Same old Culture of Contempt, different name.
Gerry Hyland Jr.
How do we solve the police corruption problem in Fairfax County?
Easy.
We bring in fresh blood. We hire
someone who will adjust the attitude of arrogance and entitlement that permeates
the department, an outsider who will change the culture of contempt and
brutality that is the Fairfax County police.
With an honest police chief, meaning someone who wasn’t bred in the
Fairfax County Police department, we won’t need to discuss a citizen oversight
panel to investigate entrapment and murders by the cops-from –another-county on
the local citizenry.
With an ethical man or woman at
the top of the Neanderthal chain, the cops reckless spending could be roped in
and the several thousand yearly misconduct complaints against the police would
actually be investigated and the results of those investigations would be made
public, since, after all, the public pays for them.
And no, the Fairfax County Police ARE NOT investigating complaints
against them. Snap out of it. This isn’t a fairy tale. This is a police
force out of control and to prove that, not one incident report on the killing
of eight unarmed citizens in the past decade has been released to the public in
all probability because they were never investigated in the first place.
Anyway, back to an honest police chief.
The board of supervisors would fire an honest chief who tried to drag
the Fairfax County police force into the light of day. They’d fire him and they
would do it within a year. And they would do that because it’s really
a matter of values which is why Sharon Bulova and her cronies will never bring
in an outside person to manage the police.
What the board wants is someone who has no values, someone who won’t
question the practice of sweeping complaints about the cops under the carpet.
And most importently they want someone who will make damn sure the right
political contributions arrive into the right hands.
To prove the point, instead of hiring an outsider who will change
things, Bulova and her friends promoted whatever the hell is name is as chief
of police….it doesn’t matter what his name because he doesn’t matter. He won’t
rock the boat. He won’t change anything. That’s what matters to those people. To
prove the point, when asked what his plans for the department are, Chief
whats-it responded that he intended to hire more cops under the guise of
diversity. We don’t need more cops, of any color or creed. More cops will just
add to the problem. Fix the cops we have and then hire new ones.
It doesn’t matter, really. None of this matters because it will never
change. This guy, chief what’s his face,
will put in his time and retire with a pension that would make him a
millionaire in most 3rd world countries.
And when he goes, the next irrelevant person chosen from the inside the
department will take his place and nothing will change and Fairfax County, a
21st century place, will go on with its 19th century police force.
And no, correcting the corrupt and often
criminal Fairfax County Police Department won’t be solved by police oversight
because oversight can’t fix the core of the problem within the Fairfax County
Police Department which is contempt by the cops for the citizens who pay them (and
pay them much too much, way above the national average)
Oversight in Fairfax County will solve nothing except to give a bunch of
angry and bored retired guys something to do while adding even more bureaucracy
to a county government already saturated in red tape, overhead and redundancy.
Want an example of costly overhead and redundant positions? Former
police chief Rhorer’s six figure salaried job as “extra special police chief” or
Head Dwarf in charge or whatever the hell he is this month, can’t be justified any
more than the board of supervisors can explain the 20,000 foot, multimillion
dollar addition to the McLean police palace or the several hundred unused cars
the police department purchased and doesn’t use or the small fortune of public
money the cops are secretly pouring into drones.
Aside from not doing anything to change the cop’s culture of contempt
the claim that a citizen’s review board
would protect the public from continued
unlawful actions by the Fairfax County Police is unfounded . The fact is that is
no evidence can be found anywhere in the United States to justify that claim.
Citizen’s review boards do not curtail violence and other felonious activities
by the police upon the citizenry because virtually every citizen’s review board
in the nation is a dismal failure. Most are powerless to enforce their will and
are manipulated into subservience by local politicians, people like Bulova and
Hyland and that’s exactly what will happen in Fairfax County if we get
oversight.
It’s also not true that a citizen’s review board would protect the
police department from unjustified criticism by the public. Snap out of it….the cops in this county don’t give
damn what the public thinks. That’s mean
you. They could care less what you think. You have no value to them and in so
long as the board of supervisors continues to reward the cop’s culture of
contempt the police will continue not to give a damn about what the public
thinks of them or anything else.
Bulova and Hyland handed us an “independent
auditor” to investigate the hundreds and hundreds of complaints about abusive
behavior by the occupying force of outsiders that is the Fairfax County Police.
And to their credit they did with a straight face and doing anything straight
must have been a real chore for Hyland but anyway……the reason the board of
supervisors dreamt up the “independent auditor” wasn’t to derail calls for
police oversight. They did it because they can fire anyone in the position who
either audits the police or acts independently.
Elected officials, generally, are
all about power and live in the cult of self adoration. They don’t want or give a damn about what’s
good for you. They want what’s good for them and controlling the “independent
auditor” is what’s good for them. Citizens controlling a police review board
does not benefit members of the board of supervisors in any way, shape, manner
or form. In fact, police oversight would draw attention away from people like Sharon
“Show me the money” Bulova and Gerry Dearie Hyland and it would sap their
control over the county.
Besides, the fact that the board of supervisors funds almost 100
advisory boards but can’t bring itself to create a citizens advisory board
should tell the citizens advisory board advocates that a citizens review panel
ain’t gonna happen.……..so snap out of the piss trance and revert to plan B and
make a real difference, here and now, through political action and pulic awareness
because police oversight until pigs fly….pun intended.
If you want change don’t expect the local government to bring about that
change. The only way to rein the police in is to fire the people who hire the
cops and you will only be able to do that if you have grass roots support. Form
a political action. Work the polling precinct with handouts on the issue of
police corruption. That should be easy
since Virginia seems to have elections every three weeks.
Build blogs and websites aimed at informing
the people of Fairfax County about how corrupt, contemptuous and bloated the
Fairfax County Police are. Send speakers
to community groups and churches to bring the issue to light. People will listen if you give them something
to listen too and if you include them in the process.
