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

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

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

Plainfield cop convicted of forcing woman to undress for him by threatening her with jail



PLAINFIELD — A former Plainfield police sergeant was convicted Wednesday of forcing a woman to undress for him while he masturbated by threatening to put her in jail.
A Union County jury found Samuel Woody, 43, a 12-year veteran of the Plainfield Police Division, guilty of second-degree official misconduct and fourth-degree criminal sexual contact.
He faces up to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced Feb. 3. He will not be allowed to hold a public job in the state.
Woody was accused of arresting a 27-year-old city resident on bogus theft and burglary charges in July 2011. After she was released, Woody reportedly asked her to meet with him on a lot on Madison Avenue, where he coerced her into undressing while he masturbated in full uniform, Union County Assistant Prosecutor Jim Tansey said. Authorities said Woody had threatening to put her in prison for five years.
Woody was arrested in January 2012 and suspended without pay.
The theft and burglary charges against the victim were dismissed.
“The conduct of this officer was not only criminal but brazenly flagrant in the manner in which it violated the public’s trust,” Union County Prosecutor Grace H. Park said Thursday in a news release.

Staff Writer Sergio Bichao: 908-243-6615; sbichao@njpressmedia.com


Puerto Rico Cop Sentenced to 25 Years for Kiddie Porn



SAN JUAN – A 33-year veteran of the Puerto Rico Police Department was sentenced to 25 years in prison for crimes related to child pornography, the San Juan office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement reported Wednesday.

William Berrios Cruz was a PRPD lieutenant up until his arrest after being found to have videos of a sexual nature of a 16-year-old girl on his cell phone.

The investigation was launched when several Homeland Security Investigations agents received information on Feb. 24 that Berrios Cruz had raped the girl after having slipped an illegal substance into her drink.

HSI agents mobilized the next day at Berrios Cruz’s residence in the central town of Barranquitas, where they found images on the cell phone of the cop engaging in sexual behavior with the minor.

Berrios Cruz had stood out for his work as an official with the PRPD’s Police Athletic League.

The investigation was undertaken by ICE agents, the HSI and a PRPD task force. 



Man released after spending 30 years in prison for rape


PONTIAC, Ill. (AP) — A man convicted of rape nearly 30 years ago -- who said Chicago police tortured him until he confessed to the crime -- was released from prison Wednesday after spending the better part of three decades behind bars.
Stanley Wrice walked out of the Pontiac Correctional Center in Illinois Wednesday morning, one day after a Cook County judge said he should be freed and his conviction should be overturned.
The judge's decision was reached partly because the police officers involved lied about how they treated Wrice during his interrogation. 
Wrice, 59, was sentenced to 100 years in prison for the 1982 rape, but he has always claimed the confession was made after officers repeatedly beat him. The accused officers did not testify at Tuesday's hearing, citing their constitutional right against self-incrimination.
Now that Wrice's conviction has been overturned, it is up to a special prosecutor to decide whether to retry him for the crime.
Wrice's is the latest case to cast a shadow over the Chicago Police Department and, more specifically, former Lt. Jon Burge -- who is accused of falsely obtaining confessions from multiple suspects during the 1970s and 1980s, several of whom have also been ordered released from prison in recent years.

Burge was convicted in 2010 of perjury and obstruction of justice and is currently serving a four year prison sentence. The city of Chicago has paid out millions of dollars in recent years to settle lawsuits in cases related to Burge's rule.



Yonkers cop charged in Florida betting ring


Court papers say officer had minor role

A veteran Yonkers cop is facing racketeering charges in Florida after undercover investigators said they busted an illegal betting and money laundering ring.
Christopher Dellacamera, 45, was arraigned on a Florida arrest warrant late Tuesday in Westchester County Court. He was released without bail on the condition that he surrender to Florida authorities within 10 days.
The yearlong investigation, spearheaded by the Broward County Sheriff’s Office, was dubbed “Operation Gotham City” and targeted a ring that investigators said took sports bets and laundered money through various banks in Florida, New York, three other states and Central America. The alleged ringleader, Adam Green of Boca Raton, was arrested Thursday along with six other Florida men. Four other arrests are expected.
A spokeswoman for the Sheriff’s Office declined to discuss the specific allegations against Dellacamera, who joined the Yonkers Police Department in 1997. He was charged with racketeering and conspiracy to commit racketeering.
According to an affidavit for one of the arrest warrants in the case, Dellacamera seemed to have a relatively minor role in the ring. The hierarchy of the “Bookmaking Enterprise Organization” showed Green as the bookmaker with five “Super Agents” and 10 “Agents,” including Dellacamera. Four of the Super Agents had more than a dozen “clients” from whom they regularly took bets. The Agents each had up to 10 clients. Dellacamera had just one, the affidavit said.
Dellacamera was caught on wiretaps discussing with the others how much had been won or lost and how and when accounts would be settled, according to the affidavit.
Dellacamera’s lawyer, Andrew Quinn, could not be reached for comment.
Lt. Patrick McCormack, a Yonkers police spokesman, said Dellacamera turned himself in to Yonkers Internal Affairs detectives on Tuesday after the department was notified by Florida authorities and New York state police about the warrant.
Dellacamera, who had been assigned to patrol, was placed on modified duty pending an investigation by Internal Affairs. He will continue to be paid his salary, which this past year was $85,976.
His older brother, Frank, is a former Mamaroneck town police officer who was sentenced to a year in jail after pleading guilty in 2006 to drug and stolen property charges. Frank Dellacamera had been arrested the previous year in a sting operation in which he was caught on tape offering to sell cocaine to an undercover officer posing as a drug addict. He also paid $2,000 to an undercover officer for what he thought was stolen electronic equipment.
In Christopher Dellacamera’s case, the affidavit says Green’s crew was infiltrated by an undercover agent who got access to the online betting site GAMETIME88.com and placed about $160,000 worth of bets with them. The investigation was carried out by the sheriff’s organized crime unit, with assistance from Boca Raton and Fort Lauderdale police.
In addition to Green and Dellacamera, those already arrested are Jordan Brown, 24, of Coral Springs; Emilio Colon, 32, of Margate; Mark Ruggiero, 42, of Pompano Beach; Sean Barnes, 34, of Delray Beach; Rehan Kazi, 45, of Pembroke Pines; and Eric Spinosa, 36, of Boca Raton.


