Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Trooper Thomas Bledsoe Charged with Indecent Exposure

A Texas State Trooper, Thomas James Bledsoe, has been suspended with pay after he was charged with indecent exposure, a class B misdemeanor, in the Cherokee County Court-at-Law.

Mr. Bledsoe is charged with exposing himself before another department employee while standing in his office on Feb. 3.

The complaint alleged Sgt. Bledsoe was "reckless about whether another person was present who would be offended or alarmed by his act."

The complaint was filed with County Attorney Craig Caldwell by Jo Anna Miles, an employee of the DPS office in Jacksonville.

Sgt. Bledsoe turned himself in to authorities last week and immediately posted a $1,000 bond after being arraigned by Justice of the Peace James Morris, Precinct 3.

Although Ms. Miles is an employee of the Texas Department of Public Safety, her salary is paid by Cherokee County.

Sgt. Bledsoe completed his trooper training and had been assigned to the Jacksonville office since February 2004.

He was promoted to sergeant in December 2008.

He was suspended with pay on Friday, March 20.

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http://www.tylerpaper.com/article/20090325/NEWS01/903250307

Capt. Clarence Arthur Ebarb Jr. Arrested for Family Assault

San Benito Police Capt. Clarence Arthur Ebarb Jr. was arrested on a family assault charge by Harlingen police.

Ebarb, a 58-year-old Harlingen resident, was arrested about 3:20 a.m. Saturday after a disturbance at the Palm Terrace Apartments, 1501 Sam Houston St., jail records show.

According to a Harlingen police news release, Ebarb's wife told police he had "forcefully grabbed her arms and repeatedly pushed and pulled her."

Ebarb has been placed on unpaid leave pending the outcome of his case.

San Benito Mayor Joe Hernandez said, "It's surprising. It's a shocker, but we have to continue going forward. It hurts because, with one little incident, (people) label every (police officer) as a bad person. They don't look at all the good they do."

Officer Armando Posada Arrested for Drunk Driving

SAN BENITO

A San Benito police officer was arrested last week on a drunken driving charge while he was driving an unmarked San Benito police vehicle, Department of Public Safety spokesman Trooper Johnny Hernandez said Wednesday.

Hernandez said Armando Posada, a 40-year-old San Benito resident, was off duty when he was pulled over for speeding while travelling east on FM 510 near Bayview about 12:30 a.m. Friday.

"He refused a field sobriety test and he refused a breath test," Hernandez said. "But he was highly intoxicated."

The DPS spokesman said Posada did not identify himself as a police officer at the time of his arrest and was driving an unmarked police pickup.

Acting police chief George Gomez said officers are allowed to take unmarked police vehicles home with them.

Posada was jailed at the Los Fresnos Police department but was no longer held there or in the Cameron County jail late Wednesday.

Military Officer Sgt. Grady Riley Arrested on Child Porn Charges


A Fort Bliss military police officer has been indicted on child pornography charges, federal agents announced Tuesday.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested Staff Sgt. Grady Michael Riley on Monday at the Army post.

Riley, 33, was charged with one count of possession of child pornography and one count of receiving child porn ography, said Leticia Zamarripa, an ICE spokeswoman. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in prison, she said.

U.S. Magistrate Norbert J. Garney read Riley the charges at a preliminary hearing Tues day.

Zamarripa said Riley was the object of a yearlong investigation.

ICE agents in February seized two computers from his home in the 12000 block of Hosea. They found 2,822 sexually explicit images and 150 child pornography videos, Zamarripa said.

Jail records show Riley was being held in the El Paso County Jail without bond.

Zamarripa said child porn ography cases often fall under ICE's jurisdiction because most of the illicit material is imported.

Riley was the second Fort Bliss soldier in a year arrested on child pornography charges. Arkon Christopher Caldwell, also a military police officer, was sentenced in July to 96 months in federal prison after being convicted on child pornography charges.

Former Officer Dennis Tasker Charged with Sex Abuse Involving Child

KINGSTON, N.Y.

A former upstate police officer is charged with multiple counts of sex abuse involving at least one child.

Dennis Tasker of New Paltz was charged Monday with two counts of felony criminal sexual act and one count of sexual course of conduct to a child. He's also charged with sexual abuse, forcible touching and endangering the welfare of a minor. He was being held in Ulster County Jail without bail.

State police say the 61-year-old performed sexual acts on a child during a 12- to 18-month period. Tasker was previously a police officer with the New Paltz and Town of Ulster police departments. He resigned from the Town of Ulster department after he was accused of stalking an ex-girlfriend.

New Paltz court officials had no attorney listed for him as of Tuesday afternoon.

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http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090324/NEWS/90323046

Officer James Watson Facing Additional Charges

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation says James Watson, 27, was an officer with the Nashville Police Department when he solicited sodomy from a 17-year-old boy earlier this month.

Watson is now charged with violating his Oath of Office which is a felony.

He voluntarily resigned from the police department effective this past Monday.

While Watson was not on duty at the time of his arrest, investigators say this latest charge could result in the loss of his police certificate.

Watson was arrested on Friday, March 13th. He is now out on bond.

Previous Post: http://whathappenedtoprotectandserve.blogspot.com/2009/03/officer-james-watson-charged-with.html

Officer Daniel Dominguez Arrested for Assaulting Girlfriend


OKLAHOMA CITY


An Oklahoma City police officer is arrested at a metro mall, accused of threatening his girlfriend a day before at a local hospital, police said.

Police alleged that Daniel Dominguez, 41, threatened a 37-year-old woman, identified by police as his on-again, off-again girlfriend, while he was working security Monday at the Oklahoma Spine Hospital.

He was arrested at about 6 p.m. Tuesday at Crossroads Mall, where he also works security, and taken to the Oklahoma County Jail, where he remains on Wednesday.

Dominguez has not been charged, but he has been placed on administrative leave pending a criminal and internal investigation, police said.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Undercover Narcotics Officer Rick Ramsdale Charged with Trafficking

A 46-year-old Alamogordo Department of Public Safety undercover narcotics agent was arrested for suspected trafficking of cocaine Saturday, an ADPS spokesman said.

ADPS Director Sam Trujillo said officer Rick Ramsdale is charged with trafficking by possession with intent to distribute.

Trujillo said the New Mexico State Police searched Ramsdale's home and found 1.3 pounds of suspected cocaine.

He said his department is continuing its own internal investigation of Ramsdale.