Police oversight isn’t the silver bullet that will end the systematic corruption
and contempt that is the Fairfax County Police ebcuase the answer to fixing the
Fairfax County Police isn’t one thing it’s many things.
Not running the police department like a secret hillbilly cult is also
part of the answer.
Firing Sharon Bulova and keeping
her out of public office forever is a very large part of the answer.
Holding Gerry…that’s Gerry with G dearies…..Hyland accountable for his
“spend whatever the cops want” actions over the past few years is part of the
answer as well.
Putting a stop to the cops costly an unneeded publicity campaign is part
of the answer.
Forcing the cops to live in the county that pays them (and again, pays
them better than the national average) is part of the answer.
Cutting the police budget by at least 20% and placing that cash where
it’s needed (Schools, highways, more roads) is part of the answer.
Explaining to the cops that using lethal force when unnecessary is a bad
thing. So is setting up school teachers and eye doctors for false arrest. The
cops don’t understand that those are morally wrong things to do and their
actions support the claim.
As to the suggestion of bringing in the FBI to investigate possible
civil rights violation by the Fairfax County Police. Forget it, that ain’t
gonna happen in a Democratic stronghold while we have a Democratic
administration in the White House.
Besides investigating civil rights violations isn’t what we need to
investigate. What we need to investigate is the reason that our elected
officials are so hell bent on making the cops happy. To find that out, don’t
send in the FBI send in the IRS to investigate the hundreds of nickel and dime
political contributions that come into the Board of Supervisors campaign offers.
Have the auditors pay special attention to those contributions that come in
from Louden and Prince William Counties….you know…those two places where 80% of
the Fairfax County police force lives.
And the investigators should ask “Are these low ball contributions,
intended to fly in under the radar, coming from the sons, daughters, in-laws
and other relatives of the Fairfax County Police at the urging of the cops
union and if so, what are the cops getting in return at our expense? A lot, actually.
Man Exposes Himself to Woman on Running Path
A 25-year-old woman was running on a path when she saw a man exposing himself, according to the Fairfax County Police Department. The incident took place at 12:35 p.m. on August 2 on the intersection of Fields Brigade Road and Walnut Cove Circle in Chantilly.
In other news Chief of police what’s his name (in photo above) says he
want to hire more cops….yeah that’s what we need. More cops.
When white trash attacks
Ceres
officer charged with assault
CERES — Prosecutors have charged a police officer with misdemeanor assault stemming
from an incident in April, Police Chief Art de Werk announced Tuesday.
Christopher Melton, a nine-year veteran of the force, is
accused of using excessive force on a suspect during an April 13 incident on
the 1600 block of Evans Road. Another officer reported the alleged misconduct.
Melton is on paid
administrative leave while the criminal and internal affairs
investigations proceed.
Prosecutors filed a criminal complaint against Melton on
July 23 that claims he assaulted a detained person while on duty.
Melton was once terminated
for failing his 12-month probation period.
A year after his reinstatement, he was among about a half
dozen officers named in a lawsuit filed by a group of partygoers that said
police used excessive force while breaking up the party.
Cop
gets probation for cuffing man who threatened to file complaint
Police Officer Admir Kacamakovic, 31, tells a Brooklyn
Federal Court judge, "My intent was not to commit a crime, it was to
prevent a crime." He was sentenced Thursday to probation for violating a
man's civil rights by handcuffing him after he threatened to file a civilian
complaint.
Kacamakovic was a cop in the 62nd Precinct when he responded
to an altercation outside his cousin's bar in Bensonhurst on July 5, 2008.
The cop resigned from the force last October after pleading
guilty. The feds dropped another charge that he had illegally used the NYPD
database to search for information on the victim.
Kacamakovic is also charged with using an NYPD computer to access
a federal database to search for the name on the driver's license.
Accounts
differ in cop’s murder trial
PHOENIX Jurors at the trial of a Phoenix police officer
charged with murder and animal cruelty in the on-duty killing of a man and his
pit bull were given conflicting accounts Wednesday on how a domestic dispute
call at a trailer escalated into violence.
Prosecutors making opening statements at Richard Chrisman’s
trial said the officer abused his police powers by fatally shooting 29-year-old
Daniel Rodriguez in October 2010 even though the unarmed man posed no threat to
officers. Authorities say he also deployed his stun gun on the victim, killed
his dog and placed the barrel of his weapon on Rodriguez’s temple at various
points during the encounter.
“He decided to step
over the line that day,” prosecutor Juan Martinez said.
Chrisman, who has pleaded not guilty to second-degree
murder, aggravated assault and animal cruelty charges, maintains the shooting
was justified because Rodriguez had reached for the officer’s gun during a
tussle that preceded the shooting. Chrisman, a nine-year veteran of the Phoenix
Police Department, was fired about five months after the death.
Supporters
call for action after disabled man claims police brutality
SYRACUSE -- About 45 people showed up in front of the
Syracuse Police Headquarters to rally in support of Brad Hulett, a severely
disabled man who claims he became the victim of police brutality on May 3rd for
refusing to sit down on a Centro bus.
Surveillance video of what happened to Hulett on May 3rd has
outraged many people in Central New york. He refused a bus driver's order to
sit down even though the bus accomodates standing passengers. Syracuse Police
Sergeant William Galvin and Officer William Coleman were called in. Hulett
continued to refuse to sit down or leave the bus. He was tasered twice and
dragged off the bus apparently breaking his hip during the incident.
"The police tased him not once, but twice. Then they
dragged him off the bus and broke his hip. Are these people insane? For
standing on the bus? This is criminal." said Sally Johnston of Disabled in
Action.
