Friday, September 12, 2008

Former Employee of Sheriff's Office Pleads Guilty to Rape of Child


MEMPHIS, TN

A former Shelby County Sheriff’s Office employee pleaded guilty to charges of Rape and Rape of a Child.

According to court documents, 60 year-old Wayne Logan has been sentenced to six years in prison for rape and eight years for raping a child after pleading guilty, Thursday, September 11, 2008.

The Shelby County District Attorney’s Office says Crawford had sex with an 8 year-old girl several times over a two year period. Investigators say the girl’s mother knew about the rape and took money from Crawford. She was indicted on charges of Facilitation of Rape and Facilitation of Rape of a Child.

Police say the abuse was brought to the attention of authorities after the little girl told her teacher that Crawford was having sex with her.

Crawford worked as a civilian employee at the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office.

Former Chief Paul Gill Convicted of Murder


EL DORADO, Ark.

A jury has convicted a former Fordyce police chief of first-degree murder in the shooting death of his wife.

The Union County jury recommended a 40-year prison sentence for Paul Douglas Gill. The jury deliberated for about four hours today before convicting Gill in the death of his wife, Sandra Kaye Gill.

Gill testified yesterday that he did not kill his wife, and witnesses said he wept and expressed grief after her death. Doug Gill had been charged with capital murder, though prosecutors did not seek the death penalty.

Sandra Kaye Gill was found in bed in March 2007 with a gunshot wound to her head.

Gill was a former police chief at Fordyce in the early 1990s and also a former deputy sheriff. At the time of the crime, he was a quality control inspector with Georgia Pacific in Fordyce.

Prosecutors allege that gunpowder residue from Gill's clothing showed he killed Sandra Gill as she lay in bed. They argue Gill tried to make his wife's death look like a suicide.

Former Officer Chancy Jones Arrested for Killing Mistress

The Memphis police officer accused of shooting and killing his mistress remained behind bars Thursday. After Chancy Jones first court appearance, his attorney said that he fears for his client's safety.

After appearing before a judge Thursday, Patrol Officer Chancy Jones spent the rest of the day sitting in jail without bond.

His attorney said Jones has a large target on his back because he's possibly with criminals he's arrested and he used to be a corrections officer inside the jail.

Jones walked into court wearing a green jail jumper. His sisters and daughter sat outside the courtroom waiting to be allowed in.

Jones' wife was not there.

After getting inside and seeing Jones, a few of them left the courtroom in tears and declined to speak on camera.

"I'm sure they're going through the same shock the family of the lady is," said Jones' attorney Ted Hansom. "It's a tragedy no matter how you look at it."

He said he hasn't had a chance to sit down and talk with his client, but he is aware Jones gave a written statement to police admitting to shooting and killing his mistress Phyllis Malone.

"I think it's easy to say he's upset," he said. "Other than that, I really couldn't comment."

Investigators said for the past few weeks, Jones was having an extramarital affair with Malone.

Early Tuesday morning, a delivery driver found a woman slumped over in a car outside a gas station on Whitten Road.

It was Malone. Authorities said she died from multiple gun shot wounds and police have confirmed that she was not pregnant.

Hansom said his client is being held in a secured location because of the publicity of the case and because his client is a Memphis police officer and a former Shelby County correctional officer.

"You have some people who are frequent fliers who come back here, that come back here when he was here," he said. "So yeah, security is a concern."

No one from Malone's family came to court.

Jones will have a bond hearing Monday. He's been charged with second degree murder. Police Director Larry Godwin said this was domestic violence taken to the extreme.

*********

I hope he get's his ass beat! He's no better than the people he put in jail.
He was nothing but a criminal with a badge.

Sgt. James Pence Arrested for Domestic Violence

A Springfield police sergeant has been arrested and charged with domestic violence in Portage.

Sgt. James Pence, 37, was arrested after an incident in Portage Tuesday and arraigned Wednesday in Kalamazoo County, Springfield Public Safety Director Rob Coles confirmed. A spokesman for the Portage Police Department could not be reached Wednesday.

Coles, reached while on vacation and out of the city, said he was not aware of details of the incident, which apparently occurred at Spence's home.

A warrant is also being sought by Battle Creek police against Pence for stalking and making harassing phone calls to a former girlfriend in Battle Creek, according to Commander James Saylor of the Battle Creek Police Department.

Information on that incident at a home Pence once shared with the woman on Clubhouse Drive early Tuesday afternoon, is being reviewed by the Calhoun County Prosecutor, Saylor said.

Pence is already serving a 14-day suspension from the department for an unrelated off-duty incident, Coles said, and is scheduled to return to work Sept. 17.

Department officials are collecting information on the Tuesday incidents and will conduct their own department investigation, the chief said.

Officer Carlos Martin Charged with Giving False Information

A Richmond police officer has been placed on leave after he was charged in a false-information case.

The department said officer Carlos Martin was charged yesterday with two misdemeanor counts of false summons or giving false reports to law enforcement officials.

The department would not release details of the case other than to say the arrest grew from a citizen complaint and was being investigated by the department's office of professional responsibility in consultation with Richmond Commonwealth's Attorney Michael N. Herring.

Martin, 34 and a five-year member of the department, has been placed on leave without pay.

Officer Juan Tapia Arrested by FBI and DEA

San Diego, California

United States Attorney Karen P. Hewitt announced that Juan Hurtado Tapia, a uniformed officer of the San Diego Police Department, was arraigned in federal court in San Diego by United States Magistrate Judge Leo S. Papas on a criminal complaint charging him with misuse of his status as a law enforcement officer to obtain and pass sensitive information to associates who were involved in drug trafficking crimes.

Mr. Tapia was arrested by FBI and DEA agents on September 2, 2008.

