Suspended Cop: 'Yeah, I [Expletive] Hit You'
Posted by Kyle Stucker
A Salem police officer could
face up to five years in prison for allegedly using a flashlight to beat and
draw blood from a handcuffed high-speed chase suspect before intentionally
stepped on one of the man's cuffed hands, according to the Eagle-Tribune.
Officer Joseph Freda, 33, of
Salem, was arrested this week on two counts of misdemeanor simple assault
months after he was placed on paid administrative leave due to a New Hampshire
Attorney General's Office investigation into Freda's actions while arresting
Thomas Templeton, 39, of York, Maine, on Oct. 6.
Freda is now on unpaid
administrative leave.
The Eagle-Tribune has reported
that several police reports pertaining to Templeton's arrest have been
released. The reports describe a series of injuries to Templeton, as well as an
exchange that featured Freda swearing at Templeton after Templeton accused
Freda of hitting him.
"Yeah, I [expletive] hit
you," reads the report filed by Salem Officer Robert Kirley.
The Nashua Telegraph has
reported that Freda has been accused of excessive force before. In 2009, a
Brookline resident claimed Freda, then a Brookline officer, used excessive
force and charged her with a crime without cause following a traffic stop.
Senior Assistant New Hampshire
Attorney General Jane Young, the Salem incident's lead investigator, couldn't
be reached for comment Wednesday or Thursday about the case.
Salem police officials also
couldn't be reached for comment, although the department has said in a release
that it "does not tolerate excessive use of force from its Police
Officers."
Utah cop kills 4 family members, self
By Michelle Rindels,
A 34-year-old officer with a
small Utah police department shot and killed his wife, mother-in-law and two
young children and turned the gun on himself, authorities said Friday.
Spanish Fork police said the
five were found dead about 11 p.m. Thursday, when co-workers reported Joshua
Boren didn't show up for his night shift as a patrol officer at the Lindon
Police Department.
Police who looked through the
window saw blood on the carpet and shell casings in the front room of the
two-story home, police said. When they went inside, they found Boren's
55-year-old mother-in-law Marie King dead in a bedroom, and Joshua Boren and
his immediate family dead in the bedroom next door.
The other victims were
identified as Kelly Boren, 32, Joshua "Jaden" Boren, 7, and Haley
Boren, 5.
Spanish Fork Lt. Matthew Johnson
said the couple had been experiencing marital problems in the past few months,
but co-workers say Boren appeared upbeat and didn't show signs of distress
before the killings.
"There were no warning
signs," Johnson said, adding that police had never been called to the
home. "This was a total shock to everyone."
Officials said they didn't find
a suicide note. Police didn't immediately have information on the events
leading up to the shooting.
Spanish Fork is a city of about
36,000 people located 9 miles south of Provo, home of Brigham Young University.
Officials at the Lindon Police Department said Boren worked for the Utah County
Sheriff's Office for more than seven years before he was hired in October from
a pool of more than 70 applicants.
"His conduct, behavior and
professionalism were exemplary," Lindon Police Chief Cody Cullimore said
in a statement. "We are working closely with the Spanish Fork Police
Department to investigate and hopefully come to an understanding of this tragic
occurrence."
The Lindon department counts
about 15 uniformed officers and patrols a city of about 10,000.
The five deaths come just days
after another Utah murder-suicide that left three people dead.
Kyler Ramsdell-Oliva, 32,
fatally shot her two daughters, 13-year-old Kenadee Oliva and 7-year-old
Isabella Oliva, on Tuesday evening before killing herself at their home in
Syracuse, police said.
The murder-suicide happened a
day after the Ramsdell-Oliva's fiance packed up to move out of the house,
authorities said.
APD settles for $300,000 in fatal shooting
By Dan McKay and Nicole Perez /
The family of Jacob Mitschelen,
who was shot in the back after a traffic stop in 2011, is set to receive a
$300,000 settlement under a tentative agreement reached with the city of
Albuquerque.
Protesters Demand Westchester Police Reform
by Casey Donahue
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – A group of
community organizations led by the Westchester Coalition for Police Reform
gathered in White Plains Friday afternoon to demand more oversight and
accountability to prevent cases of police misconduct in Westchester County.
The rally also included members
of local NAACP chapters, Westchester RISE, Blacks in Law Enforcement of
America, the Westchester Martin Luther King, Jr. Institute for Nonviolence, and
local churches. The rally was held to speak out against uses of excessive and
deadly force by police and to institute ways to hold officers, management and
district attorneys accountable. Recent cases cited in the event included the
shooting of Pace University student DJ Henry in Mount Pleasant, the shooting of
Kenneth Chamberlain of White Plains, the death of Samuel Cruz in New Rochelle
and the death of Irma Marquez in Yonkers.