Florida Police Officer Arrested For Slamming Suspect's Head Into A Wall



By Will Hagle, Wed, December 11, 2013

Video has surfaced in the case of a law enforcement officer charged with assault for his mistreatment of a suspect in Marion County, Fla.

Officer Charles Broaderick was working at the county jail when he apprehended James Duckworth, a man who had been accused of driving under the influence. The video shows Duckworth arguing with the officers before making a noise with his throat. Broaderick believed this to be a threat to spit on the officers, so he slammed Duckworth against the wall and yelled at him.


“Hey!” Broaderick says before forcibly pushing Duckworth into the wall. “You don’t spit at officers.”
Afterward, Duckworth’s blood can be seen strewn across the white wall as the officers discuss whether or not he had spit at them. Broaderick appears to immediately realize his mistake, lifting Duckworth and attempting to give him medical attention.
According to the Daily Mail, Broaderick was arrested for assault regarding the incident but spent just 13 minutes in a cell at the prison, after which he posted his $2,000 bail. He has been placed on unpaid leave as the investigation unfolds and the lawsuit against him continues.


Due to the increased use of security monitors as well as individual smartphones, prevalence of police brutality being caught on camera has been widespread throughout the past few years. Stories such as that of Oscar Grant (the BART rider shot by an Oakland officer and documented in the recent film “Fruitvale Station”) demonstrate that while this ability to self-monitor our officers allows justice against innocent victims to be served, even overwhelming evidence of police brutality cannot change the actions of the officers nor the victims that suffer injuries due to their actions.

China Grove Police Department is Suspended


Posted by Bill Oliver News Wednesday, December 11th, 2013 

CHINA GROVE, Texas (AP) _ Leaders of a South Texas city have disbanded the three-person police department amid complaints of officers not doing their jobs. 
The China Grove City Council on Monday indefinitely suspended Chief Larry Davis and the other two officers in the San Antonio-area community of nearly 1,200. Law enforcement was turned over to the Bexar (bayr) County Sheriff’s Office.
Council members in October voted to add a third officer amid hundreds of unserved warrants. 
Mayor Eugene Ripps says China Grove received complaints of lack of patrols and performance reviews were done. He says new officers will be hired but gave no timetable.
Davis says he wasn’t aware of Monday’s special council meeting. Officer Damian Balderas says police are either in the city or out serving warrants and can’t do both.

Short URL: http://wtaw.com/?p=73780

Wrongfully Arrested Colorado Man Gets $23,500 Payout Because Cops Didn’t Know Gun Laws



By Allison Geller, Thu, December 12, 2013
James Sorensen of Colorado Springs received $23,500 in damages from the city after police wrongfully arrested him for carrying a gun in a city park, an incident that was caught on video.
Sorensen, who is an Iraq and Afghanistan Army veteran, was attending a gay pride festival in July of 2012 with a 40-caliber pistol openly displayed on his hip, KUSA reported. That was the day after the Aurora theater shooting that left 12 people dead and 70 injured.
Seven Colorado Springs police officers detained and then arrested Sorensen because they thought that open carrying was still illegal in Colorado.
Open carrying in city parks has been legal since 2003, when new legislation made wide changes to statewide gun laws.
Officers blamed the outdated “cheat sheet” they carry with them, which still listed the old law.
“I knew the law,” Sorensen said last year. “I knew that it was legal for me to carry. My rights were trampled on.”
In the video, taken by Sorensen’s partner, Sorensen refuses an officer’s order to put his hands up, replying “Negative, sergeant.”
“You’re about to get the sh** kicked out of you,” the officer tells him.
Sorensen actually calls the police at one point, hoping to find an officer who knows the law.
“I need a real officer,” he says, later adding, “This is bogus. I can’t wait to get this into court. This is bullsh**.”
He also attributes his treatment to his sexuality.
“This is because I’m gay,” he tells police. “I’m gay and carrying a weapon and I threaten you, don’t I?”
Sorensen was spent an hour in custody before he was ticketed. He claims that he was not read his Miranda rights.
The Colorado Springs Gazette reported that the cash settlement releases the city from Sorensen’s claims of unlawful arrest, unreasonable search and seizure, unreasonable violation of speech rights, unreasonable violation of the right to bear arms, failure to train and failure to supervise. The settlement makes it clear that though the police admit that the ticket and arrest were mistakes, the agreement “does not constitute an admission by city defendants of any liability, wrongdoing, or violation of any law.”
Since the incident, the Colorado Springs Police Department has completed a line-by-line review of the cheat sheet, “made updates to reference guides used and instituted more periodic reviews of these documents,” according to CSPD Police Chief Pete Carey.
Sources: KUSA, WND, Colorado Springs Gazette

BOSTON COP ARRESTED FOR POINTING GUN AT 2 PEOPLE


A decorated Boston police officer was arraigned this morning for pointing a gun at a woman and her disabled husband last night in an alleged robbery attempt.

Fonseca pleaded not guilty to two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon this morning in Roxbury District Court, where he hid behind a door that led to a glass partition. He was held on $5,000 bail set by Judge Pamela Dashiell.

Authorities said patrolman Sandro Fonseca, 30, was off-duty last night when the 9:51 p.m. incident occurred on Forest Street, and that the gun allegedly involved — a blue steel .380 Smith & Wesson “Bodyguard” with a sight laser — was not his service weapon.

Police said a woman told them three Hispanic males tried to rob her and her disabled husband, and that one of the men pointed a gun in her husband’s face before fleeing.
His lawyer, Kenneth Anderson, said in court that his client was heavily intoxicated last night, and when he met with him 12 hours after the incident, Fonseca still reeked of alcohol, Anderson said.

“He doesn’t really know these people,” Anderson said. “Alcohol was a factor in whatever precipitated this incident.”

Anderson said Fonseca is a “decorated officer” who served six years with the Marines and a tour of duty in Fallujah.

Fonseca received a commendation for saving his partner’s life in a shootout with a drug suspect in South Boston five months ago, according to Boston police spokeswoman Cheryl Fiandaca.
Fonseca, a five-year veteran of the force assigned to District C6 in Southie, was one of three officers taking part in a narcotics investigation at the Mary Ellen McCormack housing project on Old Colony Avenue July 16, who authorities said were fired upon by Paul Eric Louis-Jeune, 22, of Braintree, with a loaded .38-caliber revolver, according to court records.