Hulett's supporters are calling for the immediate
suspensions of the police officers and a thorough investigation of their
actions. They also want an investigation into Hulett's treatment at the Justice
Center Jail where they say Hulett was forced to suffer with a broken hip
overnight before receiving medical treatment.
Philly
cop suspended with intent to dismiss still could retain job
Another Philadelphia police officer is on the way to being
dismissed because of credibility issues. Andre Boyer, a 17-year police veteran,
has been suspended for 30 days
with the intent to dismiss following charges of intention to deceive, failing
to follow department procedures for handling evidence and conduct unbecoming an
officer. The Philadelphia Daily News reports that Boyer had been the subject of 21 civilian complaints — more than any
other officer on the force.
Who much did the cops cost us this week?
Staten Island man sues city after false arrest
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. - A false arrest and a conviction in a
Brooklyn shooting cost him more than two years of his life and left him
emotionally and physically scarred, a Staten Island resident alleges.
Lawrence Williams was raped and beaten in prison, prevented
from attending his mother's funeral and separated from his wife and children,
according to a lawsuit recently filed in Brooklyn federal court.
Williams, who was convicted in March 2010 of a shooting two
years earlier in Coney Island, maintains he was victimized by mistaken
identification and overzealous cops who "knowingly forwarded false,
unreliable and otherwise misleading evidence" to prosecutors and failed to
vigorously pursue evidence that could have cleared him.
Williams' conviction was reversed on Oct. 26 of last year,
based on the recommendation of the Brooklyn district attorney's office.
The lawsuit, filed in Brooklyn federal court, seeks
unspecified compensatory and punitive damages and names the city and several
cops as defendants. Williams alleges civil rights violations and malicious
prosecution.
Why we need national standard IQ tests for cops
Officer
charged in deadly crash appears in court
Memphis police
officer Alex Beard appeared in court Wednesday morning. He is charged with two
counts of vehicular homicide and two counts of aggravated assault. Mackala
Ross, 13, and Deloise Epps, 54, were killed August 2012 when the car they were
riding in collided with Beard's police cruiser..
"The issue is going to be whether or not he (Beard)
violated the law in the way he responded," said Beard's defense attorney,
Leslie Ballin. "The allegations are that just before the accident, he
turned off the lights and sirens ... That just before impact, he was traveling
at a high rate of speed."
Was it a tragic accident? Or should the former officer be
punished for the fatal wreck?
At this point, the defense is requesting medical records.Michael
Ross, who still has visible scars, says that is all fine by him. "Hospital
records. Yeah, they should get them because I've got a list of my injuries that
were caused by Alex Beard driving 94 miles an hour with no lights or sirens on,"
explained Ross.
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Milwaukee officer charged with sexual assault of a...
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Milwaukee officer charged with sexual assault of a...: A Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Department officer sentenced to 40 years in prison for child porn photos is now charged with 12 counts of se...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Judge orders Las Vegas officer to turn himself in ...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Judge orders Las Vegas officer to turn himself in ...: Solomon Coleman a Las Vegas police officer charged with sexually intimidating and harassing women he met on duty was ordered to repor...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Judge orders Las Vegas officer to turn himself in ...
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Judge orders Las Vegas officer to turn himself in ...: Solomon Coleman a Las Vegas police officer charged with sexually intimidating and harassing women he met on duty was ordered to repor...
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Suspended Springfield police officer Rafael Nazari...
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: Suspended Springfield police officer Rafael Nazari...: SPRINGFIELD - Police officer Rafael Nazario- who has been on unpaid suspension since being charged with rape in late 2011 - will resig...
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This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: City rejects plea to reinstate cop accused of chil...: LAWRENCE Mass.— The city yesterday rejected a plea to reinstate a cop Mayor William Lantigua fired last month after the officer was accus...
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: NJ cop sentenced on child endangerment charge/regi...
This Week's Charge of Child Molestation by your Local Police: NJ cop sentenced on child endangerment charge/regi...: Jeffrey Kimmel a northern New Jersey police officer convicted of child endangerment has been sentenced to seven years in state prison. K...
Common theives
Wisconsin
Police Officer Charged with Two Felonies
Officer Bradley Young
has been charged with one count of Fleeing an Officer while in a Vehicle, and
one count of Vehicle Theft, both of which are felonies. Young was arrested this
week after several law enforcement agencies pursued him through multiple
counties for several alleged burglaries.
RPD
officer arrested, charged with theft
Benjamin Aumada a 3-1/2 year veteran of the Rockport Police
Department (RPD) was terminated and arrested recently and charged with theft in
connection with the pawning of equipment he had been issued while working for
the RPD. Aumada was charged with theft, more than $1,500, but less than
$20,000.
Pawtucket
police officer charged with stealing gasoline
Officer Ken Provost, who patrolled the streets of Pawtucket
for 30 years, surrendered at state police headquarters Wednesday and was
charged with stealing about $700 worth of gasoline from city pumps. They really taught him a lesson by sending him home during the summer in "The ocean state" with full pay.
Cop
Convicted of Robbing Hispanic Motorists
Marvin Blades a Tulsa police officer was convicted and
sentenced to prison Thursday for robbing Hispanic motorists during traffic
stops. Blades faced five counts of robbery with a firearm on
allegations that he repeatedly pulled over Hispanic drivers, then either took
or ordered them to abandon their wallets, and then stole money from the wallets
before returning them. District Judge Tom Gillert found Blades guilty on all
five counts and sentenced him to a split sentence of 35 years in prison,
followed by 35 years of probation.
Cops and the women they abuse: Upstate NY police officer charged with assaulting ...
Cops and the women they abuse: Upstate NY police officer charged with assaulting ...: The Albany Police Department says 29-year-old Woody Riboul, a member of the department for a year, has been suspended without pay after ...
Cops and the women they abuse: NY family files legal claim over police shooting
Cops and the women they abuse: NY family files legal claim over police shooting: NY family files legal claim over police shooting The family of a 21-year-oldHofstra University student accidentally killed by a police of...
