Vegas police officer fired in veteran slaying case
LAS
VEGAS—A Las Vegas police officer has been fired for policy violations for
fatally shooting an unarmed Gulf War veteran in a vehicle in a chaotic scene in
December 2011 that sparked calls for reforms in departmental use-of-force
policies.
Jesus
Arevalo (hay-SOOS' uh-REV'-ah-loh) was dismissed after Clark County Sheriff
Doug Gillespie upheld findings by an in-house review panel that Arevalo
"lacked the ability to make sound decisions in situations routinely faced
by police officers," a department statement said Wednesday.
Arevalo,
36, a Las Vegas police officer for more than 11 years, had been on paid leave
for the 22 months since the shooting death of Stanley Gibson.
His
dismissal Tuesday was believed to be a first for the department—at least since
the Las Vegas police and Clark County sheriff departments merged 40 years ago.
Gillespie has said he couldn't recall another officer ever being fired for an
on-duty shooting.
The
shooting spurred calls by the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada and
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People for a federal
Justice Department investigation. Instead, officials from the federal Community
Oriented Policing Services program conducted a review of departmental
use-of-force policies.
A COPS
official last month credited Las Vegas police with upgrading training, keeping
better track of how and when officers use deadly force, and instituting a pilot
program to put cameras on the uniforms of some officers.
Chris
Collins, executive director of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association,
declined Wednesday to comment on Arevalo's dismissal.
Gibson's
widow, Rondha Gibson, didn't immediately respond to a message through a
spokesman.
Her
lawyer in a federal wrongful death lawsuit against the department said
Arevalo's dismissal for policy violations was justified, but wouldn't change
the lawsuit asking a judge to address police supervisory mistakes and poor
planning.
"It
is what we were hoping would occur, unfortunately it was for different issues
from the ones involved in our case," attorney Cal Potter told The
Associated Press. "It was all just a recipe for disaster, the way they
handled it."
Gibson
remained locked in his car for more than an hour at a northwest Las Vegas
apartment complex, with his car pinned between two police cruisers as officers
with weapons drawn commanded him to surrender. Gibson's spinning tires
generated billows of acrid blue smoke before Arevalo opened fire with an
assault-style rifle.
A grand
jury refused to indict officers in the case, and Clark County District Attorney
Steve Wolfson determined in April that mistakes were made, but no criminal
charges would be filed against Arevalo.
The DA
issued a report saying Arevalo thought he was shooting in self-defense when he
heard another officer fire a beanbag shotgun to break a side window of Gibson's
vehicle. Police said they didn't know Gibson was unarmed, and had planned to
inject pepper spray through the space to force him to surrender.
Gibson,
who suffered from severe anxiety and depression, had shown signs of mental
distress in the 36 hours before the fatal encounter. He was jailed briefly on a
resisting police charge, found wandering in a street, taken to a Las Vegas
hospital for a psychiatric evaluation and released with instructions to check
back two days later.
Rondha
Gibson said he may have become disoriented driving home.
He was
shot in an apartment complex near where they used to live.
In
September, Community Oriented Policing Services said the Las Vegas Metropolitan
Police Department had addressed or completed all but nine of 80 reforms called
for in a report the agency made public almost a year ago. A final COPS report
is expected next year.
After
peaking at 25 shootings in 2010, Las Vegas police were involved in 17
officer-involved shootings in 2011 and 11 in 2012, including four fatal cases.
Trial begins for officer charged in Baltimore police trainee shooting
OWINGS MILLS, Md. - Opening arguments started today in the trial of William Kern, the Baltimore City Police instructor charged with shooting a police recruit in the head during a training session in February.
The trial began Tuesday with jury selection and motions from Kerns’ lawyer to have some pieces of evidence thrown out, according to Baltimore County Assistant State’s Attorney John Cox. These motions were ultimately denied by the judge, Cox said.
Opening arguments began Wednesday morning. The trial is ongoing this week.
Kern, age 46, was indicted in March on charges of second-degree assault and reckless endangerment. The maximum penalty for both charges is 10 years in prison.
The indictment is the result of an investigation by Maryland State Police that indicates Kern, an 18-year veteran of the police department, shot police recruit Raymond Gray in the head at point blank range during a Feb. 12 training exercise at the Rosewood Center in Owings Mills.
The trial began Tuesday with jury selection and motions from Kerns’ lawyer to have some pieces of evidence thrown out, according to Baltimore County Assistant State’s Attorney John Cox. These motions were ultimately denied by the judge, Cox said.
Opening arguments began Wednesday morning. The trial is ongoing this week.
Kern, age 46, was indicted in March on charges of second-degree assault and reckless endangerment. The maximum penalty for both charges is 10 years in prison.
The indictment is the result of an investigation by Maryland State Police that indicates Kern, an 18-year veteran of the police department, shot police recruit Raymond Gray in the head at point blank range during a Feb. 12 training exercise at the Rosewood Center in Owings Mills.
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Tuckerman police officer charged with rape
Todays sexual assault charges against your police: Tuckerman police officer charged with rape: TUCKERMAN, AR (KAIT) – A Tuckerman police officer is facing rape charges following an investigation by Arkansas State Police. Steven Slagle...
Gang mentality: 64 Officers Found Guilty of Violations in Deadly Chase
CLEVELAND–Police Chief Michael McGrath announced Tuesday that 178 suspension days have been issued against 64 officers found guilty of violations in the November chase.
The 64 officers do not include the 13 officers who were involved in the actual shooting.
Union President Jeff Follmer said the most any officer received was 10 days. Charges against three officers were dismissed, the chief said.
Additionally, two officers received written warnings.
The chief said the county prosecutor’s office is still reviewing the matter to determine if any criminal charges should be filed.
