CC Hills cop accused of firing gun while drunk and off duty
A Country Club Hills
police officer was drinking at a friend’s house in March when he started firing
his gun, sending bullets into a neighboring house and vehicle, and then tried
to hide evidence of the shooting, Cook County prosecutors said Tuesday.
Officer John Silas is
charged with reckless discharge of a firearm. In court Tuesday, Circuit Court
Judge Darren Bowden ordered him held on $75,000 bail.
Prosecutors said Silas
got off work March 8 and started drinking alcohol at a friend’s home in the
17000 block of Baker Street in Country Club Hills.
About 8 p.m., Silas
pulled his semiautomatic service gun and fired several shots toward the ground,
with one bullet going through the front window of a house across the street and
lodging into a wall, according to prosecutors.
They said a resident of
the house “had been sitting on a couch directly next to the front window just
seconds before the bullet was fired” but was not injured.
The resident called 911,
and police responded, finding the bullet in the wall and another inside a sport
utility vehicle that was parked in the driveway of the house, prosecutors said.
Silas tried to cover up
his involvement, later calling one of the investigating officers and asking him
for a favor “by getting rid of evidence recovered from the home,” according to
a statement from the state’s attorney’s office. “During a second phone call to
the officer, Silas acknowledged that he was shooting bullets into the ground
when one accidently went into the front window of the home across the street.”
The Illinois State
Police Forensics Lab was able to confirm that the bullet in the wall was fired
from Silas’ gun.
Trial of former Brunswick cop charged with participating in prostitution rescheduled for August
By Christina Haley
The trial of a former
Northwest police officer charged with participating in the prostitution of a
minor has been rescheduled for next month. No court reporter was available for
the trial this week so the case was moved to Aug. 18, the next trial date in
Brunswick County Superior Court.
he trial of a former
Northwest police officer charged with participating in the prostitution of a
minor is scheduled to begin Monday in Brunswick County Superior Court.
Michael Alan Hayes, 40,
of Southport, was indicted by a grand jury on July 1, 2013, charged with
participating in prostitution of a minor and submitting a false report to
police.
Hayes, who served as a
lieutenant in the Northwest Police Department in the small Brunswick County
city of about 837 people, turned himself into the Brunswick County Sheriff’s
Office on the morning of May 15, 2013. He was released from jail under a
$100,000 unsecured bond.
According to the
indictment, Hayes is charged with participating in the prostitution of a minor
for allegedly contacting a 17-year-old female via an advertisement on
Craigslist. He reportedly met with the teen in Boiling Springs Lakes and
exchanged $60 for sex acts.
Hayes is also charged
with contacting Deputy James P. Canton, a Brunswick County sheriff’s deputy, on
Nov. 27, 2012, and making a false statement concerning the source and
circumstances of bullet strikes to his vehicle and hindering the investigation
into the cause of the incident.
Hayes’ charges stem from
an investigation into a web-based prostitution operation via social media
websites, which the Boiling Spring Lakes Police Department began in November
2012.
According to Boiling
Spring Lakes Police Chief Brad Shirley, who spoke about the investigation in
May 2013, Hayes was a victim in an attempted robbery. His vehicle was shot
during the robbery attempt on Reidsville Road in Boiling Spring Lakes on Nov.
27, 2012.
Hayes “did not report
the incident to police and it was through the ongoing prostitution
investigation that our investigator developed information, which was forwarded
to the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation for their assistance,”
Shirley said in his initial statement about the case in 2013.
On May 6, 2013, the
police department announced that Kyle Bradley Wolfe and Shawn Christopher
Conley were arrested and charged with soliciting prostitution of a minor as a
result of the investigation. The two suspects were also charged with attempted
robbery with a dangerous weapon in connection with the November 2012 incident
in which Hayes allegedly made a false report to Canton.
Conley, 21, and Wolfe,
22, both of Southport, were indicted on two counts of promoting prostitution of
a minor and two counts of supervising, supporting or protecting minors for
prostitution in June 2013. They were also indicted on charges of attempted robbery
with a dangerous weapon and discharging a firearm into an occupied dwelling or
moving vehicle on Sept. 23, 2013.