The complaint alleges that during the course of a long-term drug trafficking investigation being conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the San Diego Police Department, investigating agents became aware in May 2008 that the targets of their investigation were in contact with Juan Hurtado Tapia, a patrol officer employed by the San Diego Police Department.

According to the complaint, information obtained through court-authorized wiretaps uncovered that Tapia was utilizing his position as a law enforcement officer to run criminal history checks on behalf of people involved in illegal drug trafficking. The complaint further alleges that Tapia passed on to those same individuals specific sensitive information regarding the then-ongoing drug investigation that he had obtained through the course of his official duties.

The individuals to whom Tapia passed the information were arrested in July 2008 and have since been charged along with several others in the Southern District of California in a criminal indictment in Case No. 08CR2642JAH.

Tapia is scheduled to be in court next on September 16, 2008, before Magistrate Judge Papas for a preliminary hearing.

Officer Rick Johnson Fired for Having Sex with Teen



An Altoona police officer accused of having sex with a teenage girl has been fired from his job.

Just hours after Rick Johnson waived his preliminary hearing Wednesday, Altoona City Council voted unanimously to fire him, citing a violation of the city's code of conduct.

It was not immediately clear if Johnson will be eligible to collect his police pension.

Officials with the city's pension board said, as far as they are concerned, there is no reason Johnson should be denied his pension.

Officer Rick Johnson Arrested for Having Sex with Teen

An Altoona police officer remains on administrative leave as authorities investigate his relationship with a 16-year-old girl.

The Pennsylvania Attorney General is leading the investigation. State police are also working the case, waiting for lab results and conducting additional interviews.

Rick Johnson was arrested Tuesday on charges of endangering the welfare of children and corruption of minors.

Police allege Johnson had sex with a 16-year-old girl from Indiana who he met on the Internet. The girl had visited Johnson a couple of times with her parents before visiting him alone last week.

Police said Johnson and the girl had sex three times when she visited him alone. Investigators said the girl's friends showed inappropriate text messages to the girl's parents, who in turn called police.

Johnson was not charged with statutory rape because the girl is 16 years old and the sex was consensual, police said.

Officer Chad Broder Accused of Fondling Handcuffed Teen


A 25-year-old Erie police officer has been arrested for investigation of unlawful sexual contact and attempted sexual assault of a young woman he had taken into custody.

The officer, Chad Aaron Broder, 25, allegedly fondled an 18-year-old woman whom he arrested for violating a restraining order.

According to Greeley police spokesman Sgt. Joe Tymkowych, Broder handled the arrest differently than most, placing the cuffed hands of the woman in front of her and letting her ride in the front passenger seat of the police cruiser.

Tymkowych said it is standard procedure to place arrested individuals in the back seat and to cuff their hands behind them.

The incident allegedly occurred the night of Aug. 31 in the 2400 block of O Street in Greeley.

Tymkowych said that Broder purportedly started talking to the young woman and then started kissing and fondling her.

The woman said she rebuffed Broder.

After she was released from custody, she told friends, who told a Longmont police officer. The Longmont officer told the woman she needed to report the incident.

Greeley police did an additional investigation after being informed of the allegations. The investigation was aided by the fact that Broder told the 18-year-old how he could be contacted.

There was an exchange of e-mails between the woman and Broder. The content of the e-mails "showed that what she claimed had happened did happen," said Tymkowych.

Broder was arrested at his home in Frederick at about 6 p.m. Wednesday.

Tymkowych said Broder has been with the Erie department for at least two years.

http://www.9news.com/news/article.aspx?storyid=99533&catid=188

Former Officer Kevin Johnson Accused of Rape

NEW YORK

A former New York City police officer has been indicted on charges of raping a woman in a hotel bathroom.

Prosecutors say 28-year-old Kevin Johnson was a police officer in April when he met a group of women at a Manhattan bar. They say although he was off duty he told the women he was an officer and one of them invited him back to their hotel room.

Johnson is accused of sexually assaulting another woman as she slept in the bathroom of the hotel room.

Johnson is charged with rape and sexual abuse. He faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted of the more serious rape charge. He resigned in June.

Defense attorney Stuart London says Johnson "vehemently denies the charges and looks forward to being vindicated at trial."

Officer Tony Smith Fired for Insubordination

Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo today fired a police officer for insubordination after he said the officer posted a blog entry that his superiors concluded was meant to undermine the chief’s authority, according to a disciplinary memo.

According to the memo, officer Tony Smith posted an article from the blog on a bulletin board regarding a sexual harassment claim against Acevedo when he worked with the California Highway patrol. The memo alleges that Smith circulated the printout in protest of the firing of Sgt. Dustin Lee.

Lee was fired in June after he was accused of repeatedly sexually harassing a police employee and lying about it to internal affairs investigators.

According to the memo, Smith said during a dismissal hearing that he, “posted the blog because it was interesting and denied any intent to criticize, ridicule, or undermine,” Acevedo.

His chain of command disagreed, according to the memo, and concluded that Smith intended to undermine the chief’s authority.

Acevedo said in the memo that he recused himself from the review hearing because the incident involved himself. He left it up to Smith’s chain of command to recommend an appropriate discipline.

Smith has worked for the department since 2003, and has been disciplined several times, the memo said.

In 2005, he was suspended for 60 days after he was accused of refusing to end a relationship with a methamphetamine user and misusing city equipment to check the woman for warrants at her request, according to the memo. He was also accused of failing to take police action when he believed the woman was purchasing drugs, the memo said.

Several years ago, Acevedo, then a chief with the California highway patrol, was sued along with the highway patrol by a female employee whom Acevedo had dated a decade earlier. She said in the lawsuit that he had taken nude photos of her and shown them to other agency officials.