“Failing to establish a system
of accountability allows a uniform to become legitimized as a symbol of
violence. We cannot allow this to happen.,” said Guisela Marroquin, a community
organizer for the Lower Hudson Valley Civil Liberties Union. “If we are to
break the patterns that allow power and privilege to victimize our families,
neighbors, and friends, we must demand change from those who are hired to keep
us safe.”
Stephen Glusker of WESPAC said
that the goals of the movement are to establish independent oversight
structures to review police practices and investigate potential misconduct,
implement protocols in departments to address the use of force, reform training
programs to emphasize nonviolence and increase the hiring and promotion of
African American and Latino officers.
“The Westchester district
attorney has failed to indict police officers for misconduct. An independent
body of special prosecutors needs to be created to investigate and impose
sanctions when local and county officials fail to act,” Glusker said.
Tom Kissner, a former police
officer and former president of the Port Chester-Rye NAACP, said that police
officers must be trained to act wisely and to disregard any stereotypes or
personal insults when dealing with the public. “A police officer, someone who
has been selected to have the awesome power to take human life should the
circumstances require it, also must have awesome responsibilities,” Kissner
said.
“We’re looking at millions of
our tax dollars being spent unnecessarily when they can just properly train
these officers and hold them accountable,” said Damon Jones of Blacks in Law
Enforcement of America. He encouraged people to reach out to elected officials
and demand change. “It cannot be politics as usual anymore. People are dying.”
Court appearance for off-duty officer charged with DUI delayed
An off-duty Durant Police
officer charged with DUI had his next court appearance postponed until
February,
Brandon S. Carbaugh, 36, was
scheduled on yesterday’s misdemeanor disposition docket but the case was then
set for Feb. 20. This is the second time the case has been postponed.
Carbaugh was charged in October
2013 for an Oct. 15 crash on Highway 91 near Achille. According to the Oklahoma
Highway Patrol, Carbaugh was under the influence of alcohol when he rolled his
pickup.
He also was not wearing a seat
belt, according to the OHP report. He was taken to the Medical Center of
Southeastern Oklahoma to be treated for arm and leg injuries and released
sometime later that day.
Carbaugh was placed on
administrative leave, and Durant Police Chief Durward Cook said this morning
there has been no change in that status.
Chicago officer jailed on charges of assaulting relative
By Steve Schmadeke and Liam
FordTribune reporters
A Chicago police officer was in
jail Friday night, accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl who is a
member of his extended family, authorities said.
Daniel Aguilera, 57, who
records show is a 22-year veteran of the Chicago Police Department, was ordered
held in lieu of $75,000 in a hearing earlier Friday before Cook County Criminal
Court Judge Israel Desierto. Aguilera is charged with sexual assault and sexual
abuse.
Aguilera is accused of sexually
assaulting and sexually abusing the girl at his Southwest Side home early on
Jan. 1, while they were at the home alone, according to prosecutors. After the
attacks, the girl tried to leave the house with the excuse she was walking the
Aguilera’s family dog, but Aguilera followed her outside and called her back
into the house, according to Assistant State’s attorney Anastasia Harper.
When Aguilera’s wife returned
home in the morning, the girl told her what happened, and she drove the girl to
another family member’s house, with Aguilera following in another car,
prosecutors said. In a family meeting, Aguilera admitted he had massaged the
girl with lotion, prosecutors said.
Aguilera’s attorney, Joseph
Pavone, said that Aguilera has numerous commendations and has been married for
19 years.
“This man is appalled that she
would make these false accusations,” Pavone said.
Pavone said the officer also
has volunteered for two years with the Chicago Area Runners Association,
helping kids train to run half marathons. “He’s actually a pillar of the community.”
Outside court, Pavone said he
would challenge the judge’s ruling that Aguilera would have to surrender his
weapons, including his service weapon, which would prevent the officer from
working desk duty while the case is pending.
sschmadeke@tribune.com
lford@tribune.com
Officer who accused former Savannah-Chatham chief of harassment suspended
By Dash Coleman
A Savannah-Chatham police
officer whose alleged affair with the department’s former chief was the subject
of a sexual harassment complaint filed against the chief and a captain in the
department was suspended Friday prior to dismissal.
City spokesman Bret Bell said
Trina Mayes was suspended for violations of the department’s general standards
of conduct.
A notice of suspension provided
by the city cited lack of truthfulness in two undefined incidents and
associating with criminals as explanation of violations.
Her attorney on Friday night
said the disciplinary action was taken over something that was investigated and
cleared in 2007.
Bell said Mayes has the right
to appeal. If her appeal is not sustained, she will be fired.
Mayes’ husband, metro police
Sgt. LaPrentice Mayes, on Sept. 20 complained to city human resources officials
that Trina Mayes revealed to him that she had an affair with former police
Chief Willie Lovett and that police Capt. Cedric Phillips helped bring it
about, according to previous stories in the Savannah Morning News.