Conley has since pleaded
guilty in the case. In March, Conley pleaded guilty to one count of human
trafficking of a minor. He was sentenced to 80-108 months in the N.C.
Department of Corrections. According to Assistant District Attorney Daniel
Thurston, multiple other charges against Conley were dismissed per the plea
deal.
Wolfe has yet to face
several charges in connection with the case, according to Thurston. He remains
at the Brunswick County jail under an $845,500 secured bond.
Thurston has been
assigned as the prosecutor in the State’s case against Hayes. Attorney Geoffrey
Hosford will represent Hayes in the case.
New corruption claims raised against Utah police department
Courts » Meanwhile, ex-detective charged in shooting
death appears in court.
By jessica miller
| The Salt Lake Tribune
First Published Jul 08 2014 08:10 am • Last Updated
Jul 08 2014 10:34 pm
New allegations against the troubled West Valley City
Police Department were revealed this week by an attorney representing the
parents of Danielle Willard, who was shot and killed by police in 2012.
Attorney Mark Geragos is asking a federal judge not to
halt their civil court case while former Detective Shaun Cowley faces criminal
prosecution for the shooting.
Geragos alleges as part of a Monday court filing that
an officer — not Cowley — accused of having sexual contact with potential
suspects was given "hush money" after he resigned from the
department, and that the officer "extorted a cash buyout" and
resigned instead of going public with details about corruption within the
department.
But Police Chief Lee Russo said Tuesday that while the
officer did receive a severance payment and signed a nondisclosure agreement
when he resigned about a year and a half ago, the money wasn’t given to keep
him quiet.
"In no way, shape or form was this presented as
covering up anything or as hush money," Russo told The Salt Lake Tribune.
Russo said the officer’s actions regarding alleged sexual
activity were reviewed by the Utah attorney general’s office, but no criminal
wrongdoing was found, and charges were never filed.
Attorneys for Willard’s parents are arguing in a civil
wrongful-death case filed in federal court against Cowley and others that the
case should not be halted while Cowley’s criminal case plays out.
The former detective is charged in 3rd District Court
with second-degree felony manslaughter for the 21-year-old woman’s death in
2012.
Meanwhile on Tuesday, Cowley, 33, made a brief initial
appearance in Salt Lake City’s 3rd District Court in the criminal case.
Cowley’s attorney waived reading of the charge, and a
scheduling hearing was set for July 28. Cowley left the courtroom quickly and
did not comment to reporters. If convicted, Cowley could be sentenced to prison
for up to 15 years.
Kevin Salmon, the other detective involved in
Willard’s shooting, was not charged.
Attorney Geragos in his civil court filing alleging
that "hush money" was paid, focused on a portion of a deposition with
West Valley City Manager Wayne Pyle, who said that city administrators
willingly agreed to pay the officer in question:
"Mr. Geragos: OK. Did you know about the
accusations of his sexual liaisons with potential suspects while on his shift
at the time that the $10,000 was authorized?
"Mr. Pyle: Yes.
"Mr. Geragos: And you knew that he was calling
that hush money so he wouldn’t talk?
"Mr. Pyle: I was aware of that after as
[Assistant City Manager] Mr. [Paul] Isaac made it known to me, yes.
"Mr. Geragos: OK. Were you aware at that time
that [the officer] wanted — was it $10,000 payment?
"Mr. Pyle: I don’t remember.
"Mr. Geragos: Whatever it was, you had authorized
it at the time, right?
"My. Pyle: Uh-huh."
Pyle was did not respond to a request for comment.
Lawsuit Re-Filed Against Atlanta Cop Accused of Buckhead IHOP Punching
The lawsuit stems from an April 23, 2011 fight inside
a now-closed Buckhead IHOP.