The pursuit happened around 10:30 p.m. on November 29 when an officer outside the Justice Center said someone in the suspects’ car fired a shot at him.
Dozens of Cleveland police officers chased the car for more than 22 minutes. The chase ended in East Cleveland when 13 officers fired 137 shots at the two suspects.
Female police officer charged, suspended after incident with husband
SAVANNAH, GA -
A Savannah-Chatham Metro Police officer is on leave after a domestic dispute early Tuesday morning.
26-year-old Chassity Johanson is also facing misdemeanor simple battery charges.
Police tell WSAV that Johanson got into an argument with her husband, a Garden City police officer, about 4 am Tuesday. During the incident she hit him, police told WSAV-TV.
Johanson is a two year veteran of the force stationed at the West Chatham Precinct.
Johanson, who attended the University of Tampa, appears to be a member of the US Army and was commissioned in 2009 as a lieutenant, according to Facebook.
Johanson is on paid leave while the incident is investigated.
A police spokeswoman told the Savannah Morning News that Johanson was charged as the primary aggressor. Johanson's husband was not charged in the incident.
A Savannah-Chatham Metro Police officer is on leave after a domestic dispute early Tuesday morning.
26-year-old Chassity Johanson is also facing misdemeanor simple battery charges.
Police tell WSAV that Johanson got into an argument with her husband, a Garden City police officer, about 4 am Tuesday. During the incident she hit him, police told WSAV-TV.
Johanson is a two year veteran of the force stationed at the West Chatham Precinct.
Johanson, who attended the University of Tampa, appears to be a member of the US Army and was commissioned in 2009 as a lieutenant, according to Facebook.
Johanson is on paid leave while the incident is investigated.
A police spokeswoman told the Savannah Morning News that Johanson was charged as the primary aggressor. Johanson's husband was not charged in the incident.
2 suspended Milwaukee police officers due in court
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Two suspended Milwaukee police officers are due in court on charges that they failed to intervene as fellow officers conducted illegal strip searches and body-cavity searches.
Jeffrey Dollhopf is charged with felony misconduct in public office and being party to the crime of illegal cavity search. Brian Kozelek is charged with illegal strip search and misconduct in office.
They're scheduled to make pre-trial appearances Tuesday morning. Their trials would begin next week.
Both men have sought to have the charges dropped. They say the counts are too vague to allow them to present proper defenses. Similar charges have resulted in criminal penalties against two other officers. Michael Vagnini (vag-NEE'-nee) was sentenced to 26 months in prison and Jacob Knight was sentenced to 20 days in jail.
Jeffrey Dollhopf is charged with felony misconduct in public office and being party to the crime of illegal cavity search. Brian Kozelek is charged with illegal strip search and misconduct in office.
They're scheduled to make pre-trial appearances Tuesday morning. Their trials would begin next week.
Both men have sought to have the charges dropped. They say the counts are too vague to allow them to present proper defenses. Similar charges have resulted in criminal penalties against two other officers. Michael Vagnini (vag-NEE'-nee) was sentenced to 26 months in prison and Jacob Knight was sentenced to 20 days in jail.
Berthoud police chief, officer suspended in probe; Larimer County sheriff's sgt. named interim chief
BERTHOUD, Colo. - A criminal investigation has led to the suspension of Berthoud Police Chief Glenn Johnson and one of his officers, authorities said.
In a statement released Monday night, the Town of Berthoud said: "The Larimer County District Attorney and the Loveland Police Department have both advised Town officials of the existence of a criminal investigation of two police officers, but no charges have been filed and no details have been released to the Town."
Meanwhile, the town statement says, "The Larimer County Sheriff's Office has, at the request of Town staff, agreed to supply an interim police chief and direct police operations until the Town is able to ascertain the nature and foundation of the allegations and investigation being conducted with respect to two Berthoud Police officers."
Sheriff's office spokesman John Schulz told 7NEWS that sheriff's Sgt. John Feyen was appointed interim Berthoud police chief last week.
The town department normally has seven police officers, including the chief.
Arrested East Haven cop Robert Ranfone seeks disability retirement
EAST HAVEN Ct. Detective Robert Ranfone, who was charged earlier this month with two felonies and a misdemeanor in connection with a used car scam, has filed paperwork to retire with a disability, police sources said.
Ranfone, 47, a longtime East Haven police officer who was the president of the police union, had already been suspended with pay for several months as a result of an unrelated January incident in which he was accused of acting unconstitutionally while investigating a purse snatching. He filed his retirement papers late last week, sources said.
Ranfone turned himself in to state Department of Motor Vehicles police and was arrested on Oct. 3 in connection with an incident involving a sports car that a New Haven used car dealer allegedly sold to two different people. Ranfone turned himself in on an arrest warrant, according to East Haven police Lt. David Emerman.
Ranfone was charged with interfering with an officer, second-degree hindering prosecution, and tampering with evidence for allegedly helping the second purchaser and ultimate recipient of the vehicle conceal it for a period of time, according to a copy of the arrest warrant affidavit obtained by the New Haven Register.
The case revolves around a 2009 Chevrolet Corvette sold — allegedly twice — by Brian Page, who at the time was owner of the now-closed Lucky Sevens Auto Dealership in New Haven, according to the affidavit.
It also involves another car, a 2008 Lexus, for which a loan and insurance policy were generated, but which the listed owner — who also was the original buyer of the Corvette — told police he never bought, took out a loan for or insured, the affidavit says.
PROTESTERS DEMAND ARREST OF FLA. COP IN TASER DEATH
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — More than 200 people
marched through Miami Beach on Sunday, Oct. 6, clogging tourist-filled
sidewalks to demand the arrest of a policeman who fired a stun gun at a
graffiti artist who died in police custody on Aug. 6.