Trujillo said state police continues its own investigation of Ramsdale's suspected possession of cocaine.

According to Otero County Detention Center records, Ramsdale was released from OCDC on a $50,000 bail bond with no ten percent to appear in court April 22.

"Narcotics agents were conducting a surveillance investigation on an unrelated case Friday," Trujillo said. "One agent noticed the erratic behavior of Ramsdale that's what alerted the agent, something was wrong."

He said Ramsdale was transported to a local hospital for an evaluation.

Trujillo said the drug test at the hospital indicates the presence of cocaine.

"There was no indication prior to Ramsdale's behavior," he said. "We contacted the state police because we believe a crime has been committed by one of our employees."

Trujillo said the two investigations being conducted were initiated by his department.

"Ramsdale has been placed on administrative leave without pay pending a termination hearing," he said. "He was arrested by state police after being released from the hospital."

Detective Lt. Lee Wilder said they conducted an internal investigation.

"We notified the District Attorney's office," Wilder said. "The DA's office notified the state police. It would be unethical for us to truly investigate our own officer."

Trujillo said it is disturbing that ADPS had an officer arrested for suspected criminal activity.

"We do have to police our own," he said. "I do have to commend the other narcotics agents for stepping forward and making sure this did not continue."

Ramsdale started working as a undercover narcotics officer five weeks ago. He has worked as patrol officer at ADPS for one year. He was an Otero County Sheriff's Department deputy for five years prior to working at ADPS.

UPDATE on Officer Scott Moss Charged with Domestic Violence

A Seattle Police officer was charged Wednesday with second-degree assault for a domestic violence incident at his home outside Sammamish.

Officer Scott Moss, 39, was arrested early March 21 after his wife ran to a neighbor's home and called 911. She told King County Sheriff's deputies that Moss had pushed her as she tried to leave during an argument and thrust a kitchen knife toward her hand, cutting her right thumb, court documents say.

His wife's thumb was bleeding when deputies arrived, court documents say.

The argument started after his wife receievd a cell phone call from a woman who said Moss was having an affair with the caller's friend. Moss' wife confronted him when he got home, court documents say.

His arraignment is set for April 7 in King County Superior Court.

The Police Department seized Moss's gun and badge after his release from jail on a $10,000 bond. A 15-year veteran, he has been re-assigned from his position as an acting sergeant in the department's Office of Professional Accountability. Moss had taken a civil service promotional exam and was on a list of potential candidates for sergeant, the Police Department said in a statement.

Moss formerly worked for the department's media relations unit. In 2005, Moss was stopped for drunken driving but the charge was reduced to first-degree negligent driving, according to court records.

The court in this case ordered a protection order between Moss and his wife, who have been married 14 years and have four children, court documents say.

When deputies arrested him, Moss denied assaulting his wife, saying "all I did was move her out of the way," according to court documents.

To read a special Seattle P-I report about domestic violence and police, click here.

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Previous Post: http://whathappenedtoprotectandserve.blogspot.com/2009/03/officer-scott-moss-accused-of.html

Veteran Houston Officer Being Investigated for Sexual Assault

HOUSTON

A 30-year veteran Houston policeman is being investigated amid allegations he sexually assaulted another male in southwest Houston, sources tell FOX 26.

A gun may have been involved in the incident, and the victim of the alleged assault has submitted a rape kit, sources said.

Meanwhile, the officer is relieved of duty pending the outcome of the criminal and internal investigations, sources said.

FOX 26 is withholding the identity of the officer because no charges have been filed against him.

However, Houston police have confirmed that he has been relieved of duty, although they declined to comment on the issue.

When Evidence From Surveillance Cameras Leads to Charges Against Officers

Surveillance cameras have captured the faces of criminal suspects in banks, in elevators and on street corners. But they have also surfaced in an unexpected law enforcement role: as evidence against police officers accused of misconduct or of lying on the witness stand.

The latest such case emerged on Monday, when a New York City detective, Debra Eager, 41, was indicted on three felony perjury charges after her testimony before a grand jury about a 2007 drug arrest “starkly contradicted” video surveillance of the event, according to Robert T. Johnson, the Bronx district attorney.

Detective Eager pleaded not guilty to the charges, said her lawyer, Peter E. Brill, who pointed out that she had 15 years’ experience on the force and no disciplinary history. He explained the discrepancies between her testimony and the video as honest mistakes.

Mr. Johnson, commenting on the case, said in a statement that “untruthful testimony” from law enforcement officers “strikes at the very heart of our system of justice and seriously erodes public confidence in our courts.”

Detective Eager’s indictment is one of several in recent months in which video recordings played a role in establishing criminal cases against police officers or led prosecutors to drop charges against suspects the officers had arrested.

In September, the Manhattan district attorney’s office dropped charges of attempted assault, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct against a cyclist, Christopher Long, after videotape showed a police officer, Patrick Pogan, knocking him off his bicycle during a cycling event in Manhattan last summer. Mr. Pogan was indicted in December on charges of assault and filing false paperwork, and has since resigned.

In January, two undercover narcotics officers, Officer Henry Tavarez and Detective Stephen Anderson, were charged with official misconduct and conspiracy after prosecutors said they lied about a “buy and bust” operation at a bar in Queens. One of the men they had arrested, on charges of selling the officers drugs, produced video evidence showing that the officers had had no contact with him or three other suspects, prosecutors said. The charges against the men were dropped.

Last month, assault charges were dropped against a truck driver, Michael Cephus, after a video showed a police officer, Maurice Harrington, hitting him 10 times with a metal baton on Delancey Street in Manhattan, according to Brian Orlow, a lawyer for Mr. Cephus.

Alicia Maxey Greene, a spokeswoman for the Manhattan district attorney’s office, confirmed that the office was investigating Officer Harrington, but declined to comment further.

Also last month, Officer David London was indicted on charges of assault and filing false records after video from a surveillance camera at an Upper West Side building showed that he pulled a man he had accused of resisting arrest out of an elevator and beat him 18 to 20 times with a baton. Officer London has pleaded not guilty.

Detective Eager was released on a $15,000 personal recognizance bond, and her case was adjourned until May 12. Each of the three counts carries a maximum sentence of seven years in prison, prosecutors said.

Mr. Brill said Detective Eager had no incentive to lie. “What did she have invested in lying?” he said on Tuesday, recounting his remarks in court the day before. “She has made 1,300 arrests.”