The national epidemic of drunk and drugged up cops
Off-duty
cop arrested for drunkenly driving wrong way on freeway
NYPD cop Ronald Holmes of Belmont was busted for smashing
into five cars for his Saturday morning joyride, which sent one person to the
hospital. The Brooklyn NYPD officer was suspended without pay, according to an
official. Authorities said he was driving drunk.
Police
report: Officer accused in a drunken house break/ Cops has since been fired.
A witness at a home in Warwick claims a Johnston police
officer has a serious drug problem and that's why she came barging into his
house. Officer Marisa Ciccone was
charged with assault and breaking and entering. According to the police report,
a homeowner on Byron Boulevard told officers that Ciccone came into his house
uninvited Monday and punched his niece in the face.
The witness said when Ciccone came in, she started yelling
and swearing, "Where is my (expletive) money?" and "Where is my
drugs?" while she was apparently looking for someone who had lived in the
house.
The homeowner said he had kicked out the person Ciccone was
apparently looking for.
The homeowner said Ciccone was highly intoxicated and kept
repeating that she was going to get her gun and blow everybody away.
Ciccone then allegedly started throwing things off a dresser
and punched the homeowner's niece in the face when the niece tried to protect
her mother from Ciccone.
The homeowner told NBC 10 that Ciccone was looking for her
drug partner.
According to the police report, he told officers that
Ciccone has a serious cocaine problem, that his former roommate and Ciccone
made drug deals, and that the former roommate was holding Ciccone's share of
the profit and that's why she was looking for him.
Hughestown
officer suspended indefinitely after federal drug arrest
Hughestown Police Officer Robert F. Evans Jr. has been
suspended indefinitely without pay following his arrest last week on a federal
drug charge, the borough council said Thursday. Federal agents charged Evans,
of Moosic, after he allegedly sold the powerful painkillers oxycodone, Percocet
and Vicodin out of his cruiser while in full uniform.
IMPD
officer suspended after DUI arrest
MORGAN CO., Ind. (WISH) - An IMPD officer was suspended
without pay Tuesday after he was arrested in Mooresville for driving while
intoxicated. Officer Kevin Brown, 41, was arrested around 3 a.m. Tuesday
morning. Brown was a patient of the St. Francis Hospital emergency room for an
injury to the right hand he received during a bar fight.While at the hospital,
Brown admitted he was drinking alcoholic beverages Monday night and said he had
seven beers.
Officer
charged with DWI on desk duties
Sergio Reyes a 16-year veteran Laredo police officer has
been assigned to desk duties following his suspected drunk driving arrest early
Sunday in the Del Mar Hills Area C neighborhood, according to authorities. He’s
been charged with driving while intoxicated.
Soddy
Daisy Officer Suspended After Early Morning Drunken Road Rage Run In
Soddy Daisy Police Officer Ryan Patterson has been suspended
in connection with an early morning road rage incident that led to gunfire and
a female fight. He is on administrative leave without pay pending an internal
investigation, Chief Phillip Hambrick said. The sheriff's office said the
incident shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday involved Officer Patterson, who had been
to a birthday celebration at Charlie's Lounge with two women, Carrie M. Rogers
and Bridget Frederick. Deputy William Ben Johnson said he determined that
Officer Patterson had been drinking but was not too intoxicated to drive after
he was given field sobriety tests. Ms. Frederick was too drunk to give a
statement.
3
Minneapolis officers investigated for bar fight
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Days after responding to allegations that
two off-duty white Minneapolis police officers used profanity and racial slurs.
The department is investigating a bar fight involving three other off-duty
white Minneapolis officers in Apple Valley last November. Two of the officers,
Christopher John Bennett and William C. Woodis, pleaded guilty in June to
charges of disorderly conduct in Dakota County.Apple Valley police initially
cited Bennett, Woodis and another Minneapolis officer, Andrew R. Allen, for
assault, damage to property and disorderly conduct following the fight at
Bogart's Place on Nov. 19, 2012. After the plea agreement by Bennett and
Woodis, the other charges were dismissed.
Tyrone Franson, Rodney Spann, Michael Spann and Lovell
Gamer, who are black, told Apple Valley police that a group of white men glared
at them when they entered the bar that evening. Franson said when he and a friend
went out to the patio to smoke, at least four men followed them and told them
they shouldn't be at the bar, according to the incident report.
"My little brother was left inside with the
gentlemen," Franson said. "And they started hard mugging him. I told
him to come outside with us. I came outside [and] as he came outside the four
gentlemen followed him outside. The next thing I know all hell broke
loose."
Franson said the Minneapolis officers told him and the other
black men "You ain't supposed to be here. Your kind ain't welcome. Get out
of here, you don't belong here."
The four men told police that when they tried to leave,
Woodis grabbed Michael Spann and started hitting him. They told police that a
group of about eight white men started punching and kicking Michael Spann.
Franson said his group didn't fight back and that Woodis also punched Rodney
Spann when he tried to break up the fight.
Haverhill
cops blame West Newbury officers for ex-trooper avoiding arrest
HAVERHILL — Legal arguments by two Haverhill police officers
— Lt. William Leeman and patrolman Christopher Pagliuca —fighting suspensions for
giving special treatment to an ex-state trooper show the officers blame West
Newbury police for not charging him with drunken driving.
The Haverhill officers were suspended without pay for ten and
five days, respectively, for violating police rules and ethical standards, as
well as unsatisfactory performance. Harry Miller, another Haverhill officer at
the scene of the crash involving the retired trooper, previously agreed not to
fight his 10-day suspension. He accepted a demotion from sergeant to patrolman
to save his job.