(Trina) Mayes “said they had an
affair numerous times and once we got back together (Lovett) became upset and
wanted her to leave me,” LaPrentice’s complaint stated.
“Once my wife refused to
divorce me, (Lovett) then started punishing her and me about her decision.”
Lovett retired abruptly Sept.
27 after city officials revealed a metro police officer had filed sexual
harassment allegations against him and that a law firm was investigating those
allegations.
After LaPrentice Mayes’
complaint, an attorney for Trina Mayes sent a notice known as an ante litem
letter to city and county officials concerning alleged injuries she suffered as
the result of conduct by Lovett, police and government officials.
Included in that conduct was
“harassment, sexual and otherwise, failure to promote because of gender, including
refusal of sexual advances, defamation ... (and) placing Ms. Mayes in a false
and negative light.”
Such letters are required
before someone can sue a governmental agency.
The Mayes’ attorney, Will
Claiborne, also filed an ante litem letter to include LaPrentice Mayes.
Phillips was placed on paid
administrative leave Oct. 3.
“To fire a woman who had the
strength to come forward is truly despicable,” Claiborne said Friday night,
calling the act retaliation.
Trina Mayes joined the force in
April 2006.
She was given a medal of merit
on Nov. 25 by Interim Police Chief Julie Tolbert for her role in the events May
17, 2012, that led to a standoff at the Olde Pink House.
She was suspended without pay
for a day in January 2010 after getting in a confrontation at Gould Elementary
with another officer who had allegedly texted her husband, internal
disciplinary action records show.
In 2012, both she and
LaPrentice Mayes were involved in a domestic violence incident that turned
physical, resulting in both of them being suspended for two days and being
ordered to attend counseling and/or the city’s EAP, a human resources
employment assistance program, according to previous stories.
LaPrentice Mayes, who joined
the Savannah police force in January 1996, returned to duty last week after
being placed on administrative leave in December. He was placed on leave with
pay Dec. 20, but a department spokesperson did not say why because it involved
personnel actions
Sheriff reacts to arrest of
school officer
Investigators arrested a
Balfour Education Center school resource officer on three felony charges of
having sex with a 16-year-old student after the Sheriff's Department received
allegations of inappropriate conduct, the Henderson County Sheriff's Department
said in a news release.
Deputy Daniel Lindsey, 27, was
arrested without incident shortly after midnight at his residence in Mountain
Home. Lindsey was charged with three felony counts of Sex Offense With a
Student. Arrest warrants charged that Lindsey had intercourse with a female who
was a student at Balfour two times in October and once in December.
The Sheriff's Office learned of
the allegations shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday.
“Unfortunately, the preliminary
investigation quickly revealed evidence supporting probable cause to obtain
warrants for the arrest of Deputy Daniel Lindsey, a school resource officer at
the Balfour Education," the sheriff said during a 13-minute news
conference at the Law Enforcement Center.
“Once we started with the
investigation, things rolled around pretty quickly,” he said. “Once we saw
certain evidence I felt like time was of the essence and we continued around
the clock. Most of the officers finished about 6 o’clock this morning.”
McDonald, who has given news
conferences infrequently, reacted quickly to the public relations side of the
story in the context ot a sheriff's race that is starting to heat up and his
own characterization of his administration as one of reform, professional
standards and integrity. Even with personnel safeguards in place, he said,
misconduct can occur.
“At 12:45 a.m. I terminated Mr.
Lindsey from the position of deputy sheriff and from employment by the
Henderson County sheriff’s office,” he said.
Deputies arrested the fellow
officer and transported him to the sheriff’s office, where they served him with
three felony warrants.
Investigators are unaware of
any contact the SRO had with any other Balfour students, he said. The sexual
offense did not occur on the campus, he said.
Asked whether the sexual
intercourse was consensual, McDonald said, “Yes, but in the situation where you
have office or somebody in a custodial situation like that that has no bearing
on the case. In fact that particular statute was put in place to help prevent
situations like that — teacher-student, law enforcement officer, any custodial
official.”
A native of Asheville, Lindsey
had been with the department since 2008. He was also a DARE officer. McDonald
said the sheriff's office will assign a deputy to work at Balfour school on
Tuesday.
The investigation is
continuing.
“I do not doubt that there may
be some other charges but I suspect those will relate to the same victim,” he
said.
The sheriff said the department
has safeguards in place for hiring officers.
“We do extremely thorough
checks. Not to pass the buck. This was an officer who had worked here before
(McDonald became sheriff),” he said. “Had no reason that I’m aware of to doubt
his competence to be a school resource officer. At this point in time all of
our background checks yield about an 83 percent washout rate just hiring
deputies in general. But certainly this is a very sensitive position — any law
enforcement officer but particularly those that are for the welfare of
students."