Posted by Justin Ove
The Atlanta Police Department officer who was cleared
of wrongdoing after a scuffle in a Buckhead IHOP in April 2011 is facing a
renewed lawsuit filed by one of the women who was arrested.
Officer Jose Vidal, who was working as an off-duty
security guard at the time, has been sued by Roberta Caban for unspecified
compensatory and punitive damages, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Reports.
According to the suit, Caban and her friend Cynthia
Freeman were assaulted, falsely arrested, and falsely held in Fulton County
jail where they were humiliated by being forced to use the bathroom before male
inmates.
Atlanta Police see it another way; Vidal's incident
report states that Freeman was acting disorderly inside the now-closed IHOP,
and when asked to leave, refused.
Police then say that Freeman began punching Vidal, and
was also accosted by Ashley Leavell, who allegedly punched the officer in the
face. Vidal was caught on camera returning Leavell's punch.
The attorney for the women arrested at the IHOP that
night told the AJC in May, 2011 that the police's story about the chain of
events was "riddled with inaccuracies."
The Atlanta Police Department cleared Vidal of any
wrongdoing, but that didn't stop Leavell from filing a lawsuit against Vidal
and IHOP in May, 2013. It is not known if the two suits are related or why the
suit needed to be filed again.
Miami Beach officer suspended for allegedly working drunk
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (WSVN) -- A Miami Beach Police
officer is being investigated by his own colleagues after he was allegedly
drunk during an off-duty job at a South Beach nightclub.
Miami Beach Police Sgt. Mike Muley has been relieved
of duty with pay while internal affairs investigates the allegation.
According to Miami Beach Police, they received an
anonymous call stating there was an intoxicated police sergeant in full uniform
working an off-duty security job at Mango's Tropical Cafe, located on the 900
block of Ocean Drive, at around 4:30 a.m. Monday. Police said officers came to
the nightclub and transported Muley to Mount Sinai Medical Center for medical
treatment and alcohol testing.
Later that morning, the Miami Beach Police cruiser
assigned to Muley was seen outside the club covered in evidence stickers. Crime
scene investigators were also spotted on the scene.
"The matter is being taken very seriously,"
said Miami Beach Police Chief Dan Oates, who was appointed chief of Miami Beach
Police in June. "I'm brand new here. We simply can't tolerate inappropriate
behavior by our officers, especially with regard to alcohol, and this matter
will get full investigation by this department."
News of Muley's suspension comes with the revelation
that he has a direct connection to another high-profile case involving another
Miami Beach Police officer accused of drinking on the job.
On Thursday, former Miami Beach Police Officer Derick
Kuilan was sentenced to 18 months in prison for giving a civilian a joyride on
his station-issued ATV that ended in a crash that injured two beach goers. It
was alleged Kuilan had been drunk.
"He had his head down on the desk," said
Muley as he reenacted Kuilan's behavior while testifying in the officer's
trial. "He had his arms up, and his head down like this."
Jurors, however, were not convinced of the evidence.
Kuilan was convicted of reckless driving with serious bodily injury but
acquitted of DUI.
Muley was Kuilan's supervisor on the night of Kuilan's
accident, which occurred in July 2011. Muley was demoted for improper supervision
as a result. However, through arbitration he was eventually able to regain the
rank of sergeant.
"I'm well aware of that," said Oates when
asked about Muley's connection to the Kuilan case. "With regard to that,
people have to recognize that that matter was adjudicated, and my understanding
was that he was originally demoted, but he got his stripes back [through]
arbitration. That's in the past. My immediate challenge as the new chief is to
deal with this new event and do what's right for the organization."
Oates encouraged the community to provide any
information they might have about Monday morning's incident. "Like any
serious matter involving the department, if there's anyone in the community who
saw this officer or has any evidence that might be useful to us, we ask that
they come forward and let us know immediately."
It remains unknown what amount of alcohol, if any, was
found in Muley's system.
The investigation remains ongoing.
Ex-Easton officer charged with passing out at wheel; resigned over alcohol citations
BETHLEHEM, Pennsylvania — A former Easton police
officer who resigned after two drunkenness citations is now charged with
passing out at the wheel of his car.