According to the legal briefs, here’s what the Haverhill
officers said happened:
Pagliuca, the first Haverhill officer on the scene of the
Mach 2012 crash, said West Newbury and Merrimac police officers were already
investigating the accident near the Rocks Village Bridge involving former state
trooper Charles Noyes when Pagliuca arrived at the scene. Noyes, who lives in
Haverhill, was a lieutenant colonel with the State Police when he retired in
2006.
Police reports show West Newbury Sergeant Daniel Cena was
first on the scene, that he spoke to Noyes through the driver’s side window of
his vehicle, and that he told other officers that Noyes was intoxicated.
Reports said Cena asked Noyes to take a field sobriety test, but that Noyes
refused.
Miller and Pagliuca testified at a local Civil Service
hearing that they believed Cena was in charge of the scene. Pagliuca testified
that Cena told him that he smelled “booze” on Noyes.
Miller testified that he said to Pagliuca, “What do you
think?” Pagliuca responded that Noyes “cannot stand up, his eyes are glassy,
and I think he is intoxicated.”
Miller then went back to Cena and asked him, “So are you
charging him with leaving the scene and OUI?” Cena responded, “No, I am
charging him with leaving the scene, but not OUI.” Miller then said, “Why
aren’t you charging him with OUI if you are charging him with leaving the
scene?” Cena responded, “My chief and the district attorney will get mad at
me.”
Miller then called Leeman at the Haverhill Police Station
and told him what was happening at the scene. Leeman was the senior Haverhill
officer on duty at the time.
While they were deciding what course of action to take,
Miller said Noyes started speaking to him about how they all work the same job
and that if this was the good old days, the officers would just let him go.
At that point, Miller said he told Noyes, “If I get the
green light to charge you, you are getting charged.”
A few moments elapsed and then Miller called Leeman back.
Leeman told Miller that he researched case law, but could not find any case
that would justify Haverhill officers charging Noyes with drunken driving based
on the facts presented to him by Miller.
Miller then discussed with Cena which department was going
to charge Noyes. It was at the point that Miller realized that Noyes was not
going to be arrested nor charged with drunken driving.
Eventually, Noyes agreed to get into an ambulance and go to
the hospital to be checked out.
The legal brief goes on to describe a tense discussion
between Cena and Noyes as Noyes boarded the ambulance.
“It was at this point that Cena began yelling at Noyes,” the
brief said.
It went on to explain what happened next.
Cena accused Noyes of giving officers the run-around,
claiming they could not prove Noyes was the operator of automobile.
“Are you really going to play this (expletive) game,” Cena
asked Noyes. “You are lucky you made it to Haverhill because if you didn’t
you’d be going to jail right now.”
The brief also said Cena told Noyes that he was almost
killed by a drunken driver in a previous incident and that Noyes’ “failure to
take ownership of what happened was ridiculous.”
In its decision to uphold the suspensions of the Haverhill
officers, Civil Service chairman Christopher Bowman accused Noyes of lying to
police at the scene of the accident as well as to the commission at a
disciplinary hearing for the two Haverhill officers earlier this year. Bowman
said Noyes’ testimony to the commission was “wildly unbelievable and tarnishes
the image of the Massachusetts State Police.”
The rest of the 41 page legal brief goes on to document how
police handled the subsequent investigation and testimony at the Civil Service
hearing.
In a statement on the Civil Service Commission’s recent
decision to uphold the city’s decision to suspend Leeman and Pagliuca, the
police patrolman’s union claimed the commission failed to consider key factual
and legal issues in the case.
“The true issue before the commission was not whether
Charles Noyes was actually intoxicated, which is what one may assume after
reading the decision, it was whether Officer Pagliuca and Lieutenant Leeman had
violated their duties as police officers. They did not,” the statement reads,
in part.
“Perhaps the most important overlooked fact was West Newbury
Sergeant Daniel Cena’s role in how this matter was handled,’’ the statement
continues. “Sergeant Cena did have the authority to lawfully summons Noyes for
operating under the influence but failed to do so. In fact, Worcester County
Assistant District Attorney John Hartmayer told the city during their
investigation of this matter that “if Mr. Noyes was to be charged with OUI, the
charge should have been brought by West Newbury.
“Unfortunately, that fact appears nowhere in the city’s nor
the commission’s decisions and, instead, unjustified blame is placed on Officer
Pagliuca and Lieutenant Leeman as a means of addressing the public’s legitimate
concerns with how this matter was handled as a whole,” the statement says.
According to police reports, Noyes crashed his Cadillac
Escalade in West Newbury on March 30, 2012, then kept driving with his air bags
deployed until police found him in the travel lane just over the Haverhill
line. The crash snapped a utility pole on Route 113 in West Newbury, cutting
power to the surrounding area for almost 11 hours.
An internal Haverhill police investigation concluded that
Noyes was given special treatment by West Newbury and Haverhill police officers
due to his previous state police position, and that officers acted to cover up
their actions in investigating the incident.
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The secret diary of Gerry Hyland: I spent 30 years in the Air Force, 30 years suckin...
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E.C. cop sentenced in mail fraud case
HAMMOND | An East
Chicago officer was sentenced last week to two years of probation in a mail
fraud case. Shawn Pitts will serve eight months of the sentence on house arrest
and must pay $10,877 in restitution. Pitts was indicted in May 2012 on mail
fraud charges in U.S. District Court. He entered a plea agreement in August
2012. He was sentenced Friday, and details were filed in court Monday. According
to the plea agreement, Pitts admitted to working as a police officer, working
security at two housing projects and working at a credit union. His work hours
would sometimes overlap jobs.
Cop who murdered wife gets life in prison
Cop Brett Seacat who
killed his wife and tried to cover it up by burning down their house was
sentenced Monday to life in prison with the possibility of parole. Under the
judge's sentence -- the maximum allowable under Kansas law -- Seacat must spend
31 years and three months behind bars before he's eligible for parole. During
her closing argument, prosecutor Amy Hanley said Seacat was full of
uncontrollable rage because his wife had filed for divorce and was kicking him
out their house.
