspect held her in front of his body and tried to back out of a house. Seven
bullets struck the suspect, identified by police as Dalton Smith, 30 years old,
killing him, One bullet struck the student, Andrea Rebello, 21, in the head.
Tisbury Officer Facing Criminal Charges
Kelly R. Kershaw, a Tisbury Mass.
Cop is facing several charges in Edgartown district court after allegedly
interfering with firefighters trying to fight a dryer fire at her home.
According to documents filed in
court, the Tisbury fire department responded to a dryer fire at Kershaw’s home.
Kershaw showed signs of intoxication and was concerned about her pet chicken. She
was repeatedly asked her to leave the fire scene. “Officer Kershaw was acting
in [an] extremely aggressive manner towards us as we informed her that she had
to leave the area,” Kershaw allegedly screamed and swore at the officers. “I
informed her that she had to leave the yard now and she again yelled and
threatened to kill me,” he wrote, adding that he knew that she was a sworn
police officer with a valid license to carry firearms. Officer Marathas said
that at one point, Officer Kershaw swung at him and hit him on his left
forearm.
Lakewood cop already convicted on federal charges for stealing donations
Skeeter Manos, a Lakewood cop already
convicted on federal charges for stealing donations from a fallen officers’
fund has admitted to identity theft and forgery in a Pierce County superior
court. He tried to cover up the theft of $159,000 from a fund established after
four Lakewood cops who were killed in a coffee shop on Nov. 29, 2009.
City of Portland to pay $35,000 to settle civil lawsuit alleging false arrest, battery during anti-police march
The City of Portland would pay
$35,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by a man who was injured during a March
2010 anti-police protest, under an ordinance that will go before city
commissioners Wednesday. The encounter, captured on television footage, resulted
in injuries to Clifford Richardson. He was treated at OHSU Hospital after his
head and face struck the pavement during a scuffle with an officer, according
to city records.
Hearing waived for D.C. officer accused in cocaine ring
Washington, D.C. cop Jared Weinberg charged
with laundering money for a California-to-Pittsburgh cocaine ring was released
on his own recognizance. Weinberg was
arrested at his precinct on a complaint filed by federal prosecutors in
Pittsburgh. He is charged with conspiracy to commit money-laundering for the
drug ring, believed to have sold as much as four tons of cocaine between 2000
and 2009.
Another drugged up cop
ASHLAND, Kentucky — Melvin Charles Schoch Jr. a Kentucky cop
entered a guilty plea in federal court to
charges of attempting to possess oxycodone with intent to distribute and
possessing a firearm during the commission of a drug crime. According to the
plea agreement, Schoch entered a home looking to take prescription pills and
money under the guise of serving a search warrant. Court records show that
neither drugs nor cash were found.
Weasel cop stealing more than $50,000 from his police union
Robert John Lucking, A Park City Itah cop has been charged with multiple counts of theft
for allegedly stealing more than $50,000 from his police union and embezzling
money from his department’s evidence room.
Does this sound right to you?
A Fairfax County cop says his police cruiser was struck by another car on Gallows Road when the driver ran a stop sign. The cops say the car struck the cop car in the back quarter panel, making the cruiser spin and strike a utility pole. The cop car has a smashed tail light. The driver then fled the scene. The only description the cops have is that the car was a dark four-door sedan.
So the cop didn’t get a license plate, a make or model of the car and he didn’t chase the bad guy?
Yeah…well….you know…that could happen.
No really, it could happen.
Does this sound right to you?
A Fairfax County cop says his police
cruiser was struck by another car on Gallows Road when the driver ran a stop
sign. The cops say the car struck the cop car in the back quarter panel, making
the cruiser spin and strike a utility pole. The cop car has a smashed tail
light. The driver then fled the scene. The only description the cops have is
that the car was a dark four-door sedan.
So the cop didn’t get a license
plate, a make or model of the car and he didn’t chase the bad guy?
Yeah…well….you know…that could
happen.
No really, it could happen.