Deputies transported Lindsey to
the Transylvania County jail, where he was booked under $45,000 bond. He bonded
out Saturday morning, the sheriff said.
“It keeps things above board as
far as the community," he said when asked about jailing Lindsey in
Brevard. "It also keeps us from putting other officers who have worked
with this officer in a situation where they don’t really need to be in having
to keep in custody somebody that worked with."
McDonald said he considered
calling in the SBI but wanted to move quickly and decided against that. He
stayed in contact with District Attorney Greg Newman about the situation, he
said.
“Certainly nothing’s
foolproof,” he said when asked how the arrest squares with his focus on
professional standards and tough background checks that reject 83 percent of
job applicants. “As I said today most of the officers working for me were
working here when I got here. However, I can tell you with great confidence,
the integrity of this department certainly is intact,” he said. “We do a lot
now as we hire. Certainly one of the hallmarks is our dedication to the oath of
office, to integrity, to the badge and honor. Truly we’re all sickened by this.
We work so hard and we’ll continue to work hard to keep the public’s trust.
It’s in everything we do, it’s in our training.”
He said the department would
review SRO standards to see if anything needs to change.
“We’re going to go back and
look at it,” he said. “We can ever go through something like this and say
there’s nothing to be learned or changed. I feel good about the oversight we
have with SROs but they are out there by themselves, at times. We do have
supervision for them. We’ve got training. Obviously we’ve got policies.”
City drops bribery claim against victim of predator cop
by Kristy Wolski
• Police Officer Anthony Arevalos was arrested in June 2011
after several women accused him of sexually assaulting them while in uniform.
• He was convicted in November of eight felony and four
misdemeanor charges involving five women, including multiple counts of sexual
battery by restraint, asking for a bribe and assault and battery by a police
officer.
• He was sentenced in February 2012 to 8 years and 8 months
in prison.
• Seven women have filed claims against the city in
connection with the Arevalos case.
SAN DIEGO – The San Diego City
Attorney’s Office seems to be flip-flopping its stance regarding a victim in
the federal lawsuit against a former San Diego police officer convicted of
bribing and sexually assaulting women.
In 2011 Anthony Arevalos pulled
over a woman, identified as “Jane Doe,” for drunk driving in the Gaslamp
District. She later testified he told her he’d let her off the DUI if she gave
him her panties. She said they went to a 7-11 nearby and she gave him her
underwear in the restroom.
Ex-SDPD officer Anthony
Arevalos was sentenced for bribing and sexually assaulting women he stopped in
the Gaslamp District for drunken driving and other offenses. (2-10-2012)
“That’s where I took my pants
off and took of the panties and where he had me pull my shirt up and where he
touched me,” said Jane Doe.
In a recently filed motion for
summary judgement, attorneys for the City of San Diego claimed Jane Doe was the
one bribing Arevalos to avoid arrest.
The document reads, “Plaintiff
bribed Officer Arevalos with her panties to get out of the DUI. Both Plaintiff
and Arevalos agreed to consummate the bribe in a nearby 7-Eleven in the
Gaslamp. Plaintiff then reported Arevalos to the SDPD. Plaintiff now claims
that she was raped by Officer Arevalos.”
Attorney Dan Gilleon was
shocked by the city’s claim.
“It’s a dangerous way to defend
a case like this,” said Gilleon.
Gilleon represented eight of
the other victims. His cases have all been settled.
“The jury is going to be asked
to believe one of two people. Mr. Arevalos said she bribed me, and Ms. Doe says
I didn’t bribe him. Who are they going to believe? The guy sitting in prison or
the victim who was once called a hero?”
Thomas Mitchell, a spokesperson
for the city attorney’s office, released the following statement Wednesday
afternoon:
“We think that it is important
that people understand that it is the conduct of former police officer Anthony
Arevalos that has placed the City in this unfortunate position. However, the
City has stepped up to the plate and settled 12 of the 13 lawsuits it faced
over Arevalos’ conduct and paid those victims a combined amount of $2.3
million. The city has engaged in good faith settlement negotiations with the
current plaintiff and made a very generous settlement offer. Unfortunately the lawyers in this case have
demanded outrageous sums of money. Even though we condemn the actions of
Arevalos, we also have an obligation to protect the taxpayers. If we proceed to trial, the amount will be
left to the jury after hearing all the facts.”
Gilleon said he believed the
bribery stance would backfire.
“If you’re going to go to trial
and you want to defend the taxpayers by all means, do that,” said Gilleon. “But
don’t do it in a way that’s going to cost the taxpayers huge amounts of money
and that’s what this is going to do. If you anger a jury because of the way you
treat the victim, you’re going to be looking back on that outrageous settlement
demand as a good deal.”