The lawsuit was dismissed, except for one allegation that Acevedo said was unrelated to his work and was settled. Acevedo said terms of the settlement prevent him from discussing the matter, and the case has been sealed by a judge.


http://www.txcn.com/sharedcontent/dws/txcn/austin/stories/091008kvue_APD_officer_fired-cb.63390686.html

Fire Chief Facing Charges of Rape Resigns

Boston Deputy Fire Chief Peter Pearson, facing charges of rape and attempted rape, resigned yesterday and is seeking a pension that could pay him more than $75,000 a year.

Based on calculations of age, years of service, military history, and his three highest paid consecutive years of service, Pearson could receive at least $76,874 a year and as much as $91,459.

Pearson's attorney, Kevin J. Reddington of Brockton, said his client, a 23-year Fire Department member, had no choice but to resign and apply for his pension after receiving notice from the fire administration that his job was in jeopardy. Under the notice, which he received last week, he had 14 days to return to work or he could be fired.

"It appears what Peter has to do to protect his family and his loved ones is to submit the paperwork he did," Reddington said. "He's got many, many years of distinguished service, and he's entitled to retirement."

Pearson was arrested on Aug. 18 after a prostitute in Brockton alleged that he raped her weeks earlier while posing as a State Police officer and showing a gun. He was initially released on $50,000 cash bail.

Within a week, five other women made allegations that he raped or tried to rape them. In all, four of them said he showed a gun. Pearson has since been held under the state's dangerousness statute.

Pearson has been in jail since Aug. 22. He applied for a four-month leave of absence, but Fire Commissioner Roderick Fraser rejected the request.

Reddington said Pearson will contest the charges and is appealing his detention. But, he said, Pearson needed to resign and seek his pension once he received the letter.

Retirement pensions are calculated on a complex formula based on age, years of service, history in the military, and the three highest paid consecutive years of service. According to city records, Pearson received an average of $158,539 over the last three years.

The state Board of Retirement calculations said Pearson, 51, is eligible to receive at least $76,874 a year if he retires immediately.

An alternative is to collect a pension at a later time. If he chooses to collect a pension at age 65, he could receive more than $91,459 a year.

City retirement officials have said that employees convicted of criminal charges can have their pensions revoked if their employer petitions the Boston Retirement Board. The officials have said it is very unusual for the board to revoke pensions. It was not clear whether the crime has to be related to job duty.

Individuals who face losing their pensions do have the opportunity to appear before the retirement board and make a case for keeping their retirement benefits.

Steve MacDonald, a spokesman for the Fire Department, said he could not comment on Pearson's salary, saying the issue will go before the city Retirement Board, which must approve city employee retirements.


http://www3.whdh.com/news/articles/local/BO87698/

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Deputy Jeffery Nation Arrested for Assaulting Teen

AIKEN, S.C.

Authorities say a former Aiken County Sheriff’s deputy is charged with assaulting an 18-year-old he was arresting.

The Aiken County Sheriff’s Office said 40-year-old Jeffrey Nation of Aiken was arrested Tuesday, two days after he hit a New Ellenton teenager. Nation was charged with assault and battery and misconduct in office.

Sheriff’s spokesman Lt. Michael Frank said Nation was no longer an officer as of Tuesday morning.

Assault charges against the teen were dismissed. A statement from the sheriff’s office said Nation falsely accused the teen of trying to head-butt him.

Sheriff Michael Hunt said he asked the South Carolina Law Enforcement to investigate, and he apologized to the teen for unacceptable behavior by an officer.

Officer Kevin Kovalovsky Request Denied

A former Freemansburg police officer charged with drunken driving faces a preliminary hearing again after his request for a first-time offender program was denied.

Kevin Kovalovsky, 32, was a full-time police officer when he was charged in December with two counts of drunken driving while off-duty. State police found Kovalovsky in his car along Route 33 in Bushkill Township and said his blood-alcohol content was more than three times the legal limit for driving of .08 percent.

Kovalovsky had waived his right to a preliminary hearing so he could be considered for the county's Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition program for first-time offenders. But Kovalovsky has been rejected for the program, said Northampton County Assistant District Attorney Bill Blake.

Kovalovsky asked the court to send the drunken driving charges back to a district judge and the request was granted Tuesday by Northampton County Judge F.P. Kimberly McFadden.

No new date has been set for the preliminary hearing, Blake said.

Last month, Kovalovsky was fired from the Freemansburg Police Department. Kovalovsky had served with the department since 1997.

In March, Kovalovsky was charged with public drunkenness by his own department in the early morning after St. Patrick's Day. That charge was later dismissed.


http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/bethlehem/index.ssf?/base/news-0/122101956449010.xml&coll=3

Officer Shaun Asher Arrested for Domestic Dispute

RIPLEY 

A West Union Police officer was recently arrested following an alleged domestic dispute in the Ripley Post Office.

According to a report from the Ripley Police Department, on Aug. 23, at approximately 2:39 p.m., Officer Kevin Little of the Ripley Police department was advised of a fight at the Ripley Post Office on U.S. 52.

According to the report submitted by Officer Little, the argument involved a man and two women. The man was later identified by Ripley Police Officer Brad Liming to be West Union Police Officer Shaun Asher.

In his report, Little states that he approached Asher, who refused to cooperate and calm down. After Officer Little had tried several times to get Asher under control, he warned Asher that he would be shot with the taser due to his "anger being out of control."

According to Little, Asher stated that his girlfriend, a juvenile, and his wife, Jennifer Asher, were arguing and that he was trying to break it up. Little advised the girlfriend to leave the premises.