Today's police brutality reports
A Providence Police Department internal investigation is underway following an incident early Sunday morning that left a local man with injuries that he claims were caused by a police officer. Eric Rodriquez, 27, showed Target 12 2 black eyes and several scrapes and bruises on his face and body. He says a police officer stopped him while he was walking on Potters Avenue near Harriet Street, just before 1 in the morning on Sunday. "I still don't know why they stopped me. And I didn't deserve this," Rodriguez says, referring to his injuries. "At one point, my eyes were swollen shut, worse than they are now. He hit me repeatedly in the face, and then moved my face to the other side and hit me repeatedly on that side"
Indianapolis settles Brandon Johnson's police brutality lawsuit for $150,000
It has been three years since Indianapolis teen Brandon Johnson was beaten by police officers as he challenged the arrest of his brother. At the time, then-Police Chief Paul Ciesielski called it one of the worst cases of excessive force he had seen in 23 years. Then-Public Safety Director Frank Straub issued a public apology. His mother settled a federal lawsuit against the city of Indianapolis for $150,000.
Two Marion SC Police officers were fired Friday after they were charged this week following an investigation by State Law Enforcement Division. Sgt. Eric Walters and Frankie Brown were booked Thursday at the Marion County Detention Center on charges of assault and battery, first degree and misconduct in office. The case stems from an incident April 2 when a woman was hit with a Taser multiple times, the arrest warrant says.
Wheeling, West
Virginia: A former sheriff will spend a year in federal prison for his role in
the beating of a robbery suspect. He will also serve 18 months’ probation and
pay his victim $1,850. ow.ly/kZ6u0 The Cato Institutes National
Police Misconduct NewsFeed Daily Recap 05-11-13 to 05-13-13 http://www.policemisconduct.net/national-police-misconduct-newsfeed-daily-recap-05-11-13-05-13-13/
Strasburg,
Virginia: A police officer lost his job over accusations that he used excessive
force against a suspect in a drug case, falsified records and violated safety
rules without a threat to life. Said the chief in a letter to the officer,
“Although you deny the allegations, the evidence in this case is overwhelmingly
against you in all three allegations.” ow.ly/kZ2LL The Cato Institutes National Police Misconduct
NewsFeed Daily Recap 05-11-13 to 05-13-13
http://www.policemisconduct.net/national-police-misconduct-newsfeed-daily-recap-05-11-13-05-13-13/
Leland police
officer in wrongful arrest claim resigns
A
Leland Police officer resigned last
week, days after the town received a letter from a man saying he was wrongfully
arrested by the officer.The letter was sent to the town by Katherine Parker of
Tin Fulton Walker and Owen law firm, who represents Darryl Langley. Langley also
contends that Smith allowed the removal of $10,000 worth of work equipment
stolen from his house in June 2011. Smith and former Officer Andrew Correll
responded to a call to assist Langley's former girlfriend Aimee Coleman in
retrieving items from Langley's house. Correll resigned from the police force
in Nov. 2012 after being cited for affray in a street fight outside of a
Wilmington bar.
Meriden
Police Brutality Case Going to Trial
After
failing to have police brutality charges against him dismissed, Meriden police
officer Evan Cossette is going to trial. Cossette, indicted by the federal
government last year, is accused of shoving a prison whose hands were cuffed
while being held inside a holding cell at the Meriden Police Department in
2010.
The victim received a head injury as a result. Cossette, the son of Police Chief Jeffry Cossette, was indicted by a grand jury that issued two counts, including a charge that Evan Cossette lied on official police reports about the incident. Under the indictment, Cossette is charged with one count of use of unreasonable force by a law enforcement officerand one count of obstruction of a federal investigation by preparing a false report, which carries a maximum prison term of 20 years and a fine of up to $250,000.
The victim received a head injury as a result. Cossette, the son of Police Chief Jeffry Cossette, was indicted by a grand jury that issued two counts, including a charge that Evan Cossette lied on official police reports about the incident. Under the indictment, Cossette is charged with one count of use of unreasonable force by a law enforcement officerand one count of obstruction of a federal investigation by preparing a false report, which carries a maximum prison term of 20 years and a fine of up to $250,000.