Late Wednesday afternoon the
City Attorney’s Office changed its stance again, after Assistant City Attorney
Paul Cooper said he reviewed the accusation of bribery.
“That accusation is contained
in several sentences of a 40 page brief filed in connection with a motion
before the judge,” Cooper wrote in a statement. “I determined that accusation
was unnecessary and inappropriate in that is was Anthony Arevalos- not Jane
Doe- who was convicted of a crime.
Accordingly, I have requested that the court strike reference to bribe.
Rather than characterize or accuse, the City will rely upon undisputed factual
evidence in addressing the pending motion.”
The next court hearing will
take place February 7. Trial is expected to start May 20.
Former Springdale cop Mark Thom sentenced to prison
About Chuck Biedka
Mark Thom Jr. was a part-time
police officer for East Deer, Sharpsburg and Tarentum, when that police
department patrolled Frazer, before he was hired as a part-time officer in
Springdale. He was named a full-time officer for Springdale Borough in June
2009 and eventually promoted to sergeant.
He resigned in February before
pleading guilty to a charge of violating a prisoner's civil rights.
The borough's insurance carrier
paid the victim in that case $225,000 to settle the man's civil rights lawsuit.
Last year, the borough paid
$98,500 to settle a lawsuit filed by an Allegheny County police officer who
claimed Thom and other Springdale officers violated his civil rights.
As a Springdale Borough police
officer, Mark E. Thom Jr. made dozens of arrests.
Next month, he'll begin serving
his own prison sentence.
On Thursday, the discredited
32-year-old ex-sergeant was ordered by U.S. District Judge Mark R. Hornak to
serve one year and one day in prison on charges of violating a suspect's civil
rights.
The sentence is the culmination
of almost two years of allegations and investigations involving Thom and his
conduct as a Springdale police officer. He was accused twice of civil rights
violations.
In the case for which he was
sentenced, Thom was accused of repeatedly punching and using a Taser on a
Tarentum man while the man was handcuffed and in the back of Thom's police car
in December 2011.
In 2012, FBI agents and U.S.
Justice Department civil rights specialists started to investigate that case as
well as other accusations against Thom and some of his fellow Springdale
officers. Thom could have been indicted by a grand jury in 2013, but officials
offered him what amounts to a plea bargain.
Thom agreed to plead guilty to
a single charge of violating civil rights.
Criminal information, the
federal equivalent of charges, was filed on Feb. 8, and Thom entered a guilty
plea one month later. He resigned from the force the day before he entered the
plea.Sentencing was deferred several times in 2013.
U.S. Attorney David Hickton
issued a written statement saying, “The vast majority of law enforcement
officials uphold the highest standard of public trust. But when someone abuses
his position, we will aggressively hold him accountable.
“We argued that a prison
sentence was especially just, not only for the crime he committed, but also
because he was discouraging other police officers from cooperating with us and
providing information.”
Before Hornak handed down the
sentence, Thom made a tearful apology to his own family, the man he was accused
of abusing and the Springdale community.
Thom said he “always wanted to
help” as an officer and “do what's right. ... I'm sorry for not having been a
better police officer and not doing my job better.”
Defense attorney Robert E.
Stewart told Hornak that Thom overcame a troubled family life, losing his
younger brother to drugs, yet managed to finish high school and become a police
officer.
Several letters from community
members were presented, all citing Thom's good character and detailing how he
helped them. In addition, letters from two police officers were presented,
accusing Thom of threatening them if they cooperated with the investigation
against Thom.
Hornak said, given the charges
and Thom's position as a police officer, a prison sentence was warranted.
Hornak told Thom, “You will
never wear a badge again.”
But the judge, instead of
scheduling a date for Thom to begin his sentence, allowed Thom to remain at his
home until notified by the U.S. Bureau of Prisons about where and when to
report for his sentence.
Thom must report to the U.S.
Marshals Office in Pittsburgh no later than noon Feb. 27 if the Bureau hasn't
called him before then, Hornak ordered.
Jury selection to begin in retired East Haven cop’s theft trial
By Evan Lips
EAST HAVEN >> On the same
day his brothers in police blues will be sentenced following their convictions
for federal civil rights violations, juror selection in the state’s evidence
theft case against retired Detective Michael D’Amato will commence, his
attorney confirmed Thursday.
The process to pick the jury
tasked with deciding D’Amato’s fate begins Tuesday — the same day retired and
convicted police Officers David Cari and Dennis Spaulding will appear in U.S.
District Court in Hartford as a federal judge decides how much prison time the
two will receive.