According to the report, Asher continued to persist, cursing and, at times becoming uncontrollable. A short time later, Lieutenant David Benjamin and Sergeant Donald Newman of the Ripley Police Department arrived on the scene. The two advised that Asher had been recently warned of his behavior at a bar at 19 Main Street.

Allegedly, Asher then stated that he was a cop and that he would "get out of it." All officers at the scene attempted to get Asher into a cab or other form of transportation, but Asher refused and told the officers to arrest him.

According to the officers, Asher allegedly turned to his wife and told her, "Shut up or I'll hit you up side the head." Upon uttering this statement, Asher was arrested for verbal domestic violence and persistent disorderly conduct. Asher was then placed in a police cruiser where he continued to curse and attempted to kick and hit the windows.

Sergeant Newman contacted the Brown County Sheriff's Office to advise of Asher's transportation to the Brown County Jail. He also contacted West Union Police Chief Roy Stricklet about the arrest. Chief Stricklet had no comment on the matter.

Allegedly, Asher continued to struggle during his travel to the Brown County Jail, claiming that he was going to fight everyone in the jail.

"Asher was afforded ample opportunities to keep himself out of jail," reported Sergeant Newman. "He decided not to use them."

Probation Officer Arrested on Theft and Forgery

A current and former employee of Cameron County's Probation Department have been arrested on theft and forgery charges after they were accused of selling $70,000 worth of forged Schlitterbahn Beach Waterpark passes.

Sylvia Gonzalez, 37, and Angela Garcia, 32, both of Brownsville, were released on $7,500 personal recognizance bonds following their Monday arrests and arraignments, officials said.

Investigators believe the women sold approximately 600 forged Schlitterbahn Beach Waterpark passes this year alone, said Jason Moody, spokesman for the District Attorney's office.

Schlitterbahn officials are conducting an audit to determine if any fake passes might have been sold in previous years.

Gonzalez was arrested at the probation office where she worked as an office clerk. It is not immediately known where Garcia was arrested.

Garcia resigned from her job as a probation officer two weeks ago.

Gonzalez will most likely be suspended with or without pay depending on the circumstances of her case, Human Resources Director Manuel Villarreal said.

Gonzalez's and Garcia's arrests are the result of a month-long investigation by the Cameron County District Attorney's Office Special Operations Group.

The district attorney's office had been contacted by Schlitterbahn employee, Mike Bigelow, director of marketing and sales, who alleged that numerous season passes had been copied and forged.

Bigelow stated that the passes were similar to the ones sold by the county's Human Resources Department to county employees at a discount.

A preliminary investigation shows that Gonzalez and Garcia were allegedly selling adult passes at $30 to $45 and passes for children at $25 to $40. The adult passes normally sell for $99, and season passes for children sell for $69.

Commenting on the arrest and charges, District Attorney Armando Villalobos said, he is disappointed with the situation in which " a few bad apples have taken advantage of a county perk for illicit gain... we are deeply offended that it included persons associated with law enforcement. We will seek jail time."

Authorities urge anyone who may have bought forged passes to contact the district attorney's office.

Detention Officer Clayton Buycks Arrested

Sheriff Joe Arpaio has arrested one of his own on charges of sexual assault and kidnapping.

28 year-old Clayton Darnell Buycks is a detention officer, accused of fondling a female inmate inside an elevator at the East Courthouse in downtown Phoenix last month.

The inmate was being transported to court to face drug charges when the attack occurred and investigators say she was handcuffed, resulting in the kidnapping charge.

Buycks spent the last 5 years as a detention officer with the Sheriff's Office, but Arpaio says he's been placed on administrative leave with pay while they continue their investigation.


http://www.azfamily.com/news/homepagetopstory/stories/phoenix-local-news-090908-officer-arrest.5ecdd5ce.html

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Officer Chancy Jones Charged with Murder


MEMPHIS, TN


A Memphis police officer has been arrested and charged with Second Degree Murder in the death of his mistress.

According to Memphis Police Director Larry Godwin, Officer Chancy Jones was in a sexual relationship with the victim, Phyllis Malone, over a period of weeks. Jones was married and had two children. At some point, Jones’ relationship with Malone became troubled. The two agreed to meet at a gas station in the 1700 block of Whitten Road, where investigators believe the murder happened, said Godwin. Malone’s body was found, slumped over the wheel of a car at the Shell gas station in Northeast Memphis, by a Wonder Bread delivery driver, Tuesday, September 9, 2008, around 5:40 a.m.

Director Godwin says an investigation led detectives to Officer Jones as a suspect in the shooting. Investigators say Jones committed the murder and then went to work as scheduled Tuesday afternoon. Investigators say the evidence quickly pointed to Jones and he was called back to his precinct Tuesday evening and taken to headquarters for questioning.

Officer Jones’ Personnel File at the Memphis Police Department shows that Jones appears to have been a model police officer. There was no disciplinary record for Jones, but there were many commendations and comments of praise within his file.



Officers Trying to Get Away with Using Fake Degrees

Berwyn Police Officer Thomas Skryd insisted he was well-qualified for promotion to sergeant: Just look at his test scores and master's degree in criminal justice, with an emphasis in "crimes of the powerful."

But when the city refused to consider the diploma, awarded by a university that approves advanced degrees overnight, Skryd fired back with a lawsuit.

The case, eventually dismissed, is another example tying the suburb's police department with recently uncovered diploma scandals.

Last month the Tribune reported that the names of five other current or former Berwyn police officers turned up on a federal list of 9,600 suspected buyers of degrees from phony schools as part of a Washington state criminal diploma scheme. Skryd is not on the list.

Through city records, it showed that a now-retired Berwyn Fire Department employee claimed a master of science degree in fire-safety management awarded from a university that state and federal officials don't recognize.