Former Easton officer John Zielinski has waived his
right Monday to a preliminary hearing.
Defense lawyer Alexander Ward tells The (Easton)
Express-Times (http://goo.gl/R8m9w5 ) that he hopes to resolve the case through
pretrial probation.
The 47-year-old Zielinski was charged with drunken
driving and resisting arrest in April after police found his car partially
blocking a highway in Bethlehem at 2 a.m.
Authorities say his blood-alcohol content was .26,
nearly four times the legal limit for drivers.
Zielinski resigned from the Easton force in 2008 after
two public drunkenness citations. The newspaper says he unsuccessfully sued
over one of the arrests.
________________________________________
Ex-El Paso police officer charged with tax fraud
By Adriana M. Chavez
A former El Paso police officer charged with tax fraud
in connection with a medical billing scheme is scheduled to appear in court
later this month.
Ricardo Huante, 54, is charged with corrupt
interference with Internal Revenue laws and 14 counts of structuring
transactions to evade reporting requirements and aiding and abetting. Huante faces
up to three years in federal prison if convicted of the first charge. Each
remaining charge carries a prison sentence of up to 10 years.
According to Huante's indictment, which was filed in
March, Huante operated a medical insurance billing company called H.M.J., also
known as H.M.D.J., beginning in 1995. The company performed billing services
for Hospital Torre Medica and other medical providers in Mexico by billing
insurance providers for services performed by doctors. The company received
checks from insurance providers to pay the doctors for the services the medical
billing company sought reimbursement for.
Huante opened a bank account in the U.S. in his name
and deposited insurance reimbursement funds he received from the insurance
providers, the indictment states. From 2004 to June 30, 2011, Huante deposited
more than $3 million.
According to the indictment, Huante reported in his
2005 tax return that the company had gross receipts of $15,211, but medical
insurance companies had reported to the IRS that they made payments of more
than $300,000 to Huante's company. The discrepancy triggered an investigation
by IRS officials.
The indictment states that in April 2007, Huante told
IRS officials in a letter that the discrepancy arouse because the tax forms
included the total amounts due to both the medical providers and to his
company, but that his commissions were five percent of the gross amounts
billed.
Federal prosecutors allege Huante's gross receipts
were "substantially greater" than the gross amounts he actually
received. Huante's indictment states that he also falsely reported on his tax
returns that a person identified only as "O.H." as the company's
owner.
Huante's wife, Ofelia Huante, has not been charged
with any wrongdoing.
Ricardo Huante's indictment also lists numerous
withdrawals from his bank account, most of them for about $2,500.
Federal prosecutors allege the transactions are
"part of a pattern of illegal activity involving more than $100,000 in a
twelve month period." The withdrawals are dated between March 2009 and
March 2010.
In March 2012, agents with the FBI and other federal
agencies raided the Huantes' East El Paso home. Ricardo Huante, who was an El
Paso police officer for 14 years, was placed on administrative leave but
resigned in July 2012, according to El Paso Times archives.
Ricardo Huante was arraigned in May. His next court
hearing is scheduled on July 30 before U.S. District Judge Philip Martinez. A
trial date has not been scheduled.
Cop: We Lie About 911 Calls to Make Arrests
NORTH CAROLINA OFFICER ADMITS TO USING TACTIC
By Neal Colgrass
The police chief in Durham, North Carolina, has warned
officers to stop lying about fake 911 calls in order to enter people's homes
and make arrests, Opposing Views reports. The tactic came up during a court
hearing in May when an officer admitted to doing it. Officer AB Beck said he'd
knocked on a woman's door and told her that someone called 911 from her house
before hurrying off the phone, Indy Week reports. When she let him in, he found
a marijuana grinder and two marijuana blunts and arrested her. A judge kicked
the case out of court, telling Beck that he "cannot enter someone's house
based on a lie."