Police reported Louis-Jeune got off at least one shot at Fonseca and officers Brendan Kelly and Steven Horne while attempting to outrun them on a steamy afternoon. When the six-shot handgun was recovered, police said there were still five live rounds in the chamber.
“The officers returned fire and were able to subdue the subject,” court records state. Louis-Jeune suffered life-threatening injuries.

Under conditions set today be the judge, Fonseca had to turn in his passport, cannot leave the state, cannot have contact with the alleged victims, is prohibited from weapons, is required to be evaluated for substance abuse and must heed any recommendations from the program, is required to take random urine tests and is required to be evaluated for stress by Boston police under conditions set by the judge.

Anderson told the judge he preferred his client immediately enter an alcohol-treatment program. He said after court that Fonseca would post bail.

Fonseca’s family members and his partner from this summer’s shooting were at court, Anderson said. They declined comment after the arraignment.

Fonseca will be placed on administrative leave, according to the Boston Police Department. His pretrial hearing is scheduled for Feb. 3.

Fonseca earned $103,000 in 2012, according to department records.

Joe Dwinell contributed to this report.

Woman dies from accidental shooting by officer during drug raid


A woman has died after being accidentally shot by a law-enforcement officer during a Ross County drug raid on Wednesday night.
Krystal Barrows, 35, had been flown to a Columbus-area hospital in critical condition after she was shot, the Ross County sheriff said.
The Chillicothe Gazette reported this morning that Barrows has died from a gunshot to the head. The sheriff’s office did not immediately respond to requests for information this morning.
Barrows was one of 11 people crowded into a modular home off Rt. 23 in southern Ross County when the sheriff’s office Emergency Response Team went in about 10:30 p.m., the sheriff’s office said.
The office wouldn’t give details yesterday about what happened, other than to acknowledge that a woman had been shot during the operation. Sheriff George W. Lavender Jr. did not return numerous calls to discuss the situation.
Prosecutor Matt Schmidt told local media that the woman was unintentionally shot by a law-enforcement officer during the raid. Schmidt said it was unclear whether the gunfire resulted from a weapon malfunction or the officer’s error.
Authorities also wouldn’t say whether the officer who shot the woman was a Ross County deputy or with another agency. The sheriff’s office and the U.S. 23 Task Force, which includes other law-enforcement agencies, had been watching the home for some time.
Large amounts of heroin, drug instruments, cash and guns were recovered from the scene.
Six people were arrested during the raid, mostly on outstanding warrants.

The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation has been called in to review how the search warrant was executed.

Arizona cops sent to prison



PHOENIX (AP) — A former Phoenix police officer on Wednesday pleaded guilty to manslaughter, in a deal that spares him a separate trial on charges of second-degree murder and animal cruelty.

Richard Chrisman was convicted of assault in September, but the jury failed to reach verdicts on the other counts. Under the deal with prosecutors, Chrisman pleaded guilty Wednesday to the lesser offense of manslaughter.

Chrisman faces seven to 14 years in prison for the manslaughter conviction, and will be sentenced on Dec. 20. He faces five to 15 years in prison for the assault conviction, but both sentences will run concurrently.

Chrisman shot and killed an unarmed man and his dog during a 2010 domestic violence call. He claimed the shooting was self-defense, but his partner testified that Chrisman was unprovoked.

Couple wants cops trained


ATLANTA -- An Atlanta couple believes too many of them are too quick to shoot family pets.

"We raised an incredibly obedient and well-mannered dog that didn't deserve to be shot," Matthew Rodriguez told 11 Alive News on Tuesday.

He and his wife, Kelley, claim their 2-year-old dog, Jane, was killed by an Atlanta Police officer for no good reason.

It happened November 10th after an accidental automated 911 call from their Southeast Atlanta home.

Kelley said she talked to a 911 dispatcher to say everything was okay, but then two APD officers showed up at the front door.

"I opened the door and my dogs ran out like they always do and within two seconds a police officer turned and shot her," she told 11 Alive.

She said the 2-year-old lab-pitbull mix, Jane, died before they could get her help.

A second dog, just a puppy, was unhurt.

In his police report, the officer who shot Jane claimed he only fired after the dogs came at him, he injured his knee falling to avoid them, and Kelley refused his repeated calls for her to call off the animals.

She disputes that account, saying the dogs were friendly and the officer fired almost immediately.

She has launched a Facebook page called "Justice for Jane Our Family Dog", that already has more than 1,000 likes.

Kelley said she's linked up with other families who've had similar tragedies, which they claim are all too common.

She wants police officers to receive special training in how to deal with such situations, like Colorado requires.

"We want law enforcement to get training on how to deal with family dogs in non-lethal and non-excessively violent ways," she added.

Atlanta Police sent 11 Alive a written statement that said, in part, "Police officers face difficult circumstances on a daily basis while carrying out their duties, including occasional attacks from dogs that are unleashed or unrestrained by their owners."

It also said the shooting of the Rodriguez family dog, "is currently under investigation by OPS (Office of Professional Standards); if the investigation determines that this was not a justified use of force, the officer will be disciplined in accordance with our policies."

The APD statement added, "The loss of any life, human or animal, is something the Department does not take lightly."

Meanwhile, Kelley and Matthew Rodriguez said they are considering hiring a lawyer for a possible civil suit.

Police in Lake County and throughout Illinois must learn nonlethal

By Judy Masterson



NORTH CHICAGO — Police in Lake County and throughout Illinois must learn nonlethal ways to respond to dogs in the line of duty under a change to the Illinois Police Training Act that goes into effect Jan. 1.

The amended law orders the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board to conduct or approve training in humane response as well as how to respond to dog fights and animal abuse and neglect.

“Police officers have to keep everybody safe − themselves, their partners, the public and animals,” said Cynthia Bathurst, executive director, Safe Humane Chicago. “But they can’t do that if they don’t have the strategies and tools they need.”

The updated law reflects both a growing attachment to pets − 40 percent of U.S. households include at least one dog − and outrage among animal lovers when four-legged friends are dispatched by police in incidents that can also provoke expensive lawsuits.

“Pet’s have gone from the barnyard to the backyard to the bedroom and they’re part of our families now,” Bathurst said. “A large percentage of Americans own dogs and that’s the way we see it.”