Police Chief William Kushner said his department has launched an investigation into whether the police officers and the Fire Department official used bogus academic credentials illegally to gain undeserved promotions and pay raises. Kushner said he also talked to the public integrity section of the Cook County state's attorney's office about possible charges.

And because the City of Berwyn offers a tuition-reimbursement program, Kushner said part of the investigation will look into whether anyone had wrongfully gotten tuition reimbursement for fake degrees, which can go from $500 a year for an associate's degree to $1,500 a year for a postgraduate diploma.

"It's a black eye on a fine department," Kushner said.

Because Kushner refused to honor Skryd's diploma, Skryd is not part of the investigation, Kushner said.

Documents obtained by the Tribune show that one retired police officer was approved for a $1,900 tuition reimbursement for a doctorate in criminal justice from Glencullen University, an institution whose accreditation isn't recognized by the federal government. Kushner said he has yet to determine whether any payments actually went through.

With the exception of Skryd, the Tribune is not naming the officials who allegedly bought the degrees because they have not been charged with a crime. Skryd's name became public when he filed the lawsuit.

Kushner said he has gone through the academic credentials of all current officers to make sure they are legitimate, and he has found no further problems.

Skryd, who never got his promotion, said he was not aware that the Belford University degree he obtained was questionable. He said that his lawsuit, filed in 2006, covered other issues apart from his degree, and that he was embarrassed to learn the nature of Belford University.

"It was one of those situations where I should've known," he said. "It was too good to be true."

Skryd's wife is Ald. Michele Skryd, who he said was unaware of his degree. "Once I realized what had happened, I was probably too embarrassed even to tell her," he said.

Kushner, who assumed his job early in 2006, talked with Skryd before he filed his suit, noting the problems with the university.

Kushner said he asked Skryd if he knew the degree had no value. "[Skryd] said, 'Well, I guess I do now,' " according to Kushner.

Still, he included the degree in his suit—an act he now blames on "cognitive dissonance."

Berwyn officials emphasize that the alleged abuses took place under a previous police chief and mayor, and that Kushner and the human resources department now must approve degrees that are submitted.

The investigation was recently aired at a City Council meeting after aldermen demanded more information.

Some of them had heard rumors that there was no investigation, "which was furthest from the truth," Mayor Michael O'Connor said. "We would never stand in the way."

The names of the current and former Berwyn officers under fire came to light after federal agents investigated the Washington diploma scheme. That probe eventually led to guilty pleas this year from diploma mill officials.

Some of the diplomas allegedly obtained by the Berwyn officers came from schools such as St. Regis University, part of the Washington scheme that federal officials shut down, and LaSalle University in Mandeville, La., which collapsed after its president was imprisoned for fraud in connection with the selling of degrees in the late 1990s.

Others, such as Glencullen University, have accreditation that isn't recognized by either the state or federal government, or both.

Records obtained by the Tribune show that the retired Berwyn Fire Department employee was awarded a degree in 2005 by Madison University, a Mississippi institution whose accreditation state and federal officials don't recognize. Fire Chief Denis J. O'Halloran said he turned the case over to Kushner.

As for Skryd's school, Belford University, it grants degrees within a few hours based on undocumented "life experience" submitted by applicants. George Gollin, a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a diploma-mill buster, tested the system and was quickly approved for a doctorate in public policy. "I gave them as my life experience that I read the newspaper and I watch the evening television news," Gollin said. "And they wrote back to say, 'Sure thing,' and I think they wanted about 500 bucks for the degree."

To apply to Belford, Skryd said he filled out a multiple-choice questionnaire and submitted his résumé online, listing his years of work on the beat, in-service training and other experience. Within a few days, he was approved for the degree, Skryd said.

But he said the degree didn't help his career; he is still waiting for promotion to sergeant.

"I never did benefit from it," Skryd said, "and I certainly would never do something like that again."

Deputy Jeffery Gerres Charged with Assault

A Harford County sheriff's deputy was arrested Sunday morning in Southeast Baltimore after a woman told police she was coaxed into a residence for a bachelor party and pushed down a flight of stairs, according to court records.

But Deputy Jeffery Gerres, a member of the sheriff's office's violent street crimes unit who received a commendation in 2007, filed his own complaint yesterday against Denise Lillian Rothwell, 47, a twice-convicted prostitute, alleging that she hit him in the eye after he rejected her advances.

Police found Rothwell about 3:30 a.m., crying with her face bruised and bloodied. She told police that a group of five men drove up to her, one of whom flashed a police badge, and asked her to join them for a bachelor party in the 3300 block of O'Donnell St., city police wrote in charging documents.

Rothwell said that she was offered $100 to perform a sex act on the bachelor, who was not identified, but alleged that the man with the badge later asked for the money back, saying that the bills were marked. She added that the man pushed her toward the front door and pushed her again down the stairs, causing her to fall face-first.

Crime lab technicians responded to Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, where she was taken for treatment and examination.

An officer went to the O'Donnell Street residence, where Gerres, 29, of Rising Sun, allegedly answered the door and identified himself as a sheriff's deputy. He said he was standing on the front steps of the home when the woman asked him if he was "looking for a party." When he told her no, she struck him in the eye, he said. The officer later observed that Gerres had bruises around his left eye.

Police charged Gerres that morning with second-degree assault and allowing a person into a building for prostitution; yesterday, Gerres filed second-degree assault charges against the woman in District Court.

A spokeswoman for the county sheriff's office said Gerres' police powers have been suspended pending further investigation.



http://www.abc2news.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=ef5e95fc-1ff5-4ffd-9df5-80e238fc3ff8

Officer Anthony Scatena Pleads Guilty to Invasion of Privacy

A Fort Wayne police officer who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor this spring was fired Monday after the city's board of public safety determined the officer had an unacceptable pattern of misconduct and a disregard for a court order.