More drunk and drugged up cops
Los Banos, California: The police department’s second highest
ranking officer has been convicted of drunken driving, according to a county
assistant district attorney. ow.ly/kUREk
The Cato Institutes National
Police Misconduct NewsFeed Daily Recap 05-11-13 to 05-13-13
East St. Louis, Illinois: A police officer was among seven people
named in a federal indictment, alleging they operated a cocaine distribution
ring. He has been charged with possession and conspiracy to distribute more
than 5 kilograms of cocaine. ow.ly/kYscD The
Cato Institutes National Police Misconduct NewsFeed Daily Recap 05-11-13 to
05-13-13
Lorain police
officer Hite guilty of physical control; charged with drunken driving pleads no
contest in court
LORAIN
—Officer
Todd Hite, 33, pleaded no contest yesterday to the charge of drunken driving. Hite was fined $750 and will have a 150-day
license suspension back dated to Nov. 22, 2012, the date of the offense Graves
said. Hite also will complete the Driver’s Intervention Program, a one-day
treatment session.
Self-glorification
We
should build a rose garden to the memory of citizens killed by the Fairfax
County Police. Don’t chuckle over it. There are enough people in this county
willing to finance and promote the project.
Just as the Fairfax
County cops best bud Gerry (With a G, dearie) Hyland wants to tax our food, the
cops decided to a mid-day self-glorification rally on company time. They have
that much of our money to spare. The manufactured
event, a memorial service held at the Public Safety Rose Garden located behind
police headquarters, was to recognize police officers killed in the
line of duty.
We should recognize
police officers who sacrifice their lives for the public good. But in all fairness
to the people of Fairfax County, we have done that and done that many times.
Considering the
enormity of police budget, the over gross overhead of assistant/deputy police
chiefs, combined with the extremely generous paychecks and golden retirement parachutes
we give the Fairfax County police …SHOULD’T THE COPS BE DOING THIS SORT OF
THING ON THEIR OWN TIME AND AT THEIR OWN EXPENSE?
This is to say
nothing of issue that the Fairfax County Police spend an inordinate amount of
time promoting themselves which is what the parade in the rose garden was about
and which leads us to the question that if the cops were forced to put on the
display in the rose garden on their own clock instead of ours, would they be conducting
these self-serving ceremonies at all? No, probably not because these sort of high
drama gatherings are for the sake of illusion, a means of telling the taxpayer “Don’t
look at what we take. Look at what we give”
But they do take.
They take a lot, especially when we factor in that Fairfax County cops, by and large,
don’t live in this country which is very generous to them. Their paychecks are
spent in Prince William County. The homes they buy are there as well. Their
kids take short buses, no doubt, to Louden schools.
Yet the enormous overhead
cost of redundant and unnecessary staff in the police department comes out of
our counties budget. Same with the fat paychecks we give them and lucrative retirement
deals they weaseled out of us. Our county pays for it.
And what is this “Public
safety rose garden?” Why are we paying
for this? If the cops want their own garden, they should build one out of their
pockets and not ours. And why do they get one at all? Does the County assessor get
an apple grove in his honor or garbage collectors a field of lilies? Enough is enough.
D.C. police officer faces Pittsburgh hearing in drug ring case
A District of Columbia police officer charged
with laundering money for a California-to-Pittsburgh cocaine ring under
indictment since 2009 is free on bond pending a preliminary hearing next week
before a federal magistrate here.
Jared Weinberg made a brief initial appearance
today in federal court in Pittsburgh following his arrest Monday at his
precinct in Washington, D.C., where he has been a police officer for a little
more than a year.
He is charged with conspiracy to commit
money-laundering for the ring, believed to have sold as much as four tons of
cocaine between 2000 and 2009.
Officer Weinberg is accused of laundering drug
proceeds for Damon Lewis Collins, identified as a California drug supplier for
a trafficking organization run by Robert Russell Spence of Coraopolis.
Mr. Spence and Mr. Collins are among some two
dozen alleged members of the ring under indictment here since 2009.
A separate indictment handed up in 2012 has
charged six others with money-laundering, including Officer Weinberg's father,
Howard Weinberg.
Several ring members have pleaded guilty,
including Montel Staples, the former athletic director and basketball coach at
now-closed Duquesne High School.
Prosecutors said Mr. Staples was a go-between
who passed cocaine money to his brother, Tywan Staples, of Oakland, Calif.,
from Mr. Spence.
An affidavit prepared by the Criminal
Investigation Division of the IRS says Officer Weinberg and his father rented
apartments in and around Baltimore for Mr. Collins to use in the cocaine
business.