The chief spokesman for the Police Department, Paul J. Browne, declined to comment on Detective Eager’s case other than to say that she had been suspended from the force. But when asked to comment about police officers accused of perjury, he said, “It does not happen often, but when it does, it is baffling why police officers would risk prosecution and their careers to advance a criminal case rather than let the chips fall where they may.”

The case against Detective Eager stems from her arrest of three people on drug charges in November 2007 at an apartment building on Holland Avenue in the Bronx.

In an excerpt from her grand jury testimony, released by Mr. Johnson’s office, Detective Eager says she and a partner left their van and entered the building through a broken door to follow two men who they believed had two boxes of marijuana. In another excerpt, she says she and her partner “went up to the fourth floor” and then “to the fifth floor” when they heard the suspects jingling keys to unlock Apartment 55N.

The third perjury count was based on her remarks that during the arrest she had recovered two boxes of marijuana, one 15 pounds and the other 18 pounds.

The district attorney’s statement does not say what the video showed, but claims that her testimony was “specific in detail” and contradicted by the video surveillance.

The felony and misdemeanor charges were dropped against the drug suspects last October, prosecutors said.

Mr. Brill said the surveillance video became part of the case when one or more of the defendants filed a complaint against Detective Eager with the Civilian Complaint Review Board.

Mr. Brill said that after Detective Eager saw the video, she realized that “some of the things she said in the grand jury were incorrect based upon not lying, but mistakes she had made in recalling this.”

Within days, he said, she went to the district attorney’s office and explained the situation.

Mr. Brill said the video showed that Detective Eager and her partner had gone up to the fifth floor separately, perhaps minutes apart, and that members of the police team she was with made the recovery of the boxes — she did not recover them on her own.

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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/25/nyregion/25perjury.html?_r=1

Correction Officer Richard Alsup Arrested for Molesting Child



A Marion County sheriff's correction officer is facing serious charges following accusations of child molest.

Richard Alsup was arrested Tuesday after police were notified by Child Protective Services investigators.

A 14-year-old relative told authorities that Alsup had molested her for two years. She said the latest incidents happened earlier this month at the Mariners Village Apartment Complex on the city's west side.

"Although he has ties with the sheriff's dept and impd from the standpoint of who he is does not matter in reference to the investgation of criminal matters," said Lt. Jeff Duhamell, Indianapolis Metro Police Department.

When Alsup was questioned about the accusations he stated that he wasn’t sure if the incident occurred.

Alsup faces several charges including child molest, incest and sexual misconduct with a minor.

He's being held in the Marion County Jail without bond. He's currently being kept under close watch, away from the rest of the jail population.

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Other Information:
http://www.wthr.com/Global/story.asp?S=10068877

http://www.theindychannel.com/news/19010756/detail.html

Amnesty International Criticize Police in Michigan for Taser Death

DETROIT

Amnesty International criticized police in Michigan on Tuesday for using a Taser to subdue a 15-year-old boy who died shortly afterward, saying it illustrates the dangers of the electroshock weapon.

Bay City police said an officer used a Taser on Brett Elder on Sunday because he tried to fight with them. The teen would have turned 16 Tuesday.

An autopsy was conducted on Monday, but a cause of death has not yet been determined, said Lt. John Card, commander of the state police's Bay City post. He said the investigation into the incident is ongoing.

The London office of Amnesty International, an outspoken critic of Tasers, issued a statement Tuesday saying the death "reinforces the need for greater caution" before Tasers are distributed more widely.

"Tasers should only be used in life-threatening situations, and this doesn't appear to be such an instance," said Oliver Sprague, director of Amnesty International's arms program in Britain. "Surely another form of restraint could have been applied in this case."

A spokesman for Taser International, based in Scottsdale, Ariz., said Amnesty was "inappropriately jumping to conclusions" about the teen's death.

"The Taser itself has saved thousands of lives, and medical science has shown it to be the safer alternative compared to any other tool on an officer's belt today," said spokesman Steve Tuttle.

"We stand behind the safety of our Taser devices, and medical science supports this stance, especially in terms of human testing," Tuttle said.

Bay City police turned the case over to Michigan State Police for investigation. The department also placed one officer on administrative leave while it conducts an internal probe of whether its rules were followed.

Amnesty International said it was the second death of a minor after Taser use this year in the U.S. and one of 351 deaths after use of a Taser in the U.S. since June 2001. Tuttle said the Taser has been exonerated as a cause or contributing factor in the vast majority of deaths.

City police Chief Michael Cecchini defended his officers' actions at a news conference Tuesday. He said officers were trying to settle a verbal dispute between Elder and a man, and the officers acted when the youth became unruly and took a "fighting stance" against them.

The officers handcuffed Elder but saw he was having a medical problem and gave assistance while calling an emergency medical crew.

His father, Eugene Elder, told The Bay City Times that while his son was unruly, police shouldn't have used the Taser on him. "There's no reason to kill my boy," he said.

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Other Information:
http://www.freep.com/article/20090324/NEWS05/903240395/1007/NEWS/State+Police+look+into+Taser+death+in+Bay+City

Deputy Accused of Writing Ticket While Woman Dies

A Tennessee man who was rushing his 83 year-old mother to a hospital says a sheriff's deputy stopped him for an expired tag and wrote up the ticket while the man's mother died in the back seat.

Wayne Ables said he was stopped on March 12, 2009. Ables said his mother Vernice Ables suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and stopped breathing during the traffic stop.

He asked the unidentified deputy to follow him to Saint Francis Hospital-Bartlett, less than a mile away, and write the ticket there. The deputy refused, instead calling an ambulance while at the same time checking Ables' license and insurance.

The incident is under investigation, according to reports.

Veteran Officer Sgt. Michael Tindall Robs Bank


At 1 p.m. the FBI announced the arrest of a 23 year veteran of the Conroe Police Department for allegedly robbing the 1st Bank of Conroe, located at 2201 Westview in Conroe on Aug. 11, 2008.

Sgt. Michael Tindall was arrested this morning at the FBI field office in Conroe.

According to the complaint, Tindall was off-duty and monitoring a police radio, when he allegedly walked into the bank wearing gloves, a white motorcycle helmet with a clear visor and aviator style glasses, a dark color jacked or shirt, blue jeans, white athletic shoes, carrying a black bag and demanded money, which was received in the amount of over $28,000.

Details emerging from the press conference stated Tindall was employed at that Bank part-time as a security officer. The complaint states the robber only demanded money from the bottom drawer, which did not contain “bait money” used to track robbers, which is said to be that bank’s policy and not an industry standard.