The protesters alleged that Officer Jorge Mercado used excessive
force when he used a Taser on Israel Hernandez-Llach, 18, during an arrest
attempt in August.
“He was sentenced like a prisoner when he goes before a firing
squad,” Hernandez-Llach’s father, Israel Hernandez Bandera, said on the steps
of Miami Beach City Hall.
Friends, family and supporters carried signs reading “Paint is
temporary, death is forever” and chanted “No justice, no peace” in English and
Spanish.
Hernandez-Llach was prolific graffiti artist nicknamed “Reefa,”
and the march was led by the Justice for Reefa Committee and the American
Community Council. Marchers asked that Mercado be fired and arrested and that
the Miami Beach Police Department change its policy regarding use of stun guns.
Police discovered Colombian-born Hernandez-Llach spray-painting
the wall of an abandoned McDonald’s early on the morning of Aug. 6. The
teenager fled, evading police for several minutes before he was cornered and
stunned with the Taser.
He died shortly afterward and friends who were with him said
they heard and saw officers celebrating and high fiving while the young man’s
body lay on the ground.
Medical examiners have yet to release a toxicology report or
cause of death. Miami Beach Police have declined to comment pending an ongoing
investigation.
The teenager’s father submitted a letter late last month to the
U.S. Department of Justice and President Barack Obama alleging that police used
excessive force and refused to provide him with information regarding the
incident.
“I’m not an investigator, just a broken father who wants
answers,” he wrote.
He said his son’s body showed signs of mistreatment, including
an injury to the forehead, after it was turned over to the family for the
funeral.
“My biggest concern is was it due to the Taser or was it from
blows (by police),” said his father.
Hernandez-Llach’s sister, Offir Hernandez, disputed speculation
that her brother was on drugs at the time of the incident, but said that
according to friends he had smoked marijuana that morning.
“He took care of himself,” she said. “He was very healthy and
wouldn’t even drink sodas and ate salads and fish. He’d never put acid in his
body.”
Hernandez-Llach’s family has also filed a lawsuit in Miami-Dade
County Circuit Court against the Miami Beach Police Department and Mercado,
seeking an undisclosed amount for damages and alleging the police used
“unnecessary, excessive and unconstitutional force.”
The Colombian-born artist was slightly built and unarmed, and
“officers had no reasonable basis to fear for their own safety or the safety of
the public,” the lawsuit said.
Mercado was named in several prior complaints according to
police Internal Affairs reports obtained by Reuters. He was disciplined for
failing a drug test in 2011 but was exonerated in several other cases,
including punching a man in the face during an off-duty fight in a men’s room
in 2007.
DEATH OF MIAMI BEACH TEEN REKINDLES DEBATE ON TASER SAFETY
By Kevin Gray of Reuters
October 14, 2013
MIAMI — When police spotted Israel Hernandez Llach spray painting a
shut-down McDonald’s in August, the Miami teenager decided to make a run for
it.
Moments later the unarmed, 18-year-old graffiti artist was dead.
He had been struck in the chest by a police stun gun. The Florida Department of
Law Enforcement is still investigating what caused the Aug. 6 death of the
Colombian-born teenager. His death in Miami Beach, where police conduct has
come under intense scrutiny in recent years, has triggered protests calling for
a change in the way officers use the stun guns known as Tasers.
It has also reignited a debate about whether the electrical
shock the Taser delivers can sometimes trigger a cardiac arrest when fired at
the chest area.
“The fact that he was shot in the chest is something we are
analyzing,” said Jose J. Rodriguez, a lawyer for Hernandez Llach’s family.
“We’re working with the assumption for now that the Taser caused his death.”
Tasers, used by police officers in the United States and
globally, have been the target of criticism from advocacy groups like Amnesty
International and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which argue they
can be lethal and have called for more stringent rules on their use.
Proponents of Tasers say stun guns are a very useful tool for
law enforcement officers, enabling them to subdue suspects without deadly
force.
“It’s not a magic bullet,” said Steve Tuttle, a spokesman for
Taser International. “But it is the most effective, accountable tool that
officers have.”
A study published last year in the American Heart Association
journal, Circulation, analyzed the cases of eight people in the United States
who suffered cardiac arrest after being shocked by a Taser in the chest.
Seven of the people died and one survived, leading the study’s
author to conclude that electricity delivered by a Taser can speed up the heart
rate and provoke cardiac arrest in some cases.
“Cardiac arrest can happen,” said Dr. Douglas Zipes, a
cardiologist and distinguished professor at the Indiana University School of
Medicine who led the study. “It’s infrequent, but how infrequent, we don’t
know.”
Taser International has questioned the study’s results, saying
it fails to establish a clear connection. In 2009, the company adjusted the
guidance it provides to police departments on Taser use, warning officers to
avoid, if possible, shots to the chest because of extremely low risk of an
“adverse cardiac event.”
“If there is going to be a cardiac arrest, it’s going to be
extraordinarily rare,” Tuttle said.
In its safety materials, Taser recommends users aim away from
the chest area as well as the head, throat and any areas with an existing
injury, if possible.
John Burton, a California lawyer who has successfully tried
several cases against Taser involving chest shots, said the language needs to
be clearer about potential risks, and more data is needed.
“No one is going around collecting these incidents, studying
their frequency, studying what happened,” he said.
When a person dies from being Tasered, sometimes the cause of
death is not clear, Burton said.
Hernandez Llach’s father, Israel Hernandez Bandera, is awaiting
a medical examiner’s report that could reveal the cause of death. The report’s
findings are being withheld because of a civil suit the family filed accusing
the police of excessive force. Such withholding is normal when suits are filed.