D’Amato’s case dates back to
March 2011, the time prosecutors allege the 25-year veteran youth detective
pilfered $1,328 from the department’s evidence room. His arrest warrant does
not pinpoint an exact date and time for the alleged incident, but does cite
video captured March 14, 2011, showing a man clad in civilian clothes and
wearing a glove entering and exiting the evidence room at least six times.
Court records show D’Amato has
identified himself as the man in the video but has also denied any involvement
in the theft of the missing evidence.
Coincidentally, Spaulding
happened to be the arresting officer on March 12, 2011, the day the money and
items in question were entered as evidence. Spaulding had arrested three
suspects on drug-related charges. D’Amato’s arrest warrant states Spaulding
entered seven bags of evidence. On March 17, 2011, Sgt. George Kammerer
reported that two of the bags were missing. The bags left behind contained
marijuana and drug paraphernalia.
The bags that went missing
contained cash and a state toxicology report, according to the warrant.
The warrant states the evidence
bags captured in the May 14, 2011, video are “clearly observed to be the type
packaged and submitted as evidence by Officer Spaulding.”
Records show, however, that no
items were logged in or out that day.
On Thursday, Tara Knight,
D’Amato’s attorney, said she’s working to convince New Haven Superior Court
Judge Brian T. Fischer to have the trial held outside New Haven County, citing
the recent spate of overwhelming negative media publicity the East Haven Police
Department has experienced.
Knight said she hopes Fischer
makes a decision prior to Tuesday’s jury selection.
D’Amato retired in December
2011, eight months after the alleged theft and five months before his arrest.
Tuesday also happens to be the
day retired Detective Robert Ranfone is due in court to enter a plea in two
separate cases. The first case involves an alleged used car scam that resulted
in his arrest in October. He turned himself in to state Department of Motor
Vehicles police and was arrested on Oct. 3 in connection with an incident
involving a 2009 Chevrolet Corvette that a New Haven used car dealer allegedly
sold to two different people.
Ranfone was charged with
interfering with an officer, second-degree hindering prosecution and tampering
with evidence for allegedly helping the second buyer and ultimate recipient of
the Corvette “conceal it for a period of time,” according to court documents.
His second case involves a
January 2013 traffic stop he and other officers conducted in New Haven while he
was still a detective. The Jan. 17, 2013, stop saw officers detain a pregnant
woman who was spotted driving a car allegedly registered to the same owner of
another car police believed to be involved in a purse-snatching incident that
occurred in East Haven earlier that day.
Ranfone’s arrest warrant
charges him with second-degree unlawful restraint, coercion and breach of
peace. None of the other officers were charged, although six others including
Ranfone were subject to a lengthy internal affairs investigation.
In D’Amato’s case, Knight said
evidence is due Jan. 29.
The federal trial involving
Cari and Spaulding lasted a little more than a month. It is unclear how long
D’Amato’s trial will take.
Conspirator in ‘cannibal cop’ case faces 10 years in jail
By Rich Calder
A former Massachusetts hospital
police chief faces up to 10 years in the slammer after copping a plea Thursday
to conspiring to torture and kill women as part of the infamous “cannibal cop”
case.
Richard Meltz, the 65-year-old
ex-chief of police at US Dept. of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Bedford,
Mass., agreed in Manhattan federal court to accept a prison sentence of 10
years or less after pleading guilty to two counts of conspiracy to commit
kidnapping. He’ll be sentenced May 22.
Meltz and former Stuyvesant HS
librarian Christopher Asch were busted in 2013 during the feds’ probe of
Michael Van Hise, a cohort of NYPD “cannibal cop” Gilberto Valle.
Asch and Meltz in September
2012 offered to help Van Hise when he said he wanted his wife, sister-in-law
and sister-in-law’s kids raped and murdered, the feds have said.
Meltz, however, insisted he
never plotted to hurt children when entering his plea– a key factor that could
determine whether he will have to register as a sex offender when he gets out
of prison.
The case grew out of an
investigation into NYPD cop Gilberto Valle, who was convicted last year of a
plot to kidnap, cook and eat women.
Ex-East Haven cop, now federal inmate No. 20808-014, begins sentence in West Virginia
By Evan Lips, New Haven
Register
EAST HAVEN >> Convicted
former police Officer Jason Zullo arrived at Gilmer Federal Correctional
Institution in Glenville, W.Va., Thursday to begin his two-year sentence,
according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons website.
Zullo, now also known as Inmate
20808-014, is scheduled for release on Oct. 10, 2015.
Gilmer FCI is about 545 miles
away from the East Haven Police Department, where Zullo had worked since 2005.
At Zullo’s December sentencing,
U.S. District Judge Alvin Thompson said the 24-month sentence was “the most
appropriate” given the plea deal Zullo reached with federal prosecutors and the
nature of the crime, which included ramming a motorcyclist at least three times
during a pursuit, causing a crash and then failing to mention in his incident
report the fact he struck the motorcycle.