During the investigation, FBI Special Agent Soo J. Barrow reviewed surveillance video from Aug. 10, the day prior to the robbery, when a uniformed officer, identified as Tindall by CPD Task Force Officer Dorcy McGinnis, used a rear entrance that allows access to the teller area, where he lingered talking on a cell phone, and walked into the drive-through area. A review of Tindall’s bank account, at that bank, shows he made a deposit around that time, but the time spent in the teller area, approximately 12 minutes, far exceeded that required to have made the transaction, according to the complaint.

Conroe Police Chief Charlie Ray stood alongside FBI officials and also addressed the media during the press conference.

Additional details will be added soon, along with video of the press conference.

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http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/hotstories/6337329.html

Officer Patrick Dotson Charged with Attempted Murder


Baltimore police have charged a city officer with attempted murder, accusing him of firing his service weapon during an off-duty fight outside a Canton nightclub this month.

Police said Officer Patrick A. Dotson, 26, who has been on the force two years, was suspended Monday when investigators determined he was involved in the March 8 incident outside Fins on the Square in the 2900 block of O'Donnell St.

Dotson and other officers got into an argument in the bar that turned into a fight and spilled outside about closing time, according to police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi. Dotson is accused of firing his weapon at a vehicle, hitting it in the rear. The men in the car left the scene and called 911.

Guglielmi said Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III suspended Dotson immediately after he was identified as a suspect.

"The commissioner has zero tolerance for this kind of thing," Guglielmi said.

Dustin Jackson, 25, who suffered two chipped teeth in the skirmish, said he did not know the man who fired the shots at his car was an officer until he was contacted by internal affairs. He said the shots were fired as he tried to leave the area.

"My buddy saw the guy who I had been getting in a fight with and said, 'Oh crap, he's got a gun,'" Jackson said. "That's when we saw him pull it from his side and fire the shot."

Jackson said that the bullet struck his gas tank. He said he was concerned that the other officers involved did not try to intervene and that none of them reported the incident. "Why wouldn't you come forward?" he said.

A source with knowledge of the investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the case said that bar staff was familiar with at least one of the officers, leading to the identification of the officers who were suspended.

Guglielmi said another officer, Fontaine W. Smallwood, has been suspended but is not expected to face criminal charges. A female officer who was with them has not been disciplined.

As a pair, Dotson and Smallwood have brought charges in numerous drug cases that are pending in District and Circuit courts. Guglielmi said they work on an initiative focused on the Pennsylvania Avenue corridor, and records indicate they are assigned to the Western District. It was unclear how the suspensions would affect the pending cases.

Several officers have recently faced criminal charges. Officer Robert H. Gordon, 44, and his wife were charged with stealing from an Owings Mills Wal-Mart. Robert Knotts, 24, a new recruit who was participating in field training in the Northwest District, was suspended after being charged this month with first-degree assault in Baltimore County.

Next week, Detective Terry Love Jr., 32, is scheduled to go on trial in the beating a man outside a Govans barbershop. Tommy Sanders III, 38, is set to go to trial on charges of manslaughter. He is accused of fatally shooting an unarmed man while on duty.

And this month, a police trial board recommended the firing of Officer Christopher Vallejo, 32, who in February 2008 was found guilty of assaulting a woman in Federal Hill.

Jackson said his experience was troubling but that it did not change his opinion of the Police Department.

"One bad apple doesn't spoil the bunch to me," Jackson said. "From how it's been handled ... to me, it's been very thorough, and internal affairs done an excellent job."

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More Information: Update 3/25

Judge, Prosecutor, & 2 Officers Charged with Misconduct

DETROIT

A former assistant Wayne County prosecutor, two Inkster police officers and a retired Wayne County circuit judge were charged with misconduct for their roles in allegedly hiding the relationship of a police informant who was a witness in a 2005 drug trial.

Karen Plants, the assistant prosecutor who retired in November, was charged by 36th District Court Magistrate Sidney Barthwell Jr. with five counts of misconduct and one count of conspiring to commit perjury.

Barthwell charged Inkster police officers Scott Rechtzigel and Robert McArthur with two counts each of conspiring to commit perjury and one count each of misconduct.

Former Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Mary Waterstone was charged with three counts of misconduct.

All are free on $25,000 personal bonds. The perjury charges carry a sentence of up to life in prison, the misconduct charges each carry a maximum of five years in prison.

"It is a sad day because law enforcement professionals are involved as defendants," State Attorney General Mike Cox said. "Nonetheless, this case is important because the allegations here undermine the credibility of our justice system."

The defendants were flanked by six lawyers and were charged in front of a packed courtroom. Their preliminary exams are set for April 28.

Cox filed a request for charges this morning. His office investigated the case after prosecutors from four counties declined to serve as a special prosecutor. The cases are expected to be lengthy and complex.

The officers are accused of lying to conceal the role of an informant in a March 11, 2005, cocaine bust. When the case made its way to circuit court in September 2005, Waterstone is accused of knowing of the cover-up and allowing the officers to testify that the informant did not have a connection to the police.

Waterstone also signed orders banning the defendants' attorneys from access to the informant's cellular telephone records because they would have showed he talked to one of the officers.

Plants is accused of never having corrected the testimony of the officers. Although the judge was informed of the perjury, the attorneys for the defendants arrested in the bust were not told, according to the report.

Prosecutor Kym Worthy suspended Plants with pay last April after the State Attorney Grievance Commission brought a formal complaint, and Plants took an early retirement option in November. Worthy then asked the attorney general to find another prosecutor to handle the case.

Worthy came under fire for not taking action before the commission filed its complaint. Worthy has said she thought Plants' actions complied with Michigan Rules of Professional Conduct for lawyers.

Former CHP Officer Abram Carabajal Accused of Fixing Ticket for Sex


SAN DIEGO

A former California Highway Patrol officer accused of fixing a speeding ticket for a female motorist in exchange for sexual favors pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges of perjury, conspiracy to obstruct justice and accepting a bribe.

Abram Anthony Carabajal, 51, of Oceanside, surrendered to authorities on an arrest warrant and was taken into custody after Vista Judge Marshall Hockett set bail at $50,000.

Carabajal faces up to five years and four months in prison if convicted of the felony charges, said Deputy District Attorney Jeffrey Dort.

A readiness conference was scheduled for April 6 and a preliminary hearing for April 8.