The IRS estimated Mr. Collins laundered more
than $2 million by structuring cash deposits into his own bank accounts and the
bank accounts of 13 other people, including Officer Weinberg.
Structuring is a technique used by drug
organizations to conceal the source of funds and evade currency transaction
reports.
The case began in 2008 when one of the accused
ring members, Ruben Mitchell of Stockton, Calif., brought a bag onto a flight
from Oakland to Pittsburgh that was too big to fit into the overhead compartment.
The plane stopped over in Las Vegas, where the
bag ended up on a carousel while the flight continued on to Pittsburgh with Mr.
Mitchell.
When no one claimed the bag in Las Vegas,
officials opened it, found 19 kilos of cocaine and called the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration in Pittsburgh to watch Mr. Mitchell when he arrived.
At the airport, drug agents watched Mr.
Mitchell as he frantically looked for his bag.
DEA began building its case and arrested him
in Idaho in 2009. Prosecutors said the ring had initially mailed coke from
California to Pittsburgh, but as the operation grew larger, members started
using couriers on flights.
Marinette police officer charged with writing checks to himself out of police account
MARINETTE - A former Marinette police officer
has been charged with fraud for allegedly writing himself checks from the
Marinette Police Explorers bank account.
According to the criminal complaint, Ryan Ilse
wrote himself two checks from the account. One was for $180, which he cashed at
Curry's Food, and the other was for $300, which he cashed at Brown's Corner.
When Ilse cashed the checks, he reportedly
told the clerks at the stores that the checks were for overtime he had worked
for the police department. He later admitted that he used all the money for
gambling.
Ilse has been charged with two counts of Theft
by Fraud. Each count is punishable by up to nine months in prison or a $10,000
fine.
2 California Borough officers suspended after leaving post while on-duty
CALIFORNIA, Pa. —
Two California Borough police officers have
been suspended as a result of an incident last Friday that the police chief
believe put the public at risk.
California Borough Police Chief Rick Encapera
said the problem goes back to last Friday night when the on-duty officers
weren’t where they were supposed to be.
Police said a bar fight broke out at Sigz
Bistro located off the California University campus and spilled into the
street.
Channel 11’s Jodine Costanzo confirmed that
three California Borough officers were on-duty, but two, officers Justin
Schultz and Terry Childs, left for a couple hours for an unauthorized errand
miles away in the city of Washington, leaving one officer patrolling the entire
borough on a busy Friday night.
Outraged students and business owners packed a
California borough meeting Thursday night where council voted unanimously to
suspend those Schultz and Childs for 30 days without pay.
Encapera said their actions created a public
safety issue even though nearby departments provided backup.
Also, at the meeting Thursday night, many
accused Schultz and Childs of unprofessional conduct and using excessive force.
Encapera promised that the accusations will be
investigated, but the department’s trust and reputation have been called into
question.
The average cop is a weasel ad here's why
Hamilton County, Ohio: A
former sheriff’s deputy was sent to prison for two years for stealing $150,000
in gold from his employer. He was caught during a sting operation. ow.ly/kPlWT
Caseyville, Illinois: The
police chief has been charged with two felonies, both alleging official
misconduct. He is accused of using a vehicle seized by police for his own
personal use. He is also charged with taking luggage purchased by the village
and using it for himself. ow.ly/kRMzx
Newark, New Jersey: A
police officer admitted in federal court to fraudulently receiving $60,000 in
federal public housing assistance for a home he owned in the city. He remains
suspended without pay, but has agreed to voluntarily resign his position.
ow.ly/kRFUV
McKenzie, Tennessee: A
police chief has been accused of stealing city property, including a tractor
and two street sweepers. The items were valued at over $10,000 and went missing
while he was the chief. ow.ly/kQkd1
Jail more of em
Update: Wilcox County,
Georgia (First reported 10/25/12): The former sheriff was sentenced to ten
years in prison for assaulting an inmate inside of the county jail and for
conspiring to cover up the incident. “Today’s sentence reflects that law
enforcement officers who assault inmates in their custody and make false
statements erode the trust of the people that they have sworn to protect,” said
the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the civil rights division.
ow.ly/kRGn8
Mansfield police officer suspended
MANSFIELD — Mansfield
police Sgt. Billy Locke has been given a 15-day suspension without pay
following an off-duty weekend incident involving another officer.