Anthony Scatena, a 13-year veteran of the department, pleaded guilty to an invasion-of-privacy charge, a Class A misdemeanor, in April. The board had little discussion of board chairwoman Sharon Peters' motion before voting to dismiss him. The two newest board members, Bob Elder and Steve Boerger, did not hear evidence related to the case and abstained from voting.

Scatena declined to comment Monday evening. Police Chief Rusty York said he would be formally notified of the board's decision today.

Scatena was initially arrested on two misdemeanor charges of battery and domestic battery after police were called to his home in November. The Allen County prosecutor dropped those two charges a few days after the invasion-of-privacy charge was filed.

According to court records, Scatena called or was called by the same woman he allegedly battered 261 times between January and February - a violation of a no-contact order issued as part of the domestic battery case. The phone calls ranged in length of one minute to 27 minutes.

York asked the board to fire Scatena in May, and a closed-door evidentiary hearing was held in July to consider whether the officer violated any departmental rules and regulations.

During the hearing, the three-member board learned that Scatena initiated 64 phone calls to the woman. Scatena told the board that the woman, who was living in his house, called him to ensure the bills were paid. An outside employer told the board that the woman tried to contact Scatena at the business several times and had seen text messages and phone calls the woman made to his cell phone, the written findings said.

The board found that Scatena violated the no-contact order repeatedly and showed a "complete disregard for an order of the court." The police department's domestic relations policy states a protective order is a court order and that violators may be arrested, the board wrote in its findings.

The board also cited Scatena's disciplinary history in determining that "Scatena's conduct demonstrates an unacceptable pattern of conduct and a clear disregard for the rules of the department."

The board detailed six reprimands and suspensions. All but one disciplinary action involved complaints that Scatena was rude, made inappropriate comments or used profanity. He also was suspended for leaving his district and a filing a false report.

York told the board that "Scatena's sustained allegations show a disregard for rules and a pattern of rudeness and confrontation," according to the written findings.

York told the board that a Class A misdemeanor conviction under the department's rules and regulations is cause for dismissal or a suspension to be determined by the board. He also said that Scatena's credibility was "impaired," the findings said.

York said after the meeting that he was concerned that by pleading guilty to disregarding a judge's order, that would hamper Scatena's ability to work with the prosecutor's office and even other divisions within the police department. For example, victims' assistance was involved in Scatena's case, York said.

The board last voted to terminate a city employee in 2002, when it fired firefighter Kenneth Burson. His dismissal was later overturned in court, and he resigned from the department. The board also fired police officers Nathan Alexander in 1999 and James Chin in 2001 - both resulted in lawsuits.

Former deputy accused of forcing child to perform sex acts at gunpoint

MAYSVILLE, S.C.

A former Lee County sheriff's deputy who police say forced a 9-year-old child to perform sex acts on him at gunpoint has been arrested.

Fifty-six-year-old Wayne Atkinson of Mayesville was being held Wednesday at a Sumter County detention center.

He is charged with criminal sexual conduct with a minor.

It's not clear if Atkinson had an attorney.

A number for Atkinson was not published and a woman at the jail said she didn't know if he had a lawyer.

Also, 51-year-old Shirley Jackson is charged with unlawful
conduct toward a child.

Investigators think the child was Jackson's foster child.

Officer Garry Ferguson Pleads No Contest

A Maricopa Police officer accused of having sex with minors entered a plea of no contest in court Monday afternoon.

Last week, 30-year-old Garry Ferguson rejected a plea deal, that would have put him behind bars for nine years.

Monday the prosecutor said she will ask for only eight years.

Ferguson is accused of sexually abusing three teenagers in Kings County. He is also being investigated in Kern County for sexual misconduct with a minor.



http://www.turnto23.com/news/17424860/detail.html

Officer Slawomir Plewa Arrested for Trying to Frame Woman

CHICAGO

A Chicago police officer and another man have been charged with taking part in a scheme to arrest the man's estranged wife after planting drugs and a gun in her car.

Slawomir Plewa, 30, faces charges of perjury, obstruction of justice, official misconduct, unlawful restraint and other charges. He was ordered held in lieu of $250,000 bail by Judge Adam Bourgeois Jr. during a hearing Tuesday in Cook County Circuit Court.

Bogdan Mazur, 48, of Crystal Lake was arrested on false reporting, obstruction of justice as well as drug and gun conspiracy charges. He was also ordered held in lieu of $250,000 bail Tuesday.

Mazur was angry with his estranged wife over money and "some of her parenting decisions" and hatched a plan with Plewa, whom he met through a mutual friend, to frame her, according to court documents filed by the Cook County state's attorney's office.

The documents say Mazur admitted to taking part in the scheme with Plewa and an uncharged coconspirator and that he and the uncharged coconspirator agreed to split a corporation owned by Mazur and his wife "after the victim was arrested and presumably convicted and sent to jail."
On April 1 of last year Mazur was with the couple's two young children in a Chicago garage when he called his wife, told her his vehicle wouldn't start, and asked her to pick up their children, officials said. Mazur and the coconspirator had already placed drugs and the gun into the spare tire compartment of the woman's car.

When she arrived at the garage, Plewa and other officers were waiting.

"Plewa provided false information indicating that an anonymous individual walked into the police station and provided information that led to the stop and arrest of the victim," according to prosecutors in the document, a motion to set bail.

When the woman arrived, Plewa asked if he could search the vehicle — a search that revealed the hidden items, prosecutors alleged.

The woman was arrested on drugs and weapons charges. She was acquitted of the charges during a trial in which Plewa allegedly provided false testimony, prosecutors said.

Plewa's attorney, Dan Herbert, said after Tuesday's hearing that his client was innocent and followed standard police procedure.