Carabajal, a 26-year veteran, resigned from the CHP during the investigation, authorities said.

The officer pulled over Shirin Zarrindej for speeding on March 12, 2008, and, at some point, developed a relationship with her, prosecutors allege.

Carabajal testified under oath last July that he was not served with a subpoena, so the speeding case against Zarrindej was dismissed, according to Paul Levikow of the District Attorney's office.

Levikow said Carabajal and Zarrindej were seen walking arm-in-arm to a room at the Guesthouse Inn in Oceanside right after the court appearance. The woman later conceded the two had sex, he said.

Zarrindej, 47, faces felony charges of subordination of perjury, giving a bribe and conspiracy to obstruct justice.

She was arrested Monday in Los Angeles, posted bail and is scheduled to make her initial court appearance on April 13.


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State Police Investigation Taser Death of 15-year-old

State Police said Monday they have started an investigation into the death of a 15-year-old Tasered by Bay City police officers who were trying to break up a fight between him and another male at an apartment.

City police placed one officer on administrative leave, said Deputy Chief Thomas Pletzke.

"This is a very tragic event," said police Chief Michael Cecchini. He said his department would conduct an internal investigation into whether the officer followed policy when using the Taser.

Police didn't immediately release the teen's name, but the Bay City Times identified him as Brett Elder.

A Bay City Police news release said officers answered a report of a fight about 3:40 a.m. Sunday. Two males were arguing in an apartment, and one of them "attempted to fight the officers," the statement said.

"The male subject was then Tasered and taken into custody," it said. "Medical personnel were summoned immediately due to the subject's reactions."

He was pronounced dead at Bay Regional Medical Center.

"He was flopping around and looked like a fish out of water. That's the only way to explain it -- his whole body was bent over," Cindy Hernden, Elder's aunt, told WNEM-TV.

Hernden said Elder tried to punch one of the officers, but she said the use of a Taser was excessive, contending her nephew already was in handcuffs. Pletzke disputed the statement, saying Elder was not handcuffed when he was hit with the Taser.

An autopsy was planned Monday, but tests for alcohol and drugs were expected to take several days.

Police said they arrested a relative of the teen at the hospital on accusations of assaulting a police officer there and of resisting and obstructing police. Charges were expected Monday.

Elder had been attending Wenona High School, an alternative school, for about three weeks. He attended Bay City Central High School earlier this school year.

"He was a pleasant enough young man," Wenona Principal Jerry Lombardo said.

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More Information: http://abclocal.go.com/wjrt/story?section=news/local&id=6726247

Officer Michael Furlow Arrested for DWI

LUBBOCK, TEXAS

A Lubbock Police officer is on paid administrative leave, following his arrest for driving while intoxicated Friday night.

According to Capt. Greg Stevens, Lubbock Police responded to a call of a one vehicle accident in the 6500 block of the west frontage road of Interstate Highway 27, in which a black Ford pickup had struck a guardrail.

Upon their arrival, responding officers identified the driver as off-duty Lubbock Police officer Michael Furlow. Officers determined that probable cause indicating that Furlow was intoxicated existed. He was arrested for Driving While Intoxicated and taken to the Lubbock County Sheriff's Office jail.

The on-duty LPD Shift Commander immediately placed Furlow on Administrative Leave after his arrest.

On Monday, March 23, 2009, the Chief of Police ordered an Internal Affairs investigation into Furlow's arrest. He remains on paid Administrative Leave as the matter is being investigated.

Furlow started with the department on February 6, 1989. The traffic accident involved only Furlow's vehicle and no injuries.

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http://www.myfoxlubbock.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=8385906&version=3&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.2.1

Three Chicago Officers Accused of Aggravated Battery

CHICAGO

Prosecutors accused three Chicago police officers of beating and covering up instead of serving and protecting as their trial got under way in Cook County Circuit Court.

The three officers, who were off-duty at the time, are accused of attacking two brothers while they played pool with friends. The fight was caught on tape by surveillance cameras at the Jefferson Tap & Grille.

Assistant State's Attorney LuAnn Snow on Monday said the two victims kept asking what was going on as they were attacked. However, defense attorneys said it was Barry and Aaron Gilfand who were the aggressors in the brawl.

Officers Paul Powers, Gregory Barnes and Sgt. Jeffery Planey are charged with aggravated battery. Planey is also accused of official misconduct.

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Information from: Chicago Sun-Times, http://www.suntimes.com/index
Other Information: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-cops-beating-jefferson-tapmar24,0,5641098.story

Monday, March 23, 2009

Did these Officers Deserve What They Got?

The deaths of four Oakland police officers gunned down in the line of duty Saturday afternoon are undisputable, immutable, irrevocable proof of the chaotic level of predatory violence on the streets of this city.

Even as crime dipped in the first three months of the year, gun violence has continued largely unabated - and now it has claimed the lives of four police officers.

The shootings of Sgt. Mark Dunakin and Officer John Hege during a seemingly routine traffic stop in East Oakland, and Sgts. Daniel Sakai and Ervin Romans two hours later as they burst into an apartment looking for the killer, will have lasting repercussions for a city already regarded as one of the most violent in the country.

It can't help but worsen already sky-high tensions between police and people who live in the city's toughest neighborhoods. Officers will be more wary than ever in dealing with everyday confrontations and routine incidents, like traffic stops - and that raises the danger level for everyone involved.

In recognition of the pressure, grief and chaos created by the shootings, every Oakland officer on duty at the time was given Sunday off to be with family and friends and come to terms with their frustration and anger.

Unfortunately, that anger is sure to be ratcheted up by anti-police rumblings that have followed the shootings.

By late afternoon Saturday, a group of about 50 people lined 73rd Avenue, a block from where Dunakin and Hege were shot. Some shouted obscenities aimed at police. Others said the officers' deaths were retribution for the fatal shooting of Oscar Grant, the unarmed Hayward man killed by a BART police officer on an Oakland train platform New Year's Day. Shouts of, "They had it comin!' " were heard in the crowd.

Uhuru House, an activist group that dates back to the 1970s, held an East Oakland rally at which some members said the killings were a foreseeable reaction to years of police brutality in disenfranchised communities.

If the members of Uhuru House and the so-called activists who took to the streets of Oakland in January to protest the Grant shooting have any real notion of what social justice means, they will surely stand with the community now in denouncing Saturday's killings.