Shamarra Evans of Grayslake accused North Chicago Police Officer Ramtin Sabet of “malice, willfullness and reckless indifference” in a federal lawsuit seeking damages after the shooting of her dog on July 8, 2011.

The city on Dec. 2 agreed to a $5,000 settlement of that claim. According to court documents, Evans, who brought her dog, “Mama,” a 4-year-old American pit bull terrier, along on a visit to a friend’s home in the 1300 block of Lincoln Street, claims Sabet shot the dog without provocation.

Evans, who works at a nail salon in Gurnee, declined to comment except to say that she accepted the settlement because defense attorneys threatened to use a past arrest against her.

North Chicago city Attorney Chuck Smith said the city agreed to settle the claim for “less than what it would have cost to defend it to jury verdict.”

“The officer was executing a search warrant for drugs,” Smith said. “Officers are trained to be protective. Many drug dealers have a pit bull and this was a pit bull. The officer said the dog was coming at him and that’s why he did what he did.”

But Evans claims Sabet killed her dog while it was playing with her friend’s dogs.

Smith said he often hears the argument that dogs have no civil rights. But courts have ruled that the “unreasonable” killing of a pet poses an unconstitutional seizure of personal property under the Fourth Amendment.

In another police-dog encounter this year, the subject of a federal lawsuit against an officer with the Metropolitan Enforcement Group (MEG), Stephanie Smith of North Chicago claims that State Trooper Adam Hendrick shot her dog Lokey “multiple times in the head and body” despite the fact that the dog was standing by her side, wagging its tail.

That shooting occurred inside Smith’s apartment at 1500 Elizabeth Ave. on March 20 during a drug raid in which her brother, who had spent the night, was taken into custody.

Assistant Attorney General Sunil Bhave, who is representing Hendrick, could not be reached for comment. Efforts to contact Smith, who still lives in the apartment where her dog died, were also unsuccessful.

Smith is seeking unspecified damages for emotional distress, loss of companionship and illegal seizure of property.

Illinois is the second state, after Colorado, to adopt police training guidelines that train officers in non-lethal methods of controlling dogs.



 

Cop sentenced to 25 years for shooting 'looter' in the wake of Hurricane Katrina is cleared at retrial



•           Former New Orleans police officer David Warren has been acquitted of the shooting of Henry Glover, 31, in the days after Hurricane Katrina
•           Warren had been found guilty in 2010 and sentenced to nearly 26 years
•           Last year an appeals court ordered a new trial after ruling he should have been tried separately from officers charged with covering-up the death
•           An ex-colleague said Warren told him shortly after the shooting that he believed looters were 'animals' who deserved to be shot
•           After the verdict was read, Glover's sister, Patrice, started wailing and had to be carried out of the courtroom
•           Warren's family embraced each other and fought back tears
•           On his release Walker said: 'We have spent years talking about something that lasted seconds'

By Daily Mail Reporter and Associated Press 

A former New Orleans police officer whose 2010 manslaughter conviction was touted as a milestone in the city's healing after Hurricane Katrina was acquitted Wednesday by a different jury of charges he fatally shot a man without justification during the storm's chaotic aftermath.
David Warren spent more than three years behind bars after he was charged in the September 2005 death of 31-year-old Henry Glover, whose body was burned in a car by a different officer after a good Samaritan drove the dying man to a makeshift police compound.
Leaving the courthouse a free man, Warren, 50, was reunited with his wife and five children after jurors acquitted him of a civil rights violation and a firearm charge.
Warren told reporters that he 'took the action that I had to take' when he shot Glover once with a rifle from a second-story balcony at a strip mall he was guarding.
'We have spent years talking about something that lasted seconds,' he said.
Warren's trembling relatives wept and embraced each other after the verdict, which jurors delivered less than two hours after they informed a judge they were struggling to reach a unanimous decision.
'Oh my gosh, I can't even get it in my head,' his wife, Kathy Warren, told a supporter.
Her husband had been in custody since June 2010, when he surrendered to authorities following his indictment.
On the other side of the courtroom, Glover's sister, Patrice, slumped over and wailed so loudly that U.S. District Judge Lance Africk paused as he spoke to jurors. After a man carried Patrice Glover out of the room, several jurors wiped away tears as they filed out.
Friends and relatives tried to console Patrice Glover as she sat in a chair in the lobby of the courthouse.
'He was a good child,' she said of her brother. 'That was my baby.'
U.S. Attorney Kenneth Allen Polite Jr. said in a statement that prosecutors were disappointed by the verdict but thanked jurors for their 'attentive service.'
His predecessor, Jim Letten, said after the 2010 verdict that it marked a 'critical phase in the recovery and healing of this city, of the people of this region.'
Africk had sentenced Warren to nearly 26 years in prison after the jury in his first trial convicted him and two other former officers of charges stemming from Glover's death.
But an appeals court overturned Warren's convictions and ordered a new trial last year.
A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit ruled that Warren should have been tried separately from four other former officers charged in an alleged cover-up of Glover's death.
The panel agreed with Warren's lawyers that the 'spillover effect' of evidence about the cover-up, including testimony about the burning of Glover's body and photos of his charred remains, denied him a fair trial.
A different officer, Gregory McRae, was convicted in 2010 of burning Glover's body. The 5th Circuit upheld McRae's convictions.
The jury for Warren's retrial was barred from hearing any testimony about what happened to Glover in the aftermath of the shooting.
On Monday, Warren testified that he feared for his life when he shot Glover because he thought he saw a gun in his hand as he and another man ran toward the building he was guarding.
Prosecutors, however, said Glover wasn't armed and didn't pose a threat.
Defense attorney Richard Simmons said the case was always about 'a policeman's worst nightmare, that split-second decision.'
'The benefit of the doubt has to go to the officer,' Simmons said, adding that 'there's no winners or losers, there's just survivors.'
Warren and another officer, Linda Howard, were guarding a police substation at the strip mall on the morning of Sept. 2, 2005, when Glover and another man pulled up in a truck.
Warren said he screamed, 'Police, get back!' twice after Glover and his friend, Bernard Calloway, exited the truck and started to run toward a gate that would have given them access to the building he was guarding.
Calloway, however, testified that Glover was standing next to the truck and lighting a cigarette when Warren shot him. Howard testified Glover and Calloway were running in different directions when Warren opened fire.
Jurors also heard testimony from a former officer, Alec Brown, who said Warren told him shortly after the shooting that he believed looters were 'animals' who deserved to be shot. Warren denied saying that.
Earlier on the same morning as Glover's shooting, Warren had fired what he called a warning shot at a man who had been riding a bike near the mall.
Warren said he knew officers aren't allowed to fire warning shots, but was worried the man intended to do 'something stupid' because he had circled the mall several times.
Warren was one of 20 officers charged in a series of federal investigations of alleged police misconduct in New Orleans.
His December 2010 conviction was touted as a major milestone in the Justice Department's ambitious efforts to clean up the city's troubled police department.
The same jury that convicted Warren and McRae also convicted a third former officer, Travis McCabe, of writing a false report on the shooting.
Africk later ordered a new trial for McCabe based on new evidence that surfaced after the trial: a different copy of the report that McCabe is accused of doctoring.