“I just want some answers,” he said. “Was it the Taser? Was it
something else?”
TASERS ARE WIDELY USED
Tasers, which were first introduced in 1994, can deliver a
charge of up to 50,000 volts that paralyze a person’s muscles, allowing
officers to easily subdue them. Officers can use a Taser from a distance of up
to 25 feet; the weapon fires prongs connected to metal string that pierce the
skin.
The devices are used by nearly 17,000 law enforcement agencies
in 107 countries, including police forces in most major U.S. cities, according
to Taser International. Tasers for law enforcement start at around $500.
Earlier this year, a Connecticut state lawmaker unsuccessfully
introduced a bill supported by the ACLU to set training and reporting standards
for Taser use in the state.
Concerns about the risk of cardiac arrest have led at least one
police department to tighten restrictions on their use. The Cincinnati Police
Department prohibited frontal shots last year except in situations of self
defense, said Sargent Julian Johnson, a department spokesman.
It is not known if Hernandez Llach had a pre-existing condition,
such as heart disease, or other factors like drug or alcohol use that could
have contributed to his death. Miami Beach Police officials have suggested he
may have died from a pre-existing condition or physical exertion.
Hernandez Llach’s sister, Offir Hernandez, said her brother did
not use hard drugs, such as the counter-culture psychedelic drug acid, or
cocaine, but said his friends told her he smoked marijuana that morning.
“He took care of himself,” she said. “He was very healthy and
wouldn’t even drink sodas, and only ate salads and fish.”
She said that detectives who came to their house to break the
news of her brother’s death immediately asked the family if Hernandez Llach had
been using acid.
“He’d never put acid in his body,” she said.
Hernandez Llach died after leading officers on an early morning
foot chase through alleyways on Miami Beach. When he was cornered, he bolted
toward the officers. A policeman responded by firing a stun gun at his chest,
according to the Miami Beach Police Department.
Once in police custody, Hernandez Llach showed signs of medical
distress and officers rushed him to a hospital. Shortly afterward, he was
pronounced dead.
Miami Beach Police spokesman Sargent Bobby Hernandez declined to
discuss specifics about the case pending the investigation.
He said the department’s officers have to be Tasered themselves
during training to understand how much pain it can cause, and added that the
department’s guidelines spell out that the department “prefers” that officers
aim for the abdomen.
“Now when you’re dealing
with someone who is resisting and not complying, when it shoots it doesn’t
exactly land where you were aiming,” he said.
Hernandez said he had recently completed the department’s
regular training for Tasers. The course offered no explanation why the chest
area should be avoided, he said.
Emma Andersson, an attorney with the ACLU Criminal Law Reform
Project, said she worried that officers were reaching too quickly for their
Tasers, particularly in non-violent situations because some police officers may
view a Taser as non-lethal.
“It’s a lot easier to whip out your Taser if you have it on your
belt than it is to spend 10 to 15 minutes trying to negotiate with someone,”
she said.
Bisard trial starting
ALLEN COUNTY, Ind. (WISH) - Jury selection begins
Monday morning in the trial for suspended Indianapolis police officer David
Bisard. The trial was moved to Allen County amid doubts Bisard would receive a
fair trial in Marion County. Bisard faces reckless homicide and drunken driving
charges for an August 2010 fatal crash on the northeast side of Indianapolis. Prosecutors
will argue that Bisard was intoxicated more than twice the legal driving limit
when he drove his squad car into a group of motorcyclists. The impact killed
Eric Wells, 30, and seriously injured two other people.
State cop who patronized prostitute, gets seven days in jai
l
Richard Narvaez pleaded guilty in Clackamas
County Circuit Court to one count of official misconduct, a misdemeanor and was
sentenced to seven days in jail
Narvaez, who worked in OSP's Tribal Gaming
Section, met Tiffany Denise Smith after he stopped at a Fred Meyer store at
Southeast 82nd Avenue and Southeast Johnson Creek Boulevard.
He approached Smith at a bus stop and
determined that she would engage in sex for money, said prosecutor Scott Healy.
The section of 82nd near the store is known as an area frequented by street
prostitutes and johns.
Narvaez went into Fred Meyer, withdrew $40
from an ATM and again contacted Smith.
They walked several blocks to a vacant lot
where they partially disrobed and began having sex, Healy said.
A 16-year-old boy observed the sexual activity
and told his mother who called police. A deputy caught Narvaez and Smith in the
act.
When confronted, Narvaez began crying.
An off-duty Richland County sheriff's deputy is in hot water
COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) - An off-duty Richland County sheriff's deputy is in hot water after allegedly assaulting a woman, handcuffing her and slamming her head into a table at a Columbia restaurant on Monday.
Columbia police arrested 49-year-old Deputy Paul Allen Derrick at Buffalo Wild Wings on Devine Street and charged him with assault.
The veteran deputy, 49-year-old Paul Derrick, was placed on leave without pay after he was arrested following the October 7 incident at Buffalo Wild Wings on Devine Street.
According to a Columbia Police Department incident report, around 11 p.m. Derrick approached a female soldier from Fort Jackson who appeared to be upset. The report states 23-year-old Brittany Ball showed no interest in Derrick and the two started arguing.
Police say Derrick, who was not in uniform and was drinking alcohol, left the restaurant and returned with handcuffs he retrieved from his vehicle.
Derrick overpowered Ball, handcuffed her, pulled her to her feet, and slammed her head into a metal table, the report states. Ball, according to the report, was also drinking alcohol.
Cell phone video recorded by a bar patron Steven Hughes details the events as they unfolded on the patio of the restaurant.