He was one of three officers
named in a January 2012 federal indictment, the result of a lengthy Department
of Justice investigation into the practices of East Haven police officers.
Zullo, 35, was the first of the
four to be sentenced. Retired Officers David Cari and Dennis Spaulding,
convicted in October for a variety of civil rights abuses, will be sentenced
Tuesday. The fourth, retired Sgt. John Miller, will be sentenced in February.
Miller pleaded guilty to charges unrelated to racial profiling.
During his sentencing
appearance, Zullo told Thompson that as a police officer he “had been told and
trained to keep secrets.”
He said the motorcyclist,
Robert Salatto, who has been convicted of multiple crimes himself, was breaking
the law.
“I tried to stop him, and he
evaded. I chose to engage, and I will live with this decision forever,” Zullo
said.
Federal prosecutor Krishna
Patel called Zullo’s comments the “type of explanation we’ve heard all too
often from East Haven police — blaming the victim.”
“And the explanation of being
‘trained to keep secrets’ — that’s not what police officers are supposed to do,
police officers are supposed to be witnesses to the truth,” Patel said.
Zullo’s attorney, Norm Pattis,
urged leniency, citing that his client’s wife is suffering from a debilitating
kidney condition that has prompted Zullo to assume the role of “most active
parent” for the couple’s children.
As for the incident with
Salatto, Thompson also questioned Zullo’s explanation about how police officers
are “trained to keep secrets.”
“I don’t know what to make of
that,” Thompson said of Zullo’s comments. “The defendant saying he was taught
to lie does not reflect well on the East Haven Police Department.”
Outside federal court, Pattis
called the sentencing “fundamentally unfair” and criticized the notion that
information gleaned from the trial of Cari and Spaulding could be used against
his client.
Salatto was accompanied by his
girlfriend, who prosecutors stressed was an innocent victim of Zullo’s actions.
She was riding with Salatto on the back of his motorcycle at the time of the
incident. After Zullo’s sentencing, Salatto said he “respected the system.”
Spaulding was in attendance
during Zullo’s sentencing.
Zullo is also required to spend
one year under supervisory release.
Gun stolen from Fairfax idiot cop used in N.J. killing, authorities say
By Justin Jouvenal, Published:
January 13 E-mail the writer
A gun stolen from a Fairfax
County police officer’s locked car was allegedly used by a leader of a heroin
distribution ring to kill another man in New Jersey, according to an indictment
and police.
The Fairfax County officer, who
was not named by authorities, was on leave in New Jersey in August 2012, when
the gun was taken from his or her vehicle, said Lucy Caldwell, a Fairfax County
police spokeswoman. The officer, who reported the theft, was allowed to be
carrying the weapon in another state, Caldwell said.
Ronald T. Daniels, 24, of New
Jersey, allegedly used the gun to fire into a group of people in Asbury Park,
N.J., killing one man in September 2012. Daniels was arrested as part of a
sweep that targeted a major heroin distribution gang. He is facing a
first-degree murder, theft and firearms-related charges
Woman who fell from LAPD car claims she was sexually assaulted
By Brett Wilkins
Los Angeles - A graduate student who was caught on camera tumbling out of a moving police car in Los Angeles claims she was being sexually assaulted by her arresting officer.
CBS Los Angeles reports Kim Nguyen, a 27-year-old pharmacist, claims she was handcuffed in the back of a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) cruiser when an officer sexually assaulted her last March 17.
Nguyen was arrested shortly after 2 a.m. as she stood with two men in front of a Koreatown restaurant waiting for a sober friend to pick them up. That's when LAPD officers pulled up and took her into custody, allegedly for being drunk. The men were left behind.
In a videotaped deposition, Nguyen claimed the officer in the back seat with her tried to spread her legs open. He also allegedly touched her chest and pulled her by the ear to bring her closer to him.
"He was grabbing my left inner thigh, trying to-- I'm assuming-- opening my legs," Nguyen said in the deposition.
Last September, the Los Angeles Times identified the LAPD officers involved in the incident as David Shin and Jin Oh.
A surveillance camera on a building on Olympic Boulevard shows the patrol car approaching the intersection of Grand Avenue at 3:08 a.m. Seconds later, video footage shows Nguyen, still in handcuffs, lying bloodied in the street with her dress removed from the waist down. She awoke from a medically-induced coma six days later in excruciating pain with her mouth wired shut and bruises all over her body. Nguyen and her attorney, Arnaldo Casillas, say her jaw was shattered and she suffered brain bleeding. She required several jaw surgeries and lost all of her teeth. She may still need to undergo risky brain surgery.