"He was like a
burning fuse," said Hanley. "That's why he was reckless."
City settles for $50,000 lawsuit of man freed because of police corruption investigation
Demario T. Harris, whose
life sentence was overturned as a result of an investigation into corruption at
the Tulsa Police Department has agreed to settle his lawsuit against the city
of Tulsa for $50,000..
Harris had been convicted in Tulsa federal
court in April 2005 on charges of possession of cocaine with intent to
distribute and being a felon in possession of a firearm.
He was sentenced in
November 2005 to life in prison but was freed in October 2010. The order
vacating his sentence said the prosecution had conceded that Harris’
“conviction was obtained in violation of the defendant’s due process rights.”
The allegations of
corruption within the Police Department did not start to come to light until
2009. At least 17 civil suits have been filed by people who claim that they
were victimized by the sort of activity that was the subject of a grand jury
probe into the Tulsa Police Department. The investigation resulted in charges
against six current or former Tulsa police officers and an ex-federal agent, as
well as accusations of criminal behavior against five officers who were never
charged.
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Former Garland County Sheriff’s Deputy Pleads Guilty to Prostitution Offense
Former
Garland County Sheriff’s Deputy Pleads Guilty to Prostitution Offense
U.S.
Attorney’s OfficeJuly
29, 2013
|
·
Western District of Arkansas(501)
340-2600
|
TEXARKANNA, AR—Conner Eldridge, United States Attorney for the
Western District of Arkansas, announced that former Garland County Sheriff’s
Deputy Neil Parliament, 39, pleaded guilty in federal court to a one-count
information for arranging for a minor to travel to Hot Springs, Arkansas, to
engage in prostitution. At the time of the offense, Parliment was a marine
patrol officer with the Garland County Sheriff’s Office. The Honorable Susan O.
Hickey accepted the plea in United States District Court in Texarkana.
United States Attorney Eldridge commented, “Mr. Parliament abused
his position of public trust to engage in illegal activities involving
prostitution. This activity is unacceptable, and we will continue to bring to
justice those individuals who seek to use similar positions to perpetrate
crimes.”
According to court documents, in early February 2013, the Little
Rock Police Department was contacted by a minor female who admitted to police
that she had been engaging in prostitution. The individual resided in Memphis,
Tennessee, and admitted to traveling into Arkansas to meet clients. She told officers
that one client, Mr. Parliament, was a police officer in Hot Springs, Arkansas,
and showed officers numerous text messages regarding her traveling to Hot
Springs to engage in prostitution. She further admitted to officers that she
first made contact with Parliament in January 2013. At that time, Parliament
made arrangements for her to travel from Memphis to Hot Springs, including
arranging for her to stay in a local hotel room. When she arrived in Hot
Springs, she and Parliament engaged in sexual activity in the hotel room in
exchange for payment. Parliament then arranged for her to meet with other
individuals, with whom she also engaged in sexual activity in exchange for
payment.
Parliament was originally arrested on a federal warrant on June
13, 2013. At sentencing, the defendant’s sentence will be determined by the
court after review of factors unique to this case, including the defendant’s
prior criminal record (if any), the defendant’s role in the offense, and the
characteristics of the violations. The sentence will not exceed the statutory
maximum, and in most cases it will be less than the maximum. In this case,
Parliament faces the maximum penalties of 20 years in prison and a fine of
$250,000.
This case was investigated by the FBI Denied Innocence Task Force
and the Little Rock Police Department. Assistant United States Attorney Dustin
Roberts is prosecuting the case for the United States.
More drunk and drugged up cops
Oswego
cop charged with selling drugs was sued, suspended
Oswego, NY – Troy Martin retired Oswego police officer charged Thursday
with selling drugs has faced suspension as well as accusations of excessive
force and misconduct during his career. Martin, was charged with third-degree criminal
sale of a controlled substance and fourth-degree conspiracy. Oswego police
confirmed Martin is retired from the department and said that he was not part
of the department while the drug investigation he was swept up in was under
way.
According to Post-Standard archives, Martin and Officer
Michael Kearns were accused of raping a woman in 1993. The woman, who at the
time was 25, filed a $36 million lawsuit in July 1994 against the city, Kearns
and Martin.
Criminal charges were never filed against Martin or Kearns.
The woman didn't file charges because she didn't want to appear before a grand
jury or in criminal court, said one of her lawyers at the time.
The city settled the lawsuit out-of-court in 1997 for
$50,000.
In 1997, the city also settled another case in which Martin
was accused of causing personal and emotional injuries. That case was settled
for $27,000 according to newspaper archives.
In 1993 Martin and Kearns were suspended without pay for 30
days.
When Martin was a campus police officer at the State University
College at Oswego, the state Court of Claims determined that he and another
officer used excessive force in arresting a college student in 1985. The
student was awarded $1,200 in damages.
Martin retired from the Oswego Police Department in 2006 and
receives an annual pension of $24,333, according to state records.
St.
Louis cop gets probation in drunken driving case
Michael Schinner, a t. Louis police officer, was sentenced
to five years probation for driving while intoxicated and causing injuries. l
Schinner, then 27, was off-duty and speeding the wrong way on a one-way street
early in the morning on Dec. 24, 2011, when his vehicle collided with a St.
Louis patrol car. On-duty Officer Darryl Monroe suffered hip and leg injuries,
according to officials.
A passenger in Schinner’s vehicle, Brian Cole, then 28,
sustained serious head trauma, including bleeding on his brain, but has since
recovered. Schinner, who had been a member of the police force for three years,
claimed no memory of the crash, but he appeared disoriented and had a strong
alcoholic odor on his breath, according to court documents.