The jury at the first trial also acquitted two other former officers of charges related to the alleged cover-up.

Alleged swinger cop resigns after shooting arrest

 By Michelle Mondo

SAN ANTONIO — An Olmos Park police officer accused of shooting a man after a failed attempt to swap sexual partners while off duty has resigned from the force, Olmos Park Police Chief Fritz Bohne confirmed Tuesday.
Frankie Salazar, 29, had been on administrative leave with pay since his Nov. 30 arrest on charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in the shooting of Jesus Edward Guitron that same day.
He was released on bail not long after his arrest.
Guitron, who was hit multiple times and taken to San Antonio Military Medical Center, was discharged on Sunday, a hospital spokesman said.
Bohne said he had no problems with Salazar since he was hired in January. He said he was shocked that his officer ended up arrested and accused in a shooting.

“It's a 4 a.m. call you never want to get,” Bohne said Tuesday.

Former Marion cop arrested on meth charge


MARION — A former Marion police officer is being held on suspicion of manufacturing methamphetamine following an arrest last month.
Steven C. Waterbury, 61, of Marion, is being held at the Williamson County Jail in lieu of $5,000 cash bond, a spokesman for the state’s attorney’s office said.
A spokesperson for the Marion Police Department confirmed Waterbury was an officer there more than 20 years ago. He has no active role with the department today.

Neither the state’s attorney’s office nor Marion police could say which agency arrested Waterbury or provide details leading to his arrest.

Lake Arthur officer accused of rape, molestation


LAKE ARTHUR, LA (KPLC) -

A Lake Arthur police officer has been charged with aggravated rape and molestation of a juvenile, state police said.
Troop I spokesman Stephen Hammons said 37-year-old Damon Broussard, of Egan, was arrested Tuesday following an investigation.
"During the investigation, detectives found that Broussard engaged in sexual activity several years ago with a child who was under 15," Hammons said in a news release. "Detectives also discovered that Broussard engaged in sexual activity with a different child, who under 13."
Hammons said that there is no indication the alleged incidents occurred during Broussard's duties as an officer.


Linwood Barnhill, D.C. Cop Accused of "Pimping" Teens, Arrested


By Erica Jones


A D.C. police officer is facing felony charges following allegations that he "pimped" teenage girls, police announced Wednesday.
Linwood Barnhill, 47, was charged Wednesday with two counts of pandering of a minor. In the District, pandering is defined as inducing or compelling an individual to engage in prostitution.
The charges comprise one count each for allegedly pimping a 16-year-old girl and a 15-year-old girl. Authorities say Barnhill advertised the girls on Backpages.com and by other means for $50-$80, News4's Mark Segraves reported.
Sources tell Segraves that other D.C. police officers are being questioned in the case, including his roommate who is also a D.C. officer.
In court Wednesday afternoon, Barnhill was shackled as he appeared before a D.C. Superior Court judge. He did not enter a plea and was ordered held until his next court date Friday.
His attorney asked that he be separated from the general population while in a D.C. jail.
Barnhill was arrested Wednesday morning, eight days after he was found inside his Southeast D.C. apartment with a 16-year-old girl who had been reported missing, as well as an 18-year-old woman.
The 16-year-old told authorities that Barnhill had approached her at a shopping mall about two weeks earlier and asked if she wanted to be a model. She visited his apartment several times after that, and at one point, Barnhill gave her a cellphone and told the girl he had made a "date" for her with another man to engage in sex acts, according to charging documents.
He told her that the man would pay her $80 and the girl should give Barnhill $20 of it, the documents say.
The girl also told authorities that Barnhill took naked photos of her wearing sparkly high-heeled shoes he had given her, and told her he'd take her shopping at Rainbow to purchase clothes for the "date."
The girl also told authorities that she met other women at the apartment who said they had worked as prostitutes for him, according to a search warrant affidavit.
A court hearing Wednesday afternoon revealed that police have found a second alleged victim, a 15-year-old girl. That girl told authorities she met Barnhill at a bus stop in September and initially told him she was 18, before admitting that she was 15 after Barnhill asked her to "escort" for him.
"The defendent informed [the girl] that he plans bachelor parties and has 'tons' of girls. [The girl] stated the defendent told her that her young age was not a problem because he had other minors who worked for him," the charging documents state.
Barnhill took nude and clothed photos of the girl and then arranged for her to have sex with a man in his 40s or 50s in Barnhill's bedroom, the documents say. Barnhill allegedly provided condoms for the encounter.
The 15-year-old girl performed the sex acts and then told Barnhill she was not interested in continuing to work for him, according to authorities.
A mirror in Barnhill's apartment displayed the names of other women whom the 16-year-old girl said were prostitutes, police said. Authorities say they know of at least six other females allegedly pimped by Barnhill. The ages of these girls or women are unknown at this point, Segraves reported.
If convicted, Barnhill could face up to 20 years in prison. He is due back in court Friday morning for a detention hearing and preliminary hearing.
Barnhill's arrest came hours after a D.C. officer facing child porn charges was found dead in the waters of Hains Point in Southwest D.C.
Last week, 32-year-old Marc Washington was arrested after he allegedly went to the home of a 15-year-old girl who had previously been reported missing, ordered her to remove her clothing and took photos of her, all while he was on duty.
In a press conference last week, Lanier said that while both officers were from the same precinct,  the two investigations were not connected.
"As disheartening as it is to have members of this department involved in this type of conduct, I take solace in knowing that it was members of this department who worked tirelessly to ensure that they were brought to justice," Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier said in a release regarding Barnhill's arrest.
Barnhill, who has been with D.C.'s Metropolitan Police Department for 24 years, has been on light duty since September 2012. Lanier declined to comment on why, citing medical privacy laws.
He is now on administrative leave.
A third officer is also under investigation for possibly tipping Washington off about his forthcoming arrest earlier this week, sources said.