Otherwise, nothing they have said or done to seek justice for Grant will amount to a hill of beans.
If an infinitesimal segment of the city's population lacks the maturity or compassion to mourn the loss of any human life - including those of police officers who risk their lives for ours - I say it's time for decent folks, us "99 percenters," to show them how we feel.

City officials are asking all residents to attend a candlelight vigil at 6 p.m. Tuesday at 74th Avenue and MacArthur Boulevard, where the first act of Saturday's tragedy played out. That's a proper sentiment, but it's not enough.

If the killings of four Oakland police officers don't evoke moral outrage in every single resident in this city, then I fear we may be too far gone to fight back.

The city should declare an official day of mourning and ask residents to wear a black armband - and put a badge on it - so everyone knows where we stand.

In the city's most troubled communities, it's clearer than ever that the fear of retaliatory violence has cowed law-abiding citizens and left the police standing alone against the bad guys.

It's time for every Oakland resident who can lift a sign, shout a slogan - or use a pair of binoculars in a neighborhood watch program - to do so. Because if we don't all come together to put an end this madness, what happened Saturday may turn out to be not just one of the worst days in Oakland's history, but a sad harbinger of its future.

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This article appeared on page A - 11 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Hutchinson Police Being Investigated for Police Brutality

Allegations of police brutality lead to an investigation of the Hutchinson Police Department.

A Hutch man says he was kicked several times by an officer during an arrest. He's hoping dash cam video of the incident leads to disciplinary action.

Tony White re-enacts his arrest by Hutchinson Police after he crashed his motorcycle last year. White admits he was drunk. His blood alcohol level was .33 and he pled guilty to DUI. That's not what he's disputing. He says the officers used unnecessary force.

"The last thing I remember is an officer saying, 'choke him out, choke him out', and then I passed out," said White.

This is what the incident looks like on police dash cam video. White is in the garage on the left.


"I'm already down and out. What am I going to do? I'm not fighting back," he said.

White admits his allegations are hard to see on tape. He says one of the officers continually kicks him. Despite being intoxicated, he says he was not resisting arrest, but there's no sound on the tape to back that up. What you can see are the injuries to his face when officers lead him out of the garage to the patrol cars. White says he had a deep cut over his eye and bruising on his side.

White wants an investigation into the incident. Hutch Police say they've done a preliminary investigation and have turned it over to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.

In the mean time, White says he'll keep pushing until someone admits wrong doing.

"I knew I screwed up. I'm a man. I can take it," said White. "I did my time. I paid my fines. I think they need to do the same before they hurt anyone else."

White is looking for an attorney to take his case but so far hasn't been able to get one. He believes no one will represent him out of fear of taking on a police department. Other attorneys have said no because they say the video is inconclusive.

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http://www.kansascw.com

Deputy Lt. Hayes Caddou Arrested for Battery

A ranking Assumption Sheriff’s deputy was arrested Monday night on battery charges stemming from a downtown bar fight last month, police said.

Less than two weeks ago, Thibodaux Police Chief Craig Melancon said he believed Lt. Hayes Caddou had not committed any crimes during a Feb. 2 bar fight at Last Call on West Third Street, in which several people claimed they were hit with pepper spray. Caddou was off-duty at the time of the alleged incident.

A subsequent investigation performed by the Lafourche District Attorney’s Office at Melancon’s request came to a different conclusion, however.

Caddou, 27, of 101 Alida Drive, Napoleonville, surrendered to authorities at the Thibodaux Police station, after a warrant was issued for his arrest on five counts of simple battery.

He was booked on the misdemeanor charges at the police station on Canal Boulevard and later released on a $500 personal recognizance bond.

Details on the crimes Caddou is accused of committing were not immediately available.

Neither Melancon nor Lafourche District Attorney Cam Morvant II returned multiple calls this evening.

Video footage from Last Call showed Caddou did not start a fight inside the bar around closing time on Feb. 2, Melancon said March 12.

The video failed to decisively answer who shot pepper spray into the crowd, Melancon added. At least three people received medical attention from paramedics on the scene.

Police investigators were unable to locate any witnesses or victims, making the process of determining a suspect difficult, Melancon said.

Caddou told officers on the scene that he did not start the fight. At the request of his attorney, he later refused to provide a statement to police about the incident.

Caddou serves as a narcotics detective for the Assumption Sheriff’s Office. Last year, he briefly served as the assistant warden of the Assumption jail.

It is unknown what effect this arrest will have on his job, if any.

Assumption Sheriff Mike Waguespack did not return multiple calls this evening seeking comment.

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http://www.houmatoday.com/article/20090324/ARTICLES/903241007/-1/SPORTS16?Title=February-brawl-results-in-cop-s-arrest

Judge Allows Class Action Civil Suit Against Strip Searches

A federal judge has granted class action status to two categories of people in a civil suit that claims officers at Baltimore's Central Booking and Intake Center regularly and illegally detained certain arrestees too long and strip-searched people without cause.

The ruling, issued Thursday in U.S. District Court in Baltimore, opens the door for tens of thousands of people processed from May 2002 through April 2008 to join the suit, which seeks unspecified monetary damages. Central booking processes everyone arrested within city limits.

Class action status means "everything" to the success of the case, attorney William Claiborne said.

"Most of these cases are difficult to try. It's difficult for an individual to get a lawyer, it's difficult for an individual to persuade a jury that he's telling the truth," he said. "But when you have 50 or 60 or 100,000 people coming in, it changes the balance, it really changes the balance of power. It's like having a union."

Lawyers at the Maryland attorney general's office, which represents officials at the intake facility, were reviewing the opinion Friday and were unable to comment. Central Booking officials have denied any wrongdoing in court papers.

Strip searches are supposed to take place only under certain circumstances, yet Claiborne's case is one of a growing number of federal lawsuits alleging that unconstitutional strip searches by Maryland law enforcement officials are routine. A Baltimore man recently filed a civil suit alleging that a city police officer cavity-searched him on the sidewalk without cause, and a group of young women are suing Harford County officers with similar allegations.

This month, state Sen. James Brochin of Baltimore County filed a bill that offers specific strip-search guidelines in response to a Baltimore Sun article that related the experience of Rosemary Munyiri, a nurse who was arrested and strip-searched at Central Booking after a traffic stop.

The bill would prohibit officers from conducting strip searches on people arrested under certain circumstances or for certain minor offenses, allowing exceptions "if the officer has a reasonable suspicion" that certain contraband is being concealed, as the Maryland Court of Special Appeals has deemed appropriate. The bill would also establish rules for strip-search procedure.