The second officer, Lauren
Cross, was not disciplined because she is already on suspension for an earlier
unrelated incident. Mansfield aldermen on Monday are expected to consider a
recommendation to fire Cross.
Locke was punished for
violation of department policy addressing conduct unbecoming an officer. “As a
rule, police officers are held to a higher standard on and off duty,” Assistant
Chief Gary Hobbs said.
The disciplinary action
handed down to Locke was sparked by a dispute between him and Cross at a
Bossier City night club. Both were under the influence of alcohol. Bossier City
police responded to a call made by Cross, Hobbs said
No arrests were made.
Locke’s suspension. effective Wednesday. was decided after a Bossier City
police report was reviewed and the facts of the situation were evaluated, Hobbs
said.
This not the first time
Locke and Cross have been in trouble for off-duty behavior. They were suspended
in September for 10 days without pay for an incident that took place during a
Mansfield festival.
More drunk and drugged up cops and why the hell doesn't the Justice Deparment do something?
Abilene, Texas: A police
officer has quit after being arrested on charges of public intoxication and
firing a gun in a public place. ow.ly/kPZkE
Jacksonville, Florida: A police officer with a history of DUI got
another one in a hit-and-run involving several vehicles. It is her third DUI.
ow.ly/kPMby
Bethel, Alaska: A police officer is being charged with being
intoxicated while on the scene of a police shooting. He was not the officer
shooting, but he was assisting at the scene. The state is charging him with
three misdemeanors: two counts of DUI and one count of misconduct involving a
weapon. ow.ly/kRN6M
Bethel police officer
charged with DUI
BETHEL, Alaska (AP) — A
Bethel police officer is fighting charges that he was drunk when he showed up
armed to assist another police officer at a crime scene.
KYUK-AM
(http://bit.ly/10vEl54) reports Samuel Symmes, now employed as a police
department dispatcher, is contesting two counts of driving under the influence
and one count of weapons misconduct.
Symmes and his attorney,
Myron Angstman, contend tests performed on blood samples taken from Symmes were
not accurate.
Symmes was off duty Oct. 2
when he responded to a call for assistance from another officer. The officer
had contacted 24-year-old Sam Alexie Jr. in a neighborhood near Brown's Slough.
Bethel police said Alexie was intoxicated and pointed a rifle at the other
officer, who fired at Alexie and killed him.
Prosecutors in charging
documents said Symmes arrived in a police car and was ordered to secure the
scene.
His behavior, prosecutors
said, at first appeared normal. However, he fell at least twice.
The first time he dropped
to his knees. He fell again and hit his head, but said he was not hurt.
However, he was later found slumped over the steering wheel of his car and
taken by ambulance to a Bethel hospital.
Police in a press release
about the shooting said conditions were slippery and that an unidentified
officer had fallen on slippery stairs and had suffered a severe concussion.
A sample of Symmes' blood
at the hospital indicated the presence of alcohol. Prosecutors said an analysis
of the blood sample at the state crime law showed an alcohol level three times
above the legal limit.
Prosecutors have requested
a DNA sample from Symmes to prove the accuracy of the blood tests.
Symmes through his attorney
wants the request rejected. In court documents, Symmes attorney said it's the
state's responsibility to prove his client's guilt and that taking a DNA sample
months after the incident would violate Symmes' privacy.
A judge has not ruled on
the request.
Symmes resigned from the
police department six days after the shooting. He was hired several months
later as dispatcher.
City Manager Lee Foley said
the community should not jump to conclusions. Symmes did not play a role in the
fatal shooting.
"And he shouldn't be
judged in the community," Foley says. "If we're going to judge
somebody, let it be done in an official capacity and then let's see how
everything falls out."
Judge: Recently arrested
Indy police officer charged in fatal 2010 crash must stay in jail
INDIANAPOLIS — A suspended
Indianapolis police officer who was arrested on drunken driving charges a few
weeks ago must remain in jail while he awaits trial on similar charges in a
fatal 2010 crash, a judge ruled Thursday.