"He gathered information and made an arrest based on that information," Herbert said.

"His relationship with Mazur was a typical relationship between a police officer and if, in fact, there was a set up, Officer Plewa had no way of knowing of this," he said.

The case marks the latest embarrassment for Chicago's police department, which has tried to restore public confidence after a string of allegations of police brutality and misconduct.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-chicago-cop-arrest-10-bothsep10,0,5995079.story

Officer John Lee May Arrested for Stealing Puppy

A Putnam County Sheriff’s Office K-9 officer and school resource officer who was fired from his job last week was arrested Monday after an 11-year-old boy reportedly saw him steal a dog from a pet shop.

John Lee May, 39, of San Mateo was arrested on a charge of grand theft in connection with the theft of a tea-cup Chihuahua.

According to Sheriff’s Maj. Keith Riddick, May went into the Acme Pet shop on U.S. 17 in San Mateo on Saturday wearing a heavy jacket. The pet shop owner later told deputies that a customer noticed a man acting suspiciously and the customer’s 11-year-old son saw the man put the tiny dog into a jacket pocket.

May was arrested on a warrant Monday and shortly afterward posted the $1,004 bond in the case, Riddick said.

May had worked for the Sheriff’s Office three times over the past eight years and the dog theft case was apparently unrelated to his release from the agency, Riddick said.

The agency terminated May a week ago after completing what Riddick said was “an internal investigation into a complaint of possible domestic violence involving his ex-girlfriend.”

May had been a K-9 officer in the School Resource Unit and was working as a middle school resource deputy when he was let go.

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Captain Tony Surles Arrested on Felony Charges

A Roseboro police captain has been arrested on a felony charge for allegedly using town funds to purchase a transmission for a vehicle not owned by the town or its police department.

Capt. Tony Surles, of the Roseboro Police Department, turned himself in to investigators at the Sampson County Law Enforcement Center Monday. He was charged with obtaining property by false pretenses, a felony offense.

Authorities said the arrest was the culmination of a two-month joint investigation by the N.C. State Bureau of Investigation and the Sampson County Sheriff’s Office. The probe was conducted at the request of the Roseboro Board of Commissioners.

“The town board, through our attorney, requested an investigation into some alleged inconsistencies in our town policies and procedures,” Roseboro mayor Roland Hall said when reached by phone Monday night.

According to sheriff’s officials, the investigation was initiated after town officials discovered that a false purchase order number from the town of Roseboro was used to obtain a vehicle transmission for a style of vehicle that is not in the town’s fleet.

The mayor said the decision was made by the town board “to seek out whatever agency was appropriate to conduct the investigation.”

The Sheriff’s Office took over the investigation and discussed the case with the District Attorney’s Office before obtaining a warrant on Surles.

“After conducting interviews and examining evidence collected, investigators consulted with District Attorney Dewey Hudson, who decided that sufficient probable cause was available to charge Surles,” a press release from the Sheriff’s Office stated.

Upon turning himself in, Surles was administratively processed at the Sampson County Detention Center Monday evening and released under a $500 unsecured bond.

Surles served in an interim capacity as police chief for a short time in 2006 before Preston Howell Jr. was hired to the chief’s post. Later that same year, then-chief Howell promoted Surles from sergeant to captain, a position in which Surles has served since then.

Hall said Monday night that he could not speak to any additional disciplinary action that would be taken by the town of Roseboro in light of the felony charge against Surles.

“I’m not in a position where I can make any comment on that right now,” Hall said. “The board is not in session until tomorrow night (Tuesday).”

The Roseboro mayor said board members would likely discuss the issue at that time.

“We will deal with that, probably in closed session because it is a personnel matter,” said Hall.

Officers Accused of Using Excessive Force

Police are under fire again for using excessive force.

Onset resident Paul Andrade, 52, recounted his story to the Board of Selectmen Tuesday night.

Andrade told the board he was driving down Depot Street with his brother behind a police car Saturday, Sept. 6. When the two cars got to the Onset VFW, the officer pulled over to the side of the road and let Andrade pass. As soon as Andrade passed the police car, it began to follow him up the street.

“I told my brother that he was going to stop us,” Andrade said.

Andrade pulled into the parking lot of the Oak Grove Package Store and got out of the car. The police car began flashing its blue lights and the officer, who Andrade identified as Charles Pillsbury, instructed Andrade to get back into his vehicle.

While Andrade repeatedly noted that he had something of a checkered past with the Wareham Police Department, he said he had done a lot to straighten out his life. When the officer asked to see his license and registration, Andrade asked why he had been pulled over; he claimed that Pillsbury told him that he didn’t need a reason.

He then told Andrade to step out of the vehicle. Andrade said he protested briefly, and he repeatedly asked the officer why he had been stopped. During this back and forth exchange between Andrade and Pillsbury, the officer sprayed him with mace. Andrade said that by the time the package store manager tried to intervene, Pillsbury must have used almost the whole can of mace.

Pillsbury then placed Andrade under arrest for disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, resisting arrest, failure to produce a license and registration, threat to commit murder, threat to commit bodily harm and failure to signal a turn.

In addition to the charges, Andrade’s car was towed, in spite of an offer from his brother to drive it back home and from the store manager to allow it to be left until Andrade could claim it. Andrade’s dogs were also taken to Dartmouth animal shelter, and he has yet to get his license and registration back.

The complaint comes on the heels of a recent accusation that officers used excessive force against a teenaged girl during an arrest in Onset earlier this summer.

Selectman Bruce Sauvageau offered one explanation, referencing accusations that the police were targeting the Cape Verdean community.

“I also notice you’re a black man, and that was your first mistake,” he said.