There were two empty beer bottles in his car — one on the
driver’s side floorboard — and he refused to submit to a blood test to
determine his blood-alcohol content, according to the documents. Police did not
apply for a search warrant to force him to provide a blood sample.Schinner was
suspended from the force without pay after the crash, and resigned in August
2012.
Police
officer charged with DWI, resigns
RALEIGH, N.C. — A
senior officer in the Cary Police Department resigned her job after an arrest
early Thursday on charges she was driving while impaired.Tiffany Dawn Silsbee,
of 2600 Broad Oaks Place in Raleigh, sideswiped four vehicles along Raleigh's
Boylan Avenue, according to police.After the crash, she had a .09 blood alcohol
content.
FBI:
Pa. police officer arrested on drug charges
-- The FBI says a Pennsylvania police officer has been
arrested and charged with distributing drugs. Agent Edward J. Hanko says in a
release that Robert F. Evans, a Hughestown Borough Police officer, was arrested
without incident Friday morning and charged with the distribution of oxycodone.
That's just outside Scranton. According to an affidavit Evans admitted
obtaining oxycodone pills from a friend and through a prescription, selling the
pills over the past year, and driving a client to Wilkes-Barre in a Hughestown
police cruiser so the client could buy illegal drugs. Evans couldn't be reached
for comment.
TEXAS
COP ARRESTED FOR FELONY DWI WITH KIDS IN TOW
A Texas police officer has been arrested and charged with
felony driving while intoxicated, the Houston Chronicle reported recently. The
officer was arrested in Beaumont, Texas, about 80 miles outside of Houston.
According to the report, the charges were increased from standard DWI to state
jail felony DWI because the driver's three children were allegedly present in
the vehicle at the time of the incident.
A
Prichard police officer has been arrested on some serious drug charges.
PRICHARD, Ala. (WPMI) A Prichard police officer has been
arrested on some serious drug charges.
Officer Edmond Burke was arrested during a Mobile County Sheriff's
Office sting. Deputies say Burke tried
to buy five kilos of cocaine from an undercover officer. Burke has been charged with trafficking
cocaine, possession of a controlled substance, and marijuana possession. Trafficking is a class-A felony that carries
a sentence of up to life in prison. Burke is a Prichard native, and has been on
the force about a year and a half. He
has been on the other side of the law before.
He was arrested in 2006 for possession of a controlled substance, and in
2000, for interfering with custody.
State
trooper blames Chan for crash that killed off-duty cop
WOBURN Off-duty
Lowell Police Officer Patrick "P.J." Johnson was drunk as he rode his
Harley Davidson Road King at speeds between 75-80 mph when he collided with a
Honda Accord -- a crash that took his life -- a State Police accident
reconstructionist testified it wasn't Johnson's speed that cause the crash, it
was the other car crossing his path.
In Middlesex Superior Court on Friday, Roderick, an accident
reconstructionist, testified that based on his calculations, the 31-year-old
Johnson, a six-year veteran of the Lowell Police Department, was barreling down
Princeton Boulevard during the early-morning hours of Sept. 11, 2010 at a
minimum speed of 75 mph and perhaps as fast as 80 mph based on the motorcycle's
broken speedometer.
Roderick testified that at the same time, Chan, 28, of
Lowell, who police allege was also legally drunk, was at the intersection of
Foster Street and Princeton Boulevard when he drove into Johnson's path.
Johnson hit the brakes, leaving a skid mark 32.5 feet long, Roderick testified.
Johnson and his motorcycle slammed into the right front quarter of Chan's car.
The impact tossed Johnson, a husband and father of two, more than 100 feet
where he landed two houses down.
He died within minutes of the crash, state Medical Examiner
Marie Cannon testified Thursday. The cause of his death was blunt trauma to the
head, torso and lower extremities, Cannon said.
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Littleton Police Officer Arrested for Drug Trafficking Crimes
U.S. Attorney’s Office July 22, 2013 • District of
Colorado (303) 454-0100
DENVER—Jeffery Allan Johnston, age 46, of Parker, Colorado,
has been arrested based on a criminal complaint charging him with the drug
trafficking related crimes, United States Attorney John Walsh, FBI Denver
Special Agent in Charge Thomas Ravenelle, and Littleton Police Chief Doug
Stephens announced. Johnston was arrested without incident at his Parker home
by the FBI on Friday, July 19, 2013. The criminal complaint was unsealed by the
court today. Johnston appeared in U.S. District Court in Denver this afternoon,
where he was advised of his rights and the charges pending against him. The
government is asking the court that Johnston be held in custody without bond
pending a resolution of his case. A detention hearing and a preliminary hearing
is scheduled to take place on July 25, 2013, at 3:00 p.m.
The criminal complaint charges Johnston with possession of a
mixture and substance containing a detectable amount of MDMA with intent to
distribute; maintaining a drug-involved premises; possessing a firearm in
furtherance of a drug trafficking crime; and using a telephone to facilitate a
drug trafficking felony.
According to the affidavit in support of the arrest warrant,
on July 15, 2013, Johnston contacted a friend via telephone. During the call,
Johnston said he wanted to “catch up” with the friend. The person Johnston
contacted is a known narcotics trafficker who has been invited to Johnston’s
residence previously to distribute narcotics to guests at parties Johnston
hosts. According to the friend, Johnston paid for 3,4-methylenedioxy
methamphetamine (known as MDMA, Ecstasy, or X) for his parties.
During the phone call, Johnston asked if he could purchase
between 40 and 50 Ecstasy pills from the source for between $15 to $20 each.