Beck also said that this 911-call tactic was standard
procedure at the department in alleged domestic violence cases, according to
the defendant's lawyer. Durham Police Chief Jose Lopez denied this, but told
ABC 11 he's started an investigation. He also fired off a departmental memo
saying he's heard the tactic is in use and has to stop. A Durham attorney
framed it as a right-to-privacy issue, saying that "you can't fake someone
out of their constitutional rights. You've got to be honest about this
stuff."
FDLE report reveals third KKK member in Fruitland Park Police Department
Deputy chief resigns, officer fired, former secretary
admits enrollment in organization
Author: Erik Sandoval,
FRUITLAND PARK, Fla. -
A report which investigated whether two Fruitland Park
police officers were involved with the Ku Klux Klan shows a third police worker
was also linked to the organization.
Deputy Chief David Borst and Officer George Hunnewell
were both named as members of the KKK by informants to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Borst resigned over the claims last Thursday and Hunnewell was
fired Friday.
Hunnewell's wife, Ann, worked as a Police Department
secretary and she admitted to Florida Department of Law Enforcement
investigators she and her husband joined the KKK.
She told the FDLE they wanted to infiltrate the klan
as part of a department investigation under then-Police Chief Mark Isom.
Hunnewell told investigators she and her husband never
paid dues and didn't believe in the klan's philosophy.
Her involvement was reported by the wife of another
former Fruitland Park police officer James Elkin, who resigned in 2010 after he
was also linked to the klan.
According to the report, Pamela Ellingsworth
"reported that George Hunnewell was a sworn member of the KKK."
"Ellingsworth reported that (Deputy Chief David)
Borst and others in the FPPD have knowledge of the Hunnewells' membership in
the KKK, but did nothing to address the issue," the report stated.
One man who was arrested two weeks ago by Hunnewell
wants the Office of the State Attorney to review his case. The man, who is
black, said he was pulled over driving 37 mph in a 25 mph zone.
"(Hunnewell) jumped in the middle of my car as I
was going and almost pulled out his gun, and said, 'I could have shot you if
you would have hit me with your car,'" the man said.
Hunnewell eventually arrested the man for marijuana
possession and driving with a suspended license, but the man argues he wouldn't
have been pulled over if he wasn't black.
The State Attorney is now reviewing hundreds of cases
handled by Borst and Hunnewell. Workers are looking for any signs of racially
motivated charges.
PCPD officer demoted for misusing software
By ZACK McDONALD | The News Herald
PANAMA CITY — A Panama City police officer has been
demoted and suspended for misusing police software to scan confidential
documents of citizens for personal reasons.
Mark Aviles was suspended without pay and demoted from
major to captain in June after he misused his rank and authority to access the
driver and vehicle information database (DAVID) files of multiple citizens for
personal reasons. The search was conducted while Aviles was off-duty and was
not for law enforcement purposes, internal investigators found, which opened
PCPD up to penalties that could’ve affected their law enforcement capabilities,
city records state.
Aviles told internal investigators he was concerned an
ex-boyfriend of his neighbor could have a history of nefarious activities. His
daughter had stayed the night while the ex-boyfriend was in the neighbor’s home
before the couple separated. Once his neighbor told him she suspected her ex
recently placed a tracker on her car, Aviles became suspicious and checked into
the ex’s background for red flags.
“If at the time, I thought that this was a misuse of
the DAVID system, I wouldn’t have done it,” Aviles told internal investigators.
“… What was occurring in my mind was there was an issue, I’m a cop, let me see
what I can find out.”
Aviles requested a subordinate officer run the
ex-boyfriend’s name through the program, since he was off duty and only certain
terminals have access to DAVID. He then accessed 34 confidential reports on at
least six people connected to the ex-boyfriend.
Each time DAVID is started, the system explicitly
notes that use for personal reasons could result in civil or criminal
proceedings against any person involved. When the program questioned Sgt. Phil
Himes about the purpose of his search, Aviles told him it was to verify an
identity.
Himes said he assumed the request was legitimate and
obliged.