Allen County Judge Allen
Surbeck ordered David Bisard to be held without bond during a hearing in Fort
Wayne, where the fatal crash case was moved because of extensive publicity in
central Indiana. Bisard was at the Marion County Jail since he was arrested
following an April 27 crash in Indianapolis, but was moved to Allen County Jail
last week.
"I think we showed by
convincing evidence that this latest arrest showed not only disdain for the
court, but that he is a danger to the community," Deputy Prosecutor Denise
Robinson told reporters outside the courthouse in Fort Wayne.
Bisard's attorney, John
Kautzman, had no comment. And Marion County Prosecutor Terry Curry had no
official comment, spokeswoman Peg McLeish said.
Bisard, 39, is scheduled to
go to trial in October for the 2010 crash in which his patrol car hit two
stopped motorcycles, killing one man and seriously injuring two other people.
He is charged with reckless homicide, drunken driving and other charges. If
convicted on those charges, Bisard could face 20 or more years in prison.
Bisard's case has had a
three-year delay due to legal wrangling over admission of blood tests that
showed he had a blood-alcohol level more than twice the legal limit. The
Indiana Supreme Court ruled in December that the blood tests could be admitted
into evidence.
Bisard had been free on
bond and was allowed to keep his driver's license while awaiting trial. He was
arrested last month on misdemeanor drunken driving charges after a pickup truck
he was driving ran into a guard rail along a winding, narrow road through a
wooded area in the northeastern Indianapolis community of Lawrence. No one was
injured.
A blood test showed he had
a blood-alcohol level of 0.22 percent, according to court documents. The
state's legal limit to drive is 0.08 percent.
Bisard's driver's license
was suspended following the most recent crash, and prosecutors asked for
Bisard's bond to be revoked, too. Curry said a condition of Bisard remaining
free while awaiting trial was that he not be arrested again.
Bisard has been suspended
without pay from the Indianapolis Police Department since the 2010 crash.
Members of the Indianapolis Fraternal Order of Police had been paying Bisard's
legal bills, but they voted to stop doing it five days after Bisard's second
arrest.
The 2010 case drew intense
local media coverage as police officers' handling of the crash scene and evidence
stirred public distrust and led to disciplinary action against several
high-ranking officers, including the demotion of the police chief.
IMPD's David Bisard to remain in jail until
trial in Fort Wayne
FORT WAYNE, IND. — Louisa
Montilla-Wells squeezed the hand of Mary Mills when the decision was announced
— then their eyes welled up.
An Allen County judge had
just ordered suspended Indianapolis police officer David -Bisard to remain in
jail until his trial in October. Judge John Surbeck said a second drunken-driving
arrest made Bisard too much of a risk to let free.
“I was so happy,” Mills
said. “I didn’t really know what to expect after all the ups and downs in this
trial.”
Bisard is facing several
charges in an alcohol-related crash in 2010 that killed motorcyclist Eric
Wells, the husband of Montilla-Wells, and critically injured Mills and Kurt
Weekly, who now is Mills’ husband.
While Mills, who arrived at
the hearing on a motorcycle, and Montilla-Wells hugged, ¬Bisard’s face
registered no visible reaction at the ruling. For much of the hearing he had
sat slumped, staring down toward the orange slippers he wore with the striped
jail jumpsuit.
Marion County Deputy
Prosecutor Denise Robinson argued that the second drunken-driving arrest on
April 27 in Lawrence made him too dangerous to be released.
“The fact that the accident
happened at 2 p.m. showed significant alcohol problems that the defendant is
not able to control,” Robinson said.
Surbeck agreed, saying
Bisard “demon¬strated his instability, and this misconduct poses a risk of
safety for another person in the commu¬nity.”
“It is clear that the
conduct in the April 2013 arrest does demonstrate instability and disdain for
authority,” Surbeck said.
The case was transferred to
Allen County by Marion Supe¬rior Court Judge Grant Hawkins, who said the
pretrial publicity Bisard had received in ¬Indianapolis would make it difficult
for an impartial jury to be selected in the state capital.
More than a dozen reporters
and photographers from Indianapolis and local news outlets covered the
late-afternoon hearing in Allen Superior Court.
Bisard has been free on
$10,000 bond since the day of his arrest in August 2010, but Marion County
Prosecutor Terry Curry asked Surbeck to revoke that bond after the recent
¬arrest.
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