"I said, 'I'm going to start videoing this, because I think something is about to get out of hand,'" said Hughes. "And about the time I got my video out, he had her turned around and was putting her in handcuffs. I mean she never yelled at him. She never resisted. She was as calm as she could be. Obviously she was scared, I mean when you get arrested, especially if it's your first time you're going to be scared."
In the video, Derrick can be seen trying to force Ball to stand up after cuffing her hands behind her back.
At one point Ball is positioned over a table, and the table collapses.
A police officer who reviewed video of the incident reports hearing Derrick say, "This is how Marines deal with soldiers," while slamming the woman into the table.
It is not clear from the video why Derrick thought it was necessary to restrain Ball.
Restaurant employees and other customers watched nearby and tried to intervene in the incident.
"At an establishment like that if the management hasn't asked you to leave, then you as a customer can't ask somebody to leave," said Hughes. "You have to go get management. That's the whole point of having a business is letting management handle it."
Derrick does not let management handle it. Instead, he warned others away as he remained on the patio with Ball still unable to free herself. By now, Columbia police are on the way. When they arrive, Hughes shows the video to an officer.
"He watched maybe the first 30 seconds of it. And when he heard the Marine-Army comment he said, 'Alright, things just changed. Arrest him, 10-37, and release her.' And that's when I said, 'Sir, I know it's hard, but that's the right thing,'" said Hughes.
Sheriff Leon Lott is scheduled to discuss the case Tuesday with Interim Columbia Chief Ruben Santiago and Fifth Circuit Solicitor Dan Johnson.
Mobile users, click here to see the video or look for the VIDEO tab in the mobile app or on the mobile website.
cases dismissed after police officer investigation
Brandenburg, Ky (WDRB) -- More court cases are being dismissed in Meade County after two state troopers were fired.
The Meade County Circuit Court Clerk's office says 10 cases were dismissed Wednesday, seven for DUIs and three for traffic violations.
The office says they were dismissed because the investigating officers listed were Kentucky State Police Troopers Jerry Clanton and Stratford Young. KSP confirms the two troopers from Post 4 were fired on Friday.
The Clerk's Office says the cases were dismissed Wednesday because the troopers were unavailable for court. That brings the total cases dismissed in two weeks in Meade County to 15 since five DUI cases were dismissed last week.
This all comes as a father tells WDRB that his 15-year-old daughter was the victim of an inappropriate relationship with two troopers, a Breckinridge County Sheriff's deputy, and a Brandenburg police officer.
Breckinridge Deputy Chris Woosley recently resigned, but his department will not say why.
Brandenburg Mayor David Pace told WDRB News Thursday that he will not release his officer's name who is on paid administrative leave because it's a personnel issue and he has no plans to terminate that officer at this time.
The Kentucky Attorney General's Office is in the process of naming a special prosecutor in the case. Once the KSP investigation is complete, it will be up to a grand jury to decide whether the men will face criminal charges.
Breckinridge County Attorney Bradley Butler says he has not dismissed any court cases involving the former Breckinridge deputy so far.
Photograph the Police: ACLU says arrest of Flint Anonymous activist is un...
Photograph the Police: ACLU says arrest of Flint Anonymous activist is un...: FLINT, MI -- An attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan said Flint police officers appear to have violated the constit...
6 officers, 3 others arrested in illegal racing scheme
Nine people, including six law enforcement officers, were arrested Saturday on charges of operating an illegal horse racing track in Crosby, Harris County prosecutors said.
The 11-month investigation found that an illegal racing and gambling business was operated at Rancho El Herradero, 12402 Sralla Road, the district attorney's office said in a news release. Authorities said the six licensed police officers arrested were providing security at the track.
The six officers arrested were identified as Secar Guadelupe Rangel, 34, and Joel Garcia, 31, deputy constables in Harris County Precinct 1; Richard Rene Rivera, 57, a Department of Public Safety trooper; David Green, 37, andEdward Scott, 34, reserve deputy constables in Fort Bend County Precinct 2; and Carlos Garza, 64, a reserve sheriff's deputy in Maverick County in Southwest Texas.
Three civilians - Cosuelo Rivera, 61; Reginaldo Mandujano, 53; and Diana Marie Salinas,19 - also were arrested.
All nine were charged with racing without a license, a felony punishable by two to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000. Cosuelo Rivera, identified as the wife of Richard Rene Rivera, also was charged with impersonating a peace officer.
All of the officers and Cosuelo Rivera were freed on bond, according to court records. Salina remains in a Harris County jail. Court records did not include any information on Mandujano's case.
Court records show Green was charged with theft in Harris County in 1994. Garza's record includes charges for assault and driving while intoxicated, court records state.
Terese Buess, chief of the DA office's public integrity division, said in the news release that the lengthy investigation included multiple undercover surveillance operations.
The investigation was led by the district attorney's office, DPS and the Texas Rangers.
Authorities said the track typically opened around mid-afternoon on weekends, with races continuing until about midnight.
Truck Driver Nearly Beaten to Death By Police For Not Signing Traffic
Listen
to this arrogant prick defend from CHP the beating
NYPD Officer Arrested for Participating in the Motorcycle 'Road Rage' Attack
An off-duty undercover cop who was riding with a large gang of motorcyclists in New York last month, not only witnessed other riders dragging a man out of his SUV and brutally assaulting him in front of his wife and child, the cop allegedly participated in the attack.
Originally, the seven-year veteran narcotics officer claimed he didn't do anything while members of the ride along punched, kicked and slashed at the victim's face because he arrived at the scene when the attack was ending. But according to new video evidence obtained by the New York Post (from the paper's "disgusted" sources), the unidentified undercover officer can be seen punching one of the SUV windows while the attack is still ongoing. (Update, 5:53 p.m. CBS News reports the undercover officer in question has been arrested for his part in the assault.)