A hearing on the bill is scheduled before the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee tomorrow.

The suit Claiborne and his co-counsel filed began with nine people who claim they were treated improperly at Central Booking. They sought class action categories for:

•Those detained for more than 48 hours without having been brought before a commissioner, which is prohibited.

•People arrested for minor, nondrug, nonviolent offenses and strip-searched before they were brought before a commissioner.

•Those who weren't strip-searched privately.

•And male arrestees who were searched to their underwear when female detainees were not.

The latter two categories were denied class action status by U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake.

Former Officer Pedro Martinez Back in Court on Rape Charges

A 20-year city police officer was ordered held on $250,000 cash or surety after he pleaded innocent Monday to 25 counts of sexual crimes involving three victims, including two of his biological daughters.

Assistant District Attorney John Compton had asked for bail of $250,000 cash, with no surety option, saying Pedro J. Martinez faces such long sentences if convicted that he has an incentive to flee.

Raipher D. Pellegrino, Martinez's lawyer, asked that he remain free on the $25,000 bail set in District Court when Martinez was arraigned on three counts of forcible rape of a child and three counts of incest.

"He maintains his innocence," Pellegrino said.

Hampden Superior Court Judge Bertha D. Josephson said that the court must make bail decisions on the likelihood of a defendant to appear in court if released on bail, and added the surety option to Compton's request.

If Martinez is released he will be on electronic monitoring with a zero curfew as he has been since release on bail on the District Court charges, and he must have no contact with the victims.

A pre-trial hearing will be held July 21.

Outside the courtroom after the arraignment, Springfield police Special Victims Unit Lt. Cheryl C. Clapprood said the investigation was very difficult in part because "we have known him for so long."

She said that the man before the court Monday is not the man fellow officers thought they knew.
Clapprood said she was not sure whether there would be any more victims coming forward, but she expects there will be more evidence. The third victim is a female who lived in Martinez' house for a time, she said.

She said the investigation encompasses events as far back as 1985.

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More Information & Video: http://www.cbs3springfield.com/news/local/41710282.html
Previous Post: http://whathappenedtoprotectandserve.blogspot.com/2009/02/officer-pedro-martinez-arrested-for.html

Trial Begins for Former Officer Malik Snell Accused of Robbery


He drove a Dodge Intrepid tricked out like a police narcotics unit undercover car, with tinted windows, lights, sirens, a police radio console, and a screen that separated the front and back seats.

He had his gun.

And, more important, he had his badge.

Those, federal prosecutors say, were the tools of the trade for rogue Philadelphia cop Malik Snell as he targeted suspected narcotics dealers, pulled them over, and stole their cash or their drugs.

Snell, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy, robbery, and witness retaliation, is to go on trial today in U.S. District Court. In October, a trial on some of the charges ended with a hung jury.

An 11-year veteran of the Police Department who was assigned to the 18th District in West Philadelphia, Snell, 36, was fired last year after his arrest in a Pottstown home-invasion case. Two superseding federal indictments have expanded the charges against him.

Among other things, he is now accused of robbing one of the biggest drug kingpins in South Philadelphia and later threatening to kill him because he was cooperating.

The kingpin, Ricardo McKendrick Jr., is expected to be called as a witness for the prosecution.

McKendrick, according to motions filed in the case, has alleged that he was stopped by Snell on Dec. 14, 2007, near Water and Dickinson Streets in South Philadelphia.

Snell, driving the Dodge Intrepid, flashed the car's lights and signaled for McKendrick, who was driving a minivan, to pull over.

Federal prosecutors allege that Snell "removed him from the [minivan] and placed him in handcuffs. . . . Snell then searched the [minivan] and took a diaper bag from the back of the van which contained $40,000 in drug proceeds.

"He put the diaper bag in the trunk of the Intrepid and left [McKendrick] handcuffed and unable to leave," according to a motion filed by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kathy A. Stark and Leo R. Tsao, the prosecutors in the case.

Snell was arrested three days later in connection with an unrelated home invasion in Pottstown. Two men, including his brother-in-law, were charged with breaking into a house where they believed drug money was stashed.

Authorities allege that Snell drove the men to Pottstown and waited outside during the break-in. He and his brother-in-law were arrested after a high-speed police chase, just outside the Montgomery County borough.

Both the brother-in-law, Tyree Aimes, and a second defendant pleaded guilty before trial. Snell's trial ended with a hung jury.

Federal prosecutors, apparently using information supplied by McKendrick and others, have since expanded the charges against Snell. He is being held without bail in the Federal Detention Center on Arch Street.

In the new trial, prosecutors hope to use Aimes' account of other incidents to undermine Snell's assertion that he was an unwitting accomplice, unaware that a robbery was planned on the night of the home invasion.

Snell's attorney, John McMahon of Norristown, has declined to comment about specifics of the case. He is expected to attack the credibility of several government witnesses who come from the drug underworld.

Aimes, according to one prosecution document, has talked about other encounters in which, he says, Snell targeted drug dealers.

Aimes has said that before the Pottstown home invasion, Snell used him to stake out two houses in Philadelphia where narcotics trafficking was allegedly taking place.

After showing him the Intrepid, which Snell allegedly said came from "a friend in the narcotics unit," Aimes said, Snell told him, "I have a job to do" at one of the suspected drug houses.

One house was off the corner of D Street and Allegheny Avenue, and the other was on Callowhill Street between 63d and 64th Streets, according to documents.

Aimes said Snell told him the house on Callowhill was frequently used by a Jamaican marijuana dealer. Aimes said he was watching when Snell, driving the Intrepid, pulled over a woman who had come from the house carrying a bag. The woman was driving a Chevy Malibu, he said.

"Snell pulled the Intrepid out behind her, activated the police lights and pulled the Malibu over," according to a prosecution motion that outlines Aimes' account.

About two hours later, Aimes said, Snell came to his home and gave him a pound of marijuana.

"He told him he had gotten ten pounds of weed from the car stop," according to the motion.

Aimes told authorities that he staked out the house off Allegheny Avenue several times for Snell, but that nothing occurred there.

About the same time, Aimes said, he learned about drug money being stashed in a house in Pottstown and told Snell he "had a job" there.

Snell, he said, agreed to participate.

The Callowhill Street incident is not part of the current indictment, but prosecutors hope to use testimony about it to establish a pattern of criminal activity by Snell.