All three officers work in MPD's Seventh District, law enforcement sources said.

Defendant, Marc Washington's GPS devices not monitored 24/7



Andrea McCarren @AndreaMcCarren

WASHINGTON, D.C. (WUSA9) -- Just one day after the apparent suicide of a DC cop who was charged with child pornography, some new questions are emerging about the electronic monitoring system that was supposed to ensure he never left his home.
The body of 32 year-old Marc Washington was pulled from the water near Hains Point in Southwest last night.
If he was indeed wearing a monitoring device, why did no one realize the officer had left his home in Waldorf, Maryland and headed to the District to commit suicide?
You may be surprised to learn that it is very rare for a defendant to be monitored around the clock. On any given day in DC, there are 375 defendants awaiting trial and equipped with GPS monitoring devices. Most are only being closely tracked during business hours.
Washington was equipped with that GPS monitoring device and under home confinement as of yesterday morning. Less than 12 hours later, his lifeless body was plucked from the frigid waters of the Potomac River.
Several sources tell us it is extremely rare to monitor a defendant 24/7 unless that person is a flight risk or a public safety threat. In most cases, PSOs, or pretrial service officers, won't even learn a defendant violated their home confinement until the next business day, when an alert is sent via email.
The head of DC's pretrial services agency, Cliff Keenan, said: "While the supervision technology is good, it's not foolproof and it's not going to make some people do the right thing all the time."
Ironically, court documents reveal that in Officer Washington's case, "The government asked the Court to detain the defendant without bail pending trial." It was a request that was denied.
The Washington case remains under investigation, but based on standard procedures, it is unlikely his child pornography charge would have made him a candidate for round-the-clock surveillance.
One other note: PSOs are not routinely issued smart phones, so even if they were willing to work off the clock, they would not necessarily have access to those emailed alerts.
Again, DC is attempting to keep track of 375 defendants who have electronic monitoring devices, but there are as many as 45-hundred others also under pre-trial supervision, but not equipped with GPS.

Written by Andrea McCarren, WUSA9

Police Officer Arrested on Child Porn Charges Dies After Being Pulled From Potomac



Officer Marc Washington, 32, was accused of taking nude photographs of a 15-year-old girl. 

By Benjamin Freed

A DC cop who was arrested last week after he allegedly took nude photographs of a 15-year-old girl was pronounced dead Tuesday night after police and firefighter teams pulled his body out of the frigid Potomac River, the Metropolitan Police Department said. The officer, Marc Washington, was pronounced dead shortly after being pulled from the water off Hains Point about 9:30 PM.
Washington, 32, was arrested December 2 after visiting the Southeast DC residence of the girl, who had been reported as having run away from home. According to court documents, Washington allegedly asked to speak to the girl privately, and during the conversation asked her to disrobe so he could take several photos of her. The girl and her mother reported the encounter to police, and Washington was arrested a short time later.
Charging documents allege that Washington deleted the photographs before he was arrested, though investigators were able to retreive them from his camera, along with photo sets of other girls.
Washington, a seven-year MPD veteran who lived in Waldorf, Maryland, was released from custody Monday pending trial after his lawyer moved to have him placed in a high-supervision program. According to the conditions of Washington's release, he was ordered to remain at home 24 hours a day and to wear a GPS tracking device.
After Washington was arrested last week, MPD Chief Cathy Lanier said his alleged behavior was especially "egregious" because it occurred while he was on duty.


NYPD sergeant first to be fired, lose pension in massive police ticket-fixing scandal

By AND / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

A police sergeant has been fired and stripped of his pension after being charged in the massive ticket-fixing scandal — the first NYPD cop to lose his job since the investigation began, the Daily News has learned.

Sgt. Jacob Solorzano was linked to crimes allegedly committed by his 40th Precinct colleague in the South Bronx, Officer Jose Ramos, whose ties to a drug dealer first launched the ticket-fixing probe that uncovered alleged wrongdoing by him and 15 other cops.

Solorzano’s lawyer said his client was too sick to appear at his departmental trial in September, but the 20-year NYPD veteran was canned anyway — becoming the first cop linked to the ticket-fixing probe to be dismissed. Now he intends to sue.

“He planned to testify,” Solorzano’s lawyer, Roger Blank, told The News. “But he was unable to participate in his defense.

“We wanted to wait to start the trial, but the intent of the city was to take away his pension,” Blank said. “He was clearly denied his due process rights.”

Sgt. Jacob Solorzano, of the 40th Precinct in South Bronx, was the first NYPD officer to be fired in the massive ticket-fixing investigation.
Howard Simmons/New York Daily News

Sgt. Jacob Solorzano, of the 40th Precinct in South Bronx, was the first NYPD officer to be fired in the massive ticket-fixing investigation.

A source said the 43-year-old sergeant was in department-ordered alcohol rehab at the time.

A police source said Solorzano contacted the department about his drinking problem to stall the trial, but Blank insisted it was the department’s recommendation that Solorzano be admitted to a rehab facility.

Solorzano was found guilty of official misconduct, similar to the misdemeanor criminal charges for which he was indicted in 2011 after the sweeping three-year investigation.

Ramos, who sparked the probe, was accused of turning his two Bronx barbershops into a front for drug dealing, robbery and stolen goods. He was already under surveillance for peddling drugs when he was caught on a wiretapped call talking about fixing tickets.

Authorities said Solorzano pretended to make an arrest in a car stop so Ramos could steal $30,000. Little did he know, the target Ramos allegedly tried to rip off turned out to be an undercover detective.

An NYPD tow truck tows a car into the tow pound on the West Side Highway on Nov. 15, 2013. The alleged drug ties of Jose Ramos, an officer in the 60th Precinct in South Bronx, led to an investigation into ticket fixing that involved Ramos and 15 other cops.
Pearl Gabel/ New York Daily News

An NYPD tow truck tows a car into the tow pound on the West Side Highway on Nov. 15, 2013. The alleged drug ties of Jose Ramos, an officer in the 60th Precinct in South Bronx, led to an investigation into ticket fixing that involved Ramos and 15 other cops.