In total, six officers were allegedly part of the group of motorcycle riders when the attack went down. It's unclear so far why they were riding with the group that NYPD was already on alert for, or why any of them failed intervene when things got ugly. The unidentified undercover officer originally got himself in trouble for not reporting his presence at the scene of the crime until more than three days after the attack. He has since turned in his badge and gun and has been reassigned pending an internal investigation.
On September 29, Alexian Lien, 33, was driving in a Range Rover on New York's West Side Highway with his wife and two-year-old daughter when a group of motorcycle riders pulled in front of him. An accidental bump occurred, and the gang started to surround Lien's SUV. When the father sped away because he was threatened, scared and outnumbered, he ran over a few of the riders, paralyzing 32-year-old Edwin Mieses, who has since teamed up with power lawyer Gloria Allred. The bike gang raced after the SUV and pursued Lien into New York City traffic where, finally having him cornered, members of the group proceeded to smash the driver side window and drag Lien out of the car. Lien was assaulted and hospitalized following the attack. Everything leading up to the attack was caught on video:
At least four bikers have so far been been arrested for their roles in the attack. Twenty-nine-year-old Craig Wright, 37-year-old Reginald Chance, and 35-year-old Robert Sims were all arraigned on assault charges. Prosecutors decided not to formally charge the fourth, 43-year-old Allen Edwards, for his role in the attack. To make things even stranger, the man who organized the ride, Jamie Lao, who goes by the name Hollywood Stuntz online, told the website Global Grind he tried to cancel the event at the last minute "due to overwhelming pressure from the police."
Prichard Officer Arrested in Child Abuse Case
PRICHARD, Ala. (WPMI) A Prichard Police officer with a previous criminal
history is accused of severely abusing a child, prosecutors said.
Bryan Pearman, 24, is charged with aggravated child abuse, jail records show.
Mobile County Assistant District Attorney Nicki Patterson said deputies received a call from USA Women's and Children's Hospital in July telling authorities a two-year-old girl had been treated for injuries that did not appear accidental.
The girl had injuries to her head and face as well as marks on her neck that were consistent with having been choked, Patterson said. The girl had been in Pearman's care when the injuries were discovered.
Deputies continued to investigate the case and obtained a warrant this week.
Prichard Police officials learned of Pearman's imminent arrest during Thursday's City Council meeting, a source with knowledge of the case said. Coincidentally in that meeting, the council voted to confirm Jerry Spezial as the city's new police chief.
Mayor Troy Ephriam and Chief of Staff Eddie Brown have been briefed on the matter, the source said.
Pearman has been a patrolman for nearly 2 years. Before he became an officer, Pearman was charged in a misdemeanor animal cruelty case where his neighbor's dog was shot, court records show.
"All the other neighbors heard shots and pinpointed them to his house," a witness wrote in a 2010 deposition, "Dog returned to her front yard where she lay bleeding."
Pearman was fined and ordered to pay restitution, records show.
It was not immediately clear how the previous arrest was handled when Pearman was applying to become an officer.
The abuse charge is a felony and carries a maximum penalty of 20 years. Pearman is scheduled to appear in court on the matter October 21.
Bryan Pearman, 24, is charged with aggravated child abuse, jail records show.
Mobile County Assistant District Attorney Nicki Patterson said deputies received a call from USA Women's and Children's Hospital in July telling authorities a two-year-old girl had been treated for injuries that did not appear accidental.
The girl had injuries to her head and face as well as marks on her neck that were consistent with having been choked, Patterson said. The girl had been in Pearman's care when the injuries were discovered.
Deputies continued to investigate the case and obtained a warrant this week.
Prichard Police officials learned of Pearman's imminent arrest during Thursday's City Council meeting, a source with knowledge of the case said. Coincidentally in that meeting, the council voted to confirm Jerry Spezial as the city's new police chief.
Mayor Troy Ephriam and Chief of Staff Eddie Brown have been briefed on the matter, the source said.
Pearman has been a patrolman for nearly 2 years. Before he became an officer, Pearman was charged in a misdemeanor animal cruelty case where his neighbor's dog was shot, court records show.
"All the other neighbors heard shots and pinpointed them to his house," a witness wrote in a 2010 deposition, "Dog returned to her front yard where she lay bleeding."
Pearman was fined and ordered to pay restitution, records show.
It was not immediately clear how the previous arrest was handled when Pearman was applying to become an officer.
The abuse charge is a felony and carries a maximum penalty of 20 years. Pearman is scheduled to appear in court on the matter October 21.
Wildwood cop who kicked handcuffed suspects resentenced to 5 years in prison
CAPE MAY COUNTY — Wildwood police officer convicted of kicking two handcuffed suspects has been resentenced to five years in prison, according to a report on PressofAtlanticCity.com.
David Romeo, 43, will have to serve one year and five days before he is eligible for parole. He has spent 30 days in the Atlantic County jail since an August decision that denied his request for a new trial, the report said.
The state appellate panel instead ordered that the sentence be revisited.
Romeo was convicted of official misconduct for kicking two handcuffed car burglary suspects in the head as they lay on the ground in a parking lot in 2007.
Romeo testified he kicked the men because he saw a weapon. But three other officers said no weapon was present when the suspects were kicked.
When Romeo appealed his original five-year sentence in 2010, prosecutors appealed a judge's decision not to make the former sergeant ineligible for parole, the Press of Atlantic City reported. The officer was allowed to remain free.