It is not clear whether Nguyen jumped from the patrol car to avoid the alleged sexual assault, whether she was pushed out by one of the officers, or if something altogether different occurred. In a lawsuit filed against the LAPD, Nguyen alleges that officers failed to secure her with a seatbelt or properly lock her door, which led to her being ejected from the vehicle.
An incident report filed by paramedics claims officers told them Nguyen fell from the car as it accelerated from an intersection at a speed of 10 miles per hour (16 km/h). But the surveillance video shows the vehicle traveling at what appears to be a much higher speed, crossing the intersection without stopping or slowing down.
"The video shows that the statement that the police officers gave the paramedics is an unabashed, unequivocal lie," attorney Casillas told reporters last September.
The two officers involved in the incident are under investigation. LAPD would not comment on pending litigation.
Protesters From 2004 RNC Settle for $18M
By ADAM KLASFELD
MANHATTAN (CN) - Protesters arrested
during the 2004 Republican National Convention agreed to settle their
decade-old civil rights claims against New York City for a potentially
record-breaking $18 million.
On Nov. 22, 2004, 24 protesters sued New
York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and
dozens of other NYPD cops and officials for false arrest, punitive detention,
abuse of process and other constitutional violations. They said the city had an
indiscriminate mass arrest policy that called for the use of mesh netting and
lines of police officers to barricade and corral large groups of protesters,
reporters, legal observers, and bystanders, without giving audible dispersal
orders.
In their original complaint, the
plaintiffs said they received "cruel and inhumane" treatment in cold,
loud, chemical-strewn, makeshift cells in Pier 57, along the Hudson River.
"Guantanamo-on-the-Hudson" was a
nickname given to the pier by more than one attorney speaking Wednesday at a
press conference outside New York City Hall.
"On information and belief, the
floors of the cages in Pier 57 were covered with numerous highly toxic
chemicals and substances, including, on information and belief, those known to
be carcinogenic, mutagenic, teratogenic, hepatogenic, and immunotoxic ... The
floors of the cages in Pier 57 were also covered in other dirt and grime,"
the original complaint stated.
The protesters said in their complaint
that city police taunted them and said they would be held "until George
Bush left town."
In 2011, the protestors won class
certification, covering 1,800 individuals, and U.S. District Judge Richard
Sullivan rejected the city's defenses a year later when American Civil
Liberties Union attorney Christopher Dunn revealed in an interview settlement
was in the works.
The settlement provides $10.4 million for
the plaintiff class and $7.6 million for their lawyers.
Seven protesters did not sign onto the
settlement and still have active cases. They include two transgender women who
say that police groped their genitals "to determine their gender for
purposes of arrest processing." Another two objectors claim they have
permanent injuries after flexicuffs cut off their circulation, and the final
protester not included in the settlement says she suffered a burst ovarian cyst
in custody and that she was handcuffed to a gurney with a male police officer
in the examination room.
City lawyer Celeste Koeleveld nevertheless
spoke about "major victories" in a statement. She said that "key
police policies used during the RNC" were upheld, and an "effort to
restrict the NYPD's ability to police large-scale events was rejected."
Dunn, the ACLU lawyer, brushed off the
city's statement, calling the settlement the largest for a protest case in the
United States. The message that sends "is more powerful than any ruling
for injunctive relief," he said.
Lisa Martin, who attended the conference
as a spectator, wore a name tag stating that she was arrested five blocks away
from her Union Square home, and that she was not a registered voter at the
time. She said she was not participating in the protest when she was arrested,
and that the experience prompted her to complete her registration within a day
of her release.
"Bloomberg made me a voter," she
quipped.
Sarah Coburn, who was a speaker at the
conference, said her arrest inspired her to go to law school and "practice
law in the public interest," as spectators applauded the announcement.
Some activists appeared disappointed,
however, by legal battles that were lost and cynical that the settlement boded
change.
The New York Times reported in 2010 that
the 2nd Circuit allowed the NYPD to withhold 1,900 pages of records detailing
police surveillance in advance of the 2004 RNC.
Civil libertarian activist Bill Dobbs asked at
the press conference about the fate of those files and what happened to police
accused of civil rights violations.
"They were promoted," shouted
back Jeffrey Rothman, a lawyer for the plaintiff class. "All of them have
higher ranks now."
Some interpreted the timing of the
settlement as evidence that the administration of Bill de Blasio will put civil
liberties more on his agenda than his predecessor, but the settlement was
actually signed in November 2013, at the tail end of the Bloomberg
administration.
Jessica Rechtschaffer, who was arrested in
connection to the burning of a papier-mache dragon float, expressed cynicism at
prospects for the change under a de Blasio administration with the governor's
recent appointment of Bill Bratton as police commissioner.
Bratton also served the administration of
Rudy Giuliani.
The National Lawyers Guild's Martin Stolar
and Beldock Levine & Hoffman attorney Jonathan Moore spoke at the
conference.
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