Sauvageau also called Officer Pillsbury a “disgrace,” and he claimed that this was the “natural result” of nepotism. Pillsbury’s mother, Mary Jane Pillsbury, is a former selectman and retired library director.

http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080910/NEWS/809100326

Monday, September 08, 2008

Officer Josh Senseney Arrested for Drunk Driving

ANDERSON, Ind.

Anderson police arrested one of their own over the weekend.

Police say Officer Josh Senseney was driving his truck when he collided with a car in the 4500 block of Columbus Avenue Saturday night.

The 13 year veteran was initially taken to St. John's Hospital for minor injuries, but later charged with DUI after failing a portable breath test. The driver of the car was not injured.

Officer Senseney has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Detective and Deputy Charged with Beating Man Unconscious

A Baltimore City homicide detective and a Baltimore County sheriff's deputy have been charged with assault after a man was beaten until he was unconscious last September outside of a Govans barbershop while they were off duty.

Prosecutors charged Terry W. Love Jr., a nine-year veteran of the Baltimore Police Department, and Deputy Sheriff Michael Herring with second-degree assault, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, as well as reckless endangerment and use of a deadly weapon with intent to injure. The incident occurred outside of the Detailer Barber Shop on York Road, a block from the Senator Theatre.

The charges were filed Friday, nearly a full year after the Sept. 8, 2007, incident - just before the one-year statute of limitations for misdemeanors was set to expire.

Charges against a third person were dropped last year. But family of victim Andre Thomas, 43, who is in jail on an assault charge, said they were relieved that prosecutors have continued to pursue the case.

"It does my heart well," said brother Tyrone Thomas, a pastor at the Charity Community Church of God. "My brother didn't put his hands on anybody, and they beat him literally until he was unconscious. He could have died, and they went on with their life as usual. They're supposed to uphold the law."

Sterling Clifford, a police spokesman, said Love had been suspended with pay and placed on administrative duties since the incident. With the criminal charges, he has now been suspended without pay and his police powers have been removed, Clifford said. He declined to comment on the charges, as did police union President Paul M. Blair Jr.

"Officers are presumed innocent, just like anybody else," Blair said.

Baltimore County Sheriff R. Jay Fisher did not respond to a request for comment about Herring's status. Neither Herring, 36, nor Love, 31, could be reached.

The officers are not the first to be charged in connection with the attack. Bernard Dutton, 34, a barber at Detailer, was charged the day of the incident with first-degree assault and "conspiring with an unknown person" to assault Thomas. But those charges were dropped three months later.

Thomas' brothers said that before the incident, they would get their hair cut weekly at the barbershop. According to court records from that case, Thomas went into the barbershop looking for one of his brothers and began arguing with Dutton. Thomas left the barbershop and was walking north on York Road when three men began kicking and punching him, the records say.

Another brother, Patrick Thomas, told The Baltimore Sun that Andre Thomas was first struck and knocked to the ground with a kick to the back. Court records show Andre Thomas told police that Dutton was wearing brass knuckles and that another one of the suspects was wearing a black and yellow "sheriff shirt."

In a brief interview, Dutton accused Andre Thomas of filing a "falsified police report" and said that Thomas had been "apprehended" by the officers. Later asked to clarify, he said his lawyer had instructed him not to talk about the incident.

Love's father, Terry W. Love, has been a Baltimore police officer since 1983 and has worked in the department's intelligence section. Court records indicate that last year the father and son both worked on an investigation of a homicide that occurred on The Block.

Terry Love Jr.'s suspension was mentioned in an unrelated nine-count complaint filed in February with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, in which Sgt. Kelvin Sewell wrote that he and Love had been subjected to unusual treatment after Love was transferred to his homicide squad in 2007.

He wrote that Love had been suspended in September 2007 "for an incident that took place off-duty."

"I was advised ... that Detective Love cannot work on any homicide investigations in or outside the office, and he is not allowed to operate any departmental vehicles while suspended," Sewell wrote. "It was explained to me that, by Detective Love working on these homicide cases, he could compromise the investigation because he's suspended."

Sewell is listed as a police witness in the assault case filed Friday.

http://www.wbaltv.com/news/17408678/detail.html

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Federal Officer Charged with Trafficking in Exchange for Sexual Device

A federal officer was arrested Friday and charged with trafficking in undocumented immigrants in exchange for a sexual device, Cialis pills - used to treat erectile dysfunction - and $2,150 in cash.

A federal grand jury indicted U.S. Department of Homeland Security Customs and Border Protection officer Guadalupe Garza, 64, on Sept. 2.

The indictment charges Garza with 13 counts of conspiracy to transport aliens, transporting them within the United States, bringing them into the country, and bribery.

Officials believe Garza was part of a conspiracy that moved the undocumented immigrants by vehicle or guided them on foot.

Court records show that another or other defendants might have been charged, but those documents remained sealed Friday.

The indictment notes that the activity took place from May 2007 through February 2008.

Garza appeared Friday before U.S. Magistrate Judge B. Janice Ellington. She set a $25,000 cash bond.

Arraignment is set for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.

At a glance:

U.S. Department of Homeland Security Customs and Border Protection officer Guadalupe Garza, 64, indicted Sept. 2 by a federal grand jury in the U.S. District Court Southern District of Texas.

>Count 1: conspiracy to transport aliens

>Counts 2-3: transporting aliens in the U.S.

>Counts 4-8: bringing aliens into the U.S.

>Counts 9-13: bribery

Penalty: For counts 1-3, up to five years in prison and/or a $250,000 fine: counts 4-8, from three to 10 years in prison and/or a $250,000 fine; and for counts 9-13, up to 15 years in prison and/or a $250,000 fine.

Source: U.S. District Court Southern District of Texas

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/pills_89765___article.html/accused_sex.html