Norristown cop sentenced to 17 years in drug case
COURTHOUSE — A
Montgomery County judge sentenced a retired Norristown police officer to 17 to
50 years behind bars Friday for selling methamphetamine and prescription pills
and using his old police badge and license plate as clout to do it.
In July, a jury
found Jack Pennington, 68, of Upper Merion, guilty of 16 out of 21 drug-related
felonies stemming from a wiretap investigation spearheaded by Montgomery County
Detectives and their Narcotics Enforcement Team (NET).
Throughout
Pennington’s four-day trial, Schadler said Pennington repeatedly used his
position as a former police officer to sway the jury.
Tampa police officer fired, charged with welfare fraud
Tampa police fired and arrested another of their own on
Thursday. This time, the charges involve a longtime police sergeant accused of
using a convict's food stamp card.
Police arrested - and Chief Jane Castor fired - Sgt. La
Joyce Houston, a 16-year veteran of the force. Houston, 47, is charged with two
counts of welfare fraud and one count of grand theft. She was released from the
Hillsborough County Orient Road Jail after posting bail set at $6,000, records
show.
The firing comes less than a month after the chief
terminated two officers for unrelated reasons. One officer had been arrested on
charges she stole money from an evidence area. The other was Sgt. Ray
Fernandez, terminated after police investigators said he was not truthful about
his involvement in the drunken driving arrest of a Tampa attorney in January who
prosecutors say was set up.
LAPD officer charged with assaulting handcuffed woman who died
Prosecutors say police cruiser's video camera caught the officer kicking the woman in the stomach and groin during an arrest. Alesia Thomas, 35, died soon after.
An LAPD officer has been charged with assaulting a woman under color of authority by kicking her in the groin during an arrest last year, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office announced Thursday.
LAPD Officer Mary O’Callaghan, 48, was charged Wednesday in connection with the July 22, 2012, incident that ended with the death of Alesia Thomas.
O'Callaghan was one of several officers sent to Thomas' home in the 9100 block of South Broadway Avenue to investigate allegations that Thomas had abandoned her children after they were left at a local police station.
O’Callaghan arrived at the scene to assist the arresting officers in placing Thomas in a patrol car. While Thomas was in handcuffs and leg restraints, prosecutors said, a police cruiser’s video camera captured the veteran officer kicking Thomas in the stomach and groin area and pushing her in the throat.
Thomas, once inside the patrol car, lost consciousness and paramedics were called. Shortly afterward, she was pronounced dead at a hospital.
Prosecutors on Thursday said they declined to charge O'Callaghan with involuntary manslaughter because of insufficient evidence to prove her conduct caused Thomas’ death.
O'Callaghan's attorney, Robert Rico, could not be reached for comment. O'Callaghan is a 19-year veteran of the LAPD.
But the president of the Los Angeles Police Protective League issued a statement.
“While I cannot comment on the specific incident because I have not seen the video and the officer involved has her own legal counsel, the alleged actions of the officer are incongruous with her reputation as an officer who was known to be diligent, courteous and ethical,” said Tyler Izen. “This officer had previously been publicly commended by the LAPD for community efforts and was publicly commended for helping a burglary victim’s family who lost all their presents at Christmas time.
Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck previously criticized the officer's actions.
In a report to the Police Commission, the civilian board that oversees the LAPD, Beck concluded -- without naming O'Callaghan -- that a veteran female officer violated department policies by repeatedly using her feet to kick or shove Alesia Thomas in her genitals and midsection.
The same officer, the chief and the commission found, showed "apparent indifference" toward Thomas as she cursed at the mother of two young children during the messy effort to restrain her and place her in the back of a police cruiser.
Beck also raised concerns about the actions of three additional officers and a supervisor during the confrontation.
Two of the officers disregarded Thomas' request for medical help, while the third cop may have lied to investigators about the incident, Beck wrote in a report.
The five-member Police Commission agreed with the chief's finding that the female officer's forceful use of her feet was "ineffective and inappropriate," according to a commission report on the incident.
An autopsy by the L.A. County coroner determined that cocaine intoxication probably was "a major factor" in Thomas' death. It was impossible to determine what role, if any, the struggle with the officers played in the 35-year-old woman's death.
Because of that uncertainty, the official cause of death was listed as "undetermined."
The Times reported previously on the alleged kicks by the female officer and Thomas' odd decision to abandon her children outside the LAPD's Southeast area station, which led to the fatal confrontation with police.
Hours before she died, Thomas, who suffered from bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and drug addiction according to the autopsy report, had left her children, a 3-year-old and a 12-year-old, outside the station, according to a department account of the incident.
Initially, police reported that Thomas was attempting to surrender the children to police custody because she felt she could no longer care for them properly.
In his report, however, Beck said, it appeared Thomas expected her mother to pick the children up at the station.
Washington Shooting – Police Brutality Becoming Routine?
The latest incident of police violence –
perpetrated on a frightened young mother in Washington, DC shooting, appears to
be have been made out to be just another routine occurrence – protecting the
public from a crazed, dangerous maniac. But was it really another incident of
police brutality?
This woman was on psychiatric drugs which
accounts, most likely, for her erratic behavior. But there’s a huge difference
here; she was unarmed. Doesn’t that get figured into the computation anymore?
Couldn’t they simply have shot the tires to get her to stop? Or fired warning
shots?
Sure, she drove through a barrier and slightly
injured a secret service man and then gunned it down the street. That was
definitely not rational behavior. But still this was no cause to go
trigger-happy.
Yes, there’s national security to consider and
it was happening at the White House. Those are still not justified rationalizations,
however, for gunning down a fairly helpless young woman – with a baby in the
car no less. It is entirely possible that child could have been shot or killed,
regardless of how accurate their aims were.