SEATTLE POLICE OFFICER, A BOTHELL RESIDENT, CHARGED WITH CHILD MOLESTATION
• Written by Briaana Gerdeman
A Seattle police officer who lives in Bothell was
charged with first degree child molestation and communication with a minor for
immoral purposes for allegedly molesting his former girlfriend’s daughter over
several years, according to documents from the Snohomish County Prosecutor’s
Office.
Eric Amadeo Smith, 57, is now on administrative leave
from the Seattle Police Department. He was released on bail from Snohomish
County Jail on July 1.
“Smith sexually abused a vulnerable child who he had
control over,” the documents state. “The abuse allegedly occurred for a period
of four years with multiple offenses.”
The 12-year-old victim reported the abuse to her
teacher last month, after the subject of inappropriate touching was covered in
health class.
According to the documents, she said Smith made her
perform sexual acts several times between 2009 and 2013, when she was age 7 to
11.
The documents describe five instances of alleged
sexual abuse, adding that the victim gave specific details of the abuse when
being interviewed during the investigation.
“The victim disclosed this abuse to her mother,
friends and school staff verbally and in writing over the years,” the documents
state. “The victim recanted her initial disclosure when she was 7 after being
confronted by the suspect in front of her mother, but has since confirmed that
the abuse occurred and continued to occur in his home until the age of 11.”
EMS on Modified Duty, Police Officer Stripped of Badge in Chokehold Arrest Death
Four EMS workers who responded to the arrest of a man
who later died in police custody were placed on modified duty a day after an
eight-year veteran of the NYPD was stripped of his badge and gun for allegedly
using a chokehold while handcuffing the man.
The EMS workers, who have not been identified,
included two EMTs and two paramedics. The workers are not city employees but
work for Richmond University Medical Center, according to the FDNY.
On Saturday, NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo was placed
on modified assignment pending further investigation into the arrest of
43-year-old Eric Garner, which was captured on a cellphone video that showed
the 43-year-old saying "I can't breathe, I can't breathe" as he was
brought to the ground by an officer using a chokehold, a tactic prohibited by
NYPD policy.
In the video, EMS workers are not shown giving CPR
when arriving at the scene.
Officials said another officer involved in the arrest,
a four-year veteran of the force who has not been identified, had been put on
administrative duty but didn't have to surrender his gun or shield.
The Staten Island District Attorney's Office is
investigating the death of Garner, who was being arrested for allegedly selling
untaxed cigarettes on Victory Boulevard and Bay Street in Tompkinsville
Thursday afternoon, according to police.
While he was being handcuffed, he went into cardiac
arrest, police said. He was taken to Richmond University Medical Center, where
he was pronounced dead.
On Sunday, the medical examiner's officer said autopsy
results are still pending.
"At this time, no determination has been made by
the Medical Examiner's office as to the cause and manner of death of Eric
Garner," the office said in a statement.
Earlier in the weekend, the Rev. Al Sharpton rallied
with supporters and Garner's family. The man's death has sparked community
outrage.
"The issue is not whether one was selling cigarettes.
The issue was how an unarmed man was subjected to a chokehold, and the result
is he is no longer with us," Sharpton said after leading the crowd in
chants of "no justice, no peace."
Patrolmen's Benevolent Association President Patrick
Lynch said in a statement that the NYPD's decision regarding Pantaleo was
politically motivated.
"The department’s modification of this police
officer under these circumstances is a completely unwarranted, knee-jerk
reaction for political reasons and nothing more," Lynch said. "It is
a decision by the department that effectively pre-judges this case and denies
the officer the very benefit of a doubt that has long been part of the social
contract that allows police officers to face the risks of this difficult and
complex job."
Mayor de Blasio has said he was "very
troubled" by the video.
"It is too early to jump to any conclusions about
this case -- we must wait for all the facts and details of the incident to
emerge," de Blasio said following Garner's death.
On Sunday, while on vacation in Italy, de Blasio
received a briefing from administration officials about the ongoing
investigation and the administration's community efforts, his office said
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