The charges in the case include the Pottstown home invasion, the robbery of $40,000 from McKendrick, and allegations that Snell later threatened to kill McKendrick and another suspected witness.

McKendrick's father, Ricardo McKendrick Sr., is a former member of the Black Mafia and a longtime Philadelphia drug trafficker, according to investigators who have described the duo as "suppliers to the suppliers" and key players in the Philadelphia drug underworld.

The McKendricks were arrested in April after members of an FBI-Philadelphia Police Department Violent Gang and Drug Task Force raided their South Philadelphia rowhouse.

Authorities found more than 600 pounds of cocaine valued at more than $28 million in the house, in Grays Ferry. It was one of the biggest drug seizures in city history.

The FBI also found nearly $1 million in cash in the trunk of the younger McKendrick's Mercedes, which was parked in the garage of his South Jersey home.

Both McKendricks entered guilty pleas to drug charges in December. Most of the documents in the younger McKendrick's court file relating to his plea have been placed under seal.

McKendrick's decision to cooperate could have ramifications far beyond the current case against Snell. McKendrick's potential debut as a government witness has created a stir in both law enforcement and underworld circles.

Snell allegedly made the threat to "inflict bodily harm" on McKendrick on Jan. 30, shortly after news accounts raised the possibility that he might be cooperating.

Retired Judge James Weaver Arrested Again for Drunk Driving

DES MOINES, Iowa

A retired Muscatine County judge was arrested for a third time over the weekend on a drunken driving charge.

According to Iowa State Patrol officials, 56-year-old James Weaver of Blue Grass was arrested Saturday afternoon in Scott County on charges of operating while intoxicated, speeding, seat belt violation and disobeying a traffic-control device.

Weaver, who served as an associate judge from 1982 to 2004, posted $5,900 bond and was scheduled to appear in court Tuesday morning.

If convicted of a third drunken driving offense, he faces up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $7,500.

An attempt to reach Weaver on Monday morning at a number listed for the Weaver Law Office in Muscatine wasn't immediately returned.

According to the state patrol, Weaver was southbound on Highway 61 on Saturday afternoon when a trooper clocked him for speeding, saw that he failed to stop at a traffic-control device and wasn't wearing a seat belt.

The trooper caught up with Weaver at the Blue Grass exit and detected a strong odor of alcohol on the former judge's breath as well as bloodshot eyes.

Weaver failed a field sobriety test, and when he arrived at the Scott County Jail a breath test showed his blood alcohol content was 0.166, more than twice the legal limit for driving of 0.08, the patrol said.

Weaver pleaded guilty to his first drunken driving offense in November 2002 after a Scott County deputy saw his car hit a utility pole. In December 2004, he was charged with second offense drunken driving after his arrest a month earlier. In that incident, police said a caller complained that a "reckless driver" had almost caused an accident.

Around the same time, Weaver was allowed to retire from the court system with a permanent disability because he was found to suffer from major depression and alcohol abuse.

In April 2005, Weaver was sentenced on the second offense drunken driving charge. He was committed to the Iowa Department of Corrections for two years to be served at a work release center and ordered to participate in alcohol treatment.

Weaver appealed his judgment and sentence to the Iowa Court of Appeals, saying the judge in his case abused his discretion. The appeals court rejected the argument.

Corrections officials have said that Weaver was released from the work release center in the spring of 2007 after serving only 25 days. He was resentenced to one year of unsupervised probation after a district court judge heard arguments on a motion to reconsider his sentence.

Last March, the Iowa Supreme Court suspended Weaver's license to practice law based on the second drunken driving arrest and critical comments he made to the media about the judge overseeing his case. The license has been reinstated, court records showed.

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http://www.kcautv.com/Global/story.asp?S=10053657

Undercover Officer Richard Ramsdale Arrested for Having Cocaine in Police Car

ALAMOGORDO, N.M.

An undercover Alamogordo Department of Public Safety officer has been arrested after officers allegedly found 1.3 pounds of cocaine in his police unit.

Richard Ramsdale has served as an undercover police officer for the Alamogordo Department of Public Safety since last month, a year after he joined the department.

Before that, he served in the narcotics unit in the Otero County Sheriff's Department.

Investigators said the arrest doesn't appear to have compromised any criminal cases.

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http://www.kvia.com/Global/story.asp?S=10056765

Three Aurora Officers Charged with Drunk Driving

AURORA, Ohio

Three police officers in three years, charged with drunk driving, all from the same department.

Sgt. Dirk Piggot, a 24 year veteran of the Aurora Police Department was pulled over for weaving by the State Highway Patrol on March 13th. It happened just north of Columbus.

The Mayor of Aurora, Lynn McGill, told FOX 8's Kristy Steeves that Piggot refused a breathalizer test so his driver's license was immediately suspended.

Residents in Aurora were shocked and disappointed when they heard the news. "I think it's appalling. Obviously a bad example for the citizens of the community which they serve and endangers the citizens of the community in which they serve," said Walter Crate, an Aurora resident.

Mary Allard reacted to the news by saying, "I think he should be removed from the job. He's in charge of everybody and he's supposed to make our streets safe but if he isn't doing his job".

Piggot, who was off duty at the time of his arrest, is the second Aurora police officer in three months to get stopped for an OVI.

In December 41-year-old Scott Garan was pulled over in Kent for erratic driving. Records show he refused all of the sobriety tests and was charged with OVI and criminal damaging.

Those charges came on the heels of him being named Aurora's Top OVI Enforcer at the Portage County MADD banquet in October.

The mayor says Garan ended up resigning from the police department. As for Sgt. Piggot, the mayor says right now, he's on unpaid leave.

Nadine Kotcz, who lives in Aurora, had this to say: "You can't make exceptions whether someone is a police officer or not. I think if it's something that's not right they should be treated like everyone else."

Three years ago a lieutentant was arrested for drunk driving. He's now back on basic patrol. As for Piggot, the mayor says he's just one year shy of retiring. The mayor says if Sgt. Piggot is convicted, he will be disciplined. "We don't coddle people here," said McGill.

Mayor McGill says the drunk driving arrests "gives the city, the department, and the mayor a black eye."

Mayor McGill told FOX 8 that the police officers are cautioned every day about not drinking and driving. "They know better," he said, adding, "There's no excuse, but to be a police officer, you're impared, you don't drive."

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Other Information: http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1237797083279300.xml&coll=2