Could it be they didn’t have time to go to the
shooting range for target practice and conveniently used her instead? That
sounds blasphemous, yes, but not necessarily unlikely, considering the
senselessness of the whole tragedy.
The famous Rodney King beating, caught on tape
in 1991, was one of the first of brutal, unfair violence against unarmed
victims of the police to hit the news on a national scale. What sparked the
public uproar and massive property destruction and looting afterwards was the
fact that the three officers involved were acquitted.
Despite the huge protest at that time, could
this have set a precedent of leniency in the courts when it came to police
crimes against the public?
In 2005, a young man named Patrick Lee was
tasered 19 times for simply behaving a bit strangely. He died from the wounds.
The court later acquitted the police officers; the jury decided they did not
use excessive force.
In May 2009, a 15 year-old boy was shot in the
upper body by a policeman because he refused to drop a toy gun he was playing
with in a game of cops and robbers.
A college student named Derek Copp, unarmed,
was shot at his home by police on a drug arrest for marijuana. The police
officer was put on paid administrative leave. Does that men police brutality
has become routine?
In a well-known case in 2006, Sean Bell was
shot dead in front of a nightclub on the eve of his wedding. Fifty shots were
fired with no warning from the police. The judge ruled in favor of the police,
despite witness testimony to the contrary.
Not long ago, thanks to a youtube video, a
police officer was charged with assault after he pushed a man off his bike for
no apparent reason. The policeman claimed otherwise and arrested the man. The
officer was later accused of filing a false report and put on administrative
leave while the bicyclist was acquitted.
In September 2013, a police officer in North
Carolina shot and killed a man who appeared to be a burglar. He was banging on
a door for help after an accident in his car. He did charge at the police but
he was unarmed – very similar to the Washington shooting. The incident was
noted by police simply as imperfect self-defense. Was that term a piece
of poetic license as the policeman filled out his report but when translated
into a less fanciful language, means murder?
In Galveston, Texas, a 12 year-old girl was
beaten in the face by three officers outside her home, calling her a
prostitute; the attack was done after she screamed for help. It turns out they
had the wrong house but even if they had the right house, how was that OK? Not
only that, they later came to the house and arrested her for having allegedly
assaulted them.
In January 2012, a man named Sebastian Prevot
stopped just past the white line at a stop sign. Frightened he would be
arrested, saying he was black and the two officers in the car behind him where
white, as well as it being 3 AM, he continued home at the speed limit and
stopping at every stop sign correctly. Ten police cars were waiting for him at
home; he was severely beaten while they also went after his wife.
This occurred in Houston, Tx where 588
incidents of police brutality were reported in the past six years; all but four
were dismissed.
What is occurring when the very people who are
given the responsibility to protect citizens from criminals are criminals
themselves? Of course, criminal police officers are still a minority but that
percentage is growing, due most likely to their acceptance by fellow police,
judges, juries and their unjust acquittals of some police officers who are
clearly guilty.
Aside from this Washington shooting, more and
more scenes are appearing in the news and online of rows and rows of police
decked out like Nazis or from some galactic patrol, armed to the teeth. It is
simply another sign of the general moral decay of society when police brutality
becomes routine. Are they afraid of us? All bullies are.
Clarksburg man alleges police brutality from 2011 arrest
A dashboard camera captured
three police officers beating a Clarksburg man in 2011, according to a lawsuit
claiming excessive force that was filed last week in federal court.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A dashboard camera captured three
police officers beating a Clarksburg man in 2011, according to a lawsuit
claiming excessive force that was filed last week in federal court.
Joy Pumphrey was pulled over near the town of Nutter Fort
in Harrison County in October 2011 for having loud exhaust, according to the
complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Clarksburg on Tuesday.
Nutter Fort Patrolman J.E. Young and Harrison County
sheriff's deputies W.J. Cunningham and C.M. Heater had the man get out of his
vehicle for questioning and a search. Pumphrey was "known by the officers
to be unarmed," the lawsuit states.
"Suddenly, [Pumphrey] began to flee, on foot, from
the officers," the complaint states. He was subdued within a short
distance -- "still within the partial view of the dashboard camera."
The lawsuit states that the officers were then able to
take the man into custody without resistance. But they began "striking,
kicking and punching [Pumphrey] in the face, head and ribs," according to
the complaint, which claims the man was not resisting or fighting back.
Pumphrey, according to the suit, was rendered unconscious
for a period of time and suffered severe injuries to his face and ribs. He was
taken by ambulance to United Hospital Center in Bridgeport, where he was
diagnosed with several facial fractures, including his sinuses and nose and
several ribs.
"When the defendants repeatedly struck and punched
Joy Pumphrey in the face and ribs, no objectively reasonable officers could
have perceived Mr. Pumphrey as posing an immediate threat to the safety of the
officers or others," John Bryan, the man's attorney, wrote in the
complaint.
He was transferred to Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown
because his severe facial fractures needed special treatment, the lawsuit
states.
Doctors there diagnosed him with an orbital floor
fracture, a zygomatic fracture, a right orbital fracture, and a laceration of
the left eye as the result of "assault," according to the complaint.
Nutter Fort Police Chief Ron Goodwin said Young still
works as a patrolman with his department. He said the county's prosecutor and
an independent agency investigated the incident and no charges were filed
against the officers.
Harrison County Prosecuting Attorney Joe Shaffer didn't
return a phone message.
A secretary with the Harrison County Sheriff's Department
said Cunningham and Heater still worked for the department. Sheriff Albert
Morano couldn't be reached for comment.
Pumphrey underwent surgery, but has permanent injuries to
his body and vision from the alleged attack, according to the complaint.
He is suing the officers individually, the Harrison County
Commission and the Town of Nutter Fort.
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