Solorzano was not implicated in the theft.

Solorzano and 15 other cops were indicted in October 2011 and are still awaiting trial on the criminal charges. Ramos is being held on $500,000 bail.

More than 500 cops, most of them officers assigned to the Bronx, have been tainted by the scandal.

More than 200 of the cops have been hit with departmental charges, with about 150 reaching a deal. Most of them lost no more than 30 vacation days as penalty, police sources said.

Cases involving another roughly 60 officers are still pending.

And another 300 were hit with command disciplines and lost no more than 10 vacation days, or they were issued letters of instructions. The letters, detailing the wrongdoing, are placed in the officers’ files and serve as a warning.

The investigation was at first narrowly focused on Ramos and his alleged connection to Bronx drug dealers. Once he was caught on a wiretap talking about fixing a ticket, the probe exploded into a wider inquiry.

All told, about 139,000 phone calls were secretly recorded as part of the probe. Another 450,000 emails and text messages were intercepted.

Defense lawyers have been arguing against the admissibility of the wiretap evidence in the case.

Five civilians, including Ramos’ wife, Wanda Abreu, have also been indicted. Seven months after the ticket-fixing charges were announced, Ramos and Abreu were accused of conspiring to use money from his pension to try to have a key witness against him murdered.

The couple have denied the charges.

rparascandola@nydailynews.com


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-sergeant-fired-ticket-fixing-probe-article-1.1542824#ixzz2nBGiz0Vj

Virginia cops spying on cell phone data


WASHINGTON, D.C. (WUSA) -- It's not just the NSA - local cops are mining the cell phone data to reveal the location, identity and call information of hundreds of people at a time -- whether they're suspected of criminal activity or not.
Police in DC, Fairfax Co., Montgomery Co. buy cellular spy gear
In a joint investigation with Gannett television stations across the country and USA Today, WUSA9 obtained documents that show police in Fairfax County, Montgomery County and the Metropolitan Police in DC have purchased cell phone spy gear capable of tracking your whereabouts - even if you're not the one being investigated. 
Spy gear called "Cell Site Simulator"
It's called a "Cell Site Simulator," and different models are manufactured under names like: "Stingray," "Kingfish," and "Amberjack". 
WUSA9 obtained documents showing area police have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on cell site simulator equipment, software updates and FBI training.
A Stingray device can operate from inside a vehicle and hook up to a laptop. It mimics the signal that would come from a real cell phone tower, and tricks  nearby devices into communicating with it, which reveals their locations, and possibly more. 
Privacy concerns
Alan Butler works with EPIC, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which alerts the public to potential invasions of privacy.
Butler says he's seen, in a number of cases, where police have been able to triangulate a subject's location within a few feet -- without a search warrant. 
"Where you are at different points in time can reveal a great deal about what people are doing, their associations," Butler says. "That can reveal that you're going to the doctor's office. Or it can reveal whether you're going to church or whether you're going to a rally." 
With few rules now, Congressman Dennis Ross says it will take legislation and the courts to develop standards.

"Does the data of your location, is that confidential?" asked Ross, a Republican.  "Because you're broadcasting your location as if you're shouting out something to the public, and I think this is, now the Supreme Court's going to visit this, I think it's something that we as citizens need to be concerned about."
Fairfax County Police among mum agencies
Law enforcement agencies are tight-lipped about the use of this technology. No one from the local police would go on camera with WUSA9.
When we asked the Fairfax County Police whether they own and use Stingray equipment, their public information officer responded, via email, "I do not believe that we have even acknowledged that we have or use the device you are asking about." 
WUSA9 found Fairfax County documents touting the Stingray's ability to "locate crime victims, crime suspects, wanted persons, and those in need of emergency services" and approving over $126,000 to "enhance the Stingray cell phone tracking system" with a system upgrade. 
Stingrays in DC, Montgomery County 
A procurement record from Montgomery County in 2012 shows that they spent more than $180,000 for "upgrades and enhancements to  Harris Stingray/Kingfish system." Montgomery County officials ignored our request for comment. 
DC's Metropolitan Police denied our requests for an interview, but WUSA9 found purchase orders from 2009, 2010 and 2013 for Stingray devices and equipment -- including their contract with the manufacturer of the products, Harris Corporation. As recently as March of this year, MPDC spent $107,786 for system upgrades and training on tracking civilian cell phones. 
To locate their targets, the technology scoops up the data of hundreds of unintended cell users too. There are no known standards requiring police to erase data collected from those not suspected of criminal activity -- private information from citizens like you. 
Butler, from EPIC, tells us that the only foolproof way to keep your cell phone data secret is to turn your phone off - or stop carrying one altogether.