They discussed the fact that some of the Ecstasy currently available was not
well made. Johnston offered to use a test kit to confirm the quality of the
Ecstasy. On July 19, 2013, the FBI conducted a controlled delivery of 37
Ecstasy pills and 6.3 grams of Ecstasy powder. Johnston paid $1,300 for the
delivery. Following the exchange of Ecstasy and money, Johnston was taken into
custody, and a search warrant was executed a Johnston’s residence.
Agents found the 10 grams of Ecstasy just delivered to
Johnston in a kitchen drawer and a stainless steel Colt Officers Model .45
caliber pistol, which was located in a small black bag on the counter above the
drawer containing the Ecstasy. The pistol was loaded with seven .45 rounds of
ammunition in the magazine and one .45 round in the chamber. Investigators also
found suspected cocaine, suspected steroids, hundreds of suspected prescription
pills, additional firearms, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, all in his
residence. Further, agents discovered evidence of drug trafficking in a kitchen
drawer. In that drawer was empty pill pouches, a drug test kit and a scale.
In the complaint, the preliminary charging document,
Johnston faces one count of possession of a mixture and substance containing a
detectable amount of MDMA with intent to distribute, which carries a penalty of
not more than 20 years in federal prison and a fine of not more than
$1,000,000; one count of maintaining a drug involved premises, which carries a
penalty of not more than 20 years in federal prison and a fine of not more than
$500,000; one count of possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug
trafficking crime, which carries a penalty of not less than five years and not
more than life in federal prison and a fine of up to $250,000; one count of
using a telephone to facilitate a drug trafficking felony, which carries a
penalty of not more than four years in federal prison and up to a $500,000
fine.
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI). Those who may have information regarding this matter
should contact the FBI at 303-629-7171.
Johnston is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Guy
Till and David Conner.
A criminal complaint is a probable cause charging document.
Anyone accused of committing a federal felony crime has a Constitutional right
to be indicted by a grand jury, thus finalizing the charges.
The charges contained in the complaint are allegations, and
the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
E.C. cop sentenced to 8 months home detention
Shawn Pitts an East Chicago police officer who worked a
private security job during the same hours he was on duty as a cop will serve
eight months of home detention. Pitts, 42, will serve the home detention as
part of two years on probation, U.S. District Judge Rudy Lozano ruled during
Pitt’s sentencing hearing Friday.
Pitts pleaded guilty a year ago to mail fraud in connection
with working two jobs at the same time. Pitts, who worked for the East Chicago
Police Department starting in 1997, picked up part-time security jobs at
several housing projects in the city from 2009 to 2011. However, when he was
supposed to be working those jobs, he was actually on duty as an officer.
Let's now, 8 cops doing dress up at an average cost of 70K, this photo cost the taxpayer $300.00
The business of government does not call for an honor guard by the local cops. Again, the Fairfax County Police have to much money and not enough to do.
Idiots at work
Fired
NYPD cop sues to get pension back, cites race for unequal treatment
Veteran NYPD officer Daniel King filed a lawsuit in
Manhattan Supreme Court seeking restitution of his pension, arguing his
benefits were taken away because he is black.
Fiered NYPD officer Daniel King, who is black, filed a lawsuit
that seeks restitution of his pension and unspecified damages. He claims that
many white officers terminated under similar circumstances were allowed to keep
their retirement nest eggs.
A former Manhattan cop who was fired after he pleaded guilty
to writing a false summons is suing the NYPD and the city to get his pension
back, arguing his benefits were taken away because he’s black.
King, 49, was busted in February 2012 for ticketing an
undercover cop for drinking in public when the detective in fact had no alcohol
on him.
As part of the settlement of his administrative case with
the NYPD, King says in his lawsuit that he agreed to retire but only after he
ascertained that he would still qualify for his pension.
Cleveland
police officer suspended
A Cleveland Police officer has been placed on
“administrative relief of duty” after a complaint was filed against him. According
to Evie West, information officer for Cleveland Police Department, Ross Wooten
is the suspended officer.
In July 2006, Ross was charged with two counts of official
misconduct. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation was in charge of the case in
which Wooten allegedly engaged in sexual relations with two “suspects,”
according to then-TBI information officer Jennifer Johnson and Cleveland Daily
Banner archives.
Johnson said the investigation began in March 2006 after the
“two suspects complained that Wooten engaged in sexual relations with them in
November 2005.”
Texas
Cops Go To Wrong House, Kill Elderly Man, Blame Bad Lighting
Two rookie cops
responding to a burglary call accidentally went to the wrong Fort Worth house
and ended up shooting the homeowner due to "poor lighting," a police
affidavit claims.
Despite being sent to investigate a possible break-in at 409
Havenwood Lane, Officers B.B. Hanlon and R.P. Hoeppner "inadvertently
began searching" [PDF] across the street at 404 Havenwood instead.
The early morning hours of May 28th provided little natural
light for the officers, and the affidavit says there was "no lighting
around the home" of 72-year-old Jerry Waller and his wife Kathy, "and
the officers had only the use of their flashlights."
Facts get a bit murky after that.
The officers allege that they encountered Waller standing
outside his garage with a .38-caliber handgun, and identified themselves. They
insist they only shot Waller after he pointed the gun at them.
But Waller's family tells a different story.
"My father never stepped outside of his garage,"
Waller's son Chris told the Star-Telegram shortly after the shooting. "He
was shot multiple times in the chest only a few steps away from the doorway to
his kitchen."
The only facts not in dispute are that Waller was shot six
times in his own home by two police officers who shouldn't have been on his
property to begin with.
"Married 46 years, and then somebody gets a little
trigger-happy and away they go," Kathy told WFAA back in May.
According to her version of events, Jerry stepped outside
after noticing suspicious bright lights shining outside their bedroom window.
She said she heard some yelling, followed almost immediately
by gunshots.
A police department spokesperson said an internal
investigation was ongoing. Meanwhile, both Hanlon and Hoeppner have resumed
full-time duty.
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