Cellphone data spying: It's not just the NSA
WASHINGTON, DC (USA Today, WUSA9, KUSA)--The National Security Agency isn't the only government entity secretly collecting data from people's cellphones. Local police are increasingly scooping it up, too.
Armed with new technologies, including mobile devices that tap into cellphone data in real time, dozens of local and state police agencies are capturing information about thousands of cellphone users at a time, whether they are targets of an investigation or not, according to public records obtained by USA TODAY and Gannett newspapers and TV stations.
The records, from more than 125 police agencies in 33 states, reveal:
About one in four law-enforcement agencies have used a tactic known as a "tower dump," which gives police data about the identity, activity and location of any phone that connects to the targeted cellphone towers over a set span of time, usually an hour or two.
A typical dump covers multiple towers, and wireless providers, and can net information from thousands of phones.
At least 25 police departments own a Stingray, a suitcase-size device that costs as much as $400,000 and acts as a fake cell tower. The system, typically installed in a vehicle so it can be moved into any neighborhood, tricks all nearby phones into connecting to it and feeding data to police.
In some states, the devices are available to any local police department via state surveillance units. The federal government funds most of the purchases, via anti-terror grants.
Thirty-six more police agencies refused to say whether they've used either tactic. Most denied public records requests, arguing that criminals or terrorists could use the information to thwart important crime-fighting and surveillance techniques.Police maintain that cellphone data can help solve crimes, track fugitives or abducted children or even foil a terror attack.
Organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union and Electronic Privacy Information Center say the swelling ability by even small-town police departments to easily and quickly obtain large amounts of cellphone data raises questions about the erosion of people's privacy as well as their Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure.
"I don't think that these devices should never be used, but at the same time, you should clearly be getting a warrant," said Alan Butler of EPIC.
In most states, police can get many kinds of cellphone data without obtaining a warrant, which they'd need to search someone's house or car. Privacy advocates, legislators and courts are debating the legal standards with increasing intensity as technology - and the amount of sensitive information people entrust to their devices - evolves.
Vast data net
Many people aren't aware that a smartphone is an adept location-tracking device. It's constantly sending signals to nearby cell towers, even when it's not being used. And wireless carriers store data about your device, from where it's been to whom you've called and texted, some of it for years.
The power for police is alluring: a vast data net that can be a cutting-edge crime-fighting tool.
Last fall, in Colorado, a 10-year-old girl vanished while she walked to school. Volunteers scoured Westminster looking for Jessica Ridgeway. Local police took a clandestine tack. They got a court order for data about every cellphone that connected to five providers' towers on the girl's route. Later, they asked for 15 more cellphone site data dumps.
Colorado authorities won't divulge how many people's data they obtained, but testimony in other cases indicates it was at least several thousand people's phones.
The court orders in the Colorado case show police got "cellular telephone numbers, including the date, time and duration of any calls" as well as numbers and location data for all phones that connected to the towers searched, whether calls were being made or not. Police and court records obtained by USA TODAY about cases across the country show that's standard for a tower dump.
The tower dump data helped police choose about 500 people who were asked to submit DNA samples. The broad cell-data sweep and DNA samples didn't solve the crime, though the information aided in the prosecution.
A 17-year-old man's mother tipped off the cops, and the man confessed to kidnapping and dismembering the girl, hiding some of her remains in a crawl space in his mother's house. He pleaded guilty and last month was sentenced to more than 100 years in prison.
Not every use of the tower dumps involved stakes so high.
A South Carolina sheriff ordered up four cell-data dumps from two towers in a 2011 investigation into a rash of car break-ins near Columbia, including the theft of Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott's collection of guns and rifles from his police-issued SUV, parked at his home.
"We were looking at someone who was breaking into a lot of vehicles and was not going to stop," the sheriff said. "So, we had to find out as much information as we could."
The sheriff's office says it has used a tower dump in at least one prior case, to help solve a murder.
Law-enforcement records show police can use initial data from a tower dump to ask for another court order for more information, including addresses, billing records and logs of calls, texts and locations.
Cellphone data sweeps fit into a broadening effort by police to collect and mine information about people's activities and movements.
Police can harvest data about motorists by mining toll-road payments, red-light cameras and license-plate readers. Cities are installing cameras in public areas, some with facial-recognition capabilities, as well as Wi-Fi networks that can record the location and other details about any connecting device.
Secret Stingrays
Local and state police, from Florida to Alaska, are buying Stingrays with federal grants aimed at protecting cities from terror attacks, but using them for far broader police work.
With the mobile Stingray, police can get a court order to grab some of the same data available via a tower dump with two added benefits. The Stingray can grab some data from cellphones in real time and without going through the wireless service providers involved. Neither tactic - tower dumps or the Stingray devices - captures the content of calls or other communication, according to police.
Typically used to hunt a single phone's location, the system intercepts data from all phones within a mile, or farther, depending on terrain and antennas. The cell-tracking systems cost as much as $400,000, depending on when they were bought and what add-ons they have. The latest upgrade, code-named "Hailstorm," is spurring a wave of upgrade requests.
Initially developed for military and spy agencies, the Stingrays remain a guarded secret by law enforcement and the manufacturer, Harris Corp. of Melbourne, Fla. The company would not answer questions about the systems, referring reporters to police agencies. Most police aren't talking, either, partly because Harris requires buyers to sign a non-disclosure agreement.
"Any idea of having adequate oversight of the use of these devices is hampered by secrecy," says Butler, who sued the FBI for records about its Stingray systems. Under court order, the FBI released thousands of pages, though most of the text is blacked out.
"When this technology disseminates down to local government and local police, there are not the same accountability mechanisms in place. You can see incredible potential for abuses," American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Catherine Crump says.
Privacy, oversight concerns
Crump and other privacy advocates pose questions such as "Is data about people who are not police targets saved or shared with other government agencies?" and "What if a tower dump or Stingray swept up cell numbers and identities of people at a political protest?"
When Miami-Dade police bought their Stingray device, they told the City Council the agency needed to monitor protesters at an upcoming world trade conference, according to purchasing records.
Most of the police agencies that would talk about the tactics said they're not being used for intelligence gathering, only in search of specific targets.
Lott, the sheriff in the South Carolina gun-theft case, said police weren't interested in seeing data about the other residents whose information was collected as a byproduct of his agency's tower dumps.
"We're not infringing on their rights," Lott said. "When they use that phone they understand that information is going to go to a tower. We're not taking that information and using it for any means whatsoever, unless they're the bad guy or unless they're the victim."
Brian Owsley, a former magistrate who reviewed many police requests for bulk cellphone data, grew skeptical because authorities were not always forthcoming about the technology or what happened with "collateral data" of innocent bystanders.
"What is the government doing with the data?" asks Owsley, now a law professor at Texas Tech University.
Surveillance regulation is being tinkered with piecemeal by courts and legislators. This year, Montana and Maine passed laws requiring police to show probable cause and get a search warrant to access some cellphone data, as they would to search a car or home. State and federal courts have handed down seemingly contradictory rulings about which cellphone data is private or not. Seattle's City Council requires police to notify the council of new surveillance technology deployed in the city.
"We have to be careful because Americans deserve an expectation of privacy, and the courts are mixed right now as to what is an expectation of privacy when using a cellphone," says U.S. Rep. Dennis Ross, R-Fla., who says Congress needs to clarify the law. "More and more, we're seeing an invasion of what we would expect to be private parts of our lives."
Legislative and judicial guidance is needed to match police surveillance rules to today's technology, says Wayne Holmes, a prosecutor for two Central Florida counties. He has weighed frequent local police requests for tower dumps and Stingray surveillance.
"The clearer the law, the better the law is."
Americans "are sensitized right now" to cellphone surveillance because of reports about potential abuses by the NSA, said Washoe County Sheriff Michael Haley of Reno. He's is opting not to use the Stingray.

"I'm being cautious about how I access information, because at the end of the day I know that I will be in court if I access information using systems and techniques that are not constitutionally vetted," Haley said.