Saturday, January 16, 2010

Former Officer Daniel Gardner Sentenced to 20 Years for Murdering His Girlfriend

A former Murfreesboro police officer has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty to first-degree murder in the shooting death of his girlfriend.

Forty-3-year-old Daniel Gardner pleaded guilty Wednesday in Nashville to the Jan. 10, 2009, death of 34-year-old Marie Cogburn of Nashville.

Investigators say Gardner shot Cogburn in the back with a rifle during an argument then went to his mother's home to call police. Police say he returned to the scene of the shooting to wait for police and was arrested.

Gardner was a police officer in the 1990s for Murfreesboro.

Former Officer Kachina McAlexander Found Guilty Of Firing Weapon at Police

A former Denver Police officer was found guilty on all counts on Thursday after she was accused of firing her handgun at local law enforcement officers in South Dakota.
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Kachina McAlexander, who resigned from her job with DPD last April, was convicted of three counts of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and one count of reckless use of a firearm.

The jury deliberated for 3.5 hours on Thursday before returning a verdict.

Her trial began on Tuesday.

McAlexander was holed up in a Custer, S.D. motel room on March 24, 2009 when local officers arrived in response to a report that McAlexander might be suicidal.

The 10-year DPD veteran is accused of firing her weapon at the responding officers, none of whom was injured.

Attempted murder charges were initially filed but then thrown out nine months ago.

According to The Denver Post, McAlexander faced weapons charges in 2006 after firing at a television and at the walls of her home in Adams County. Like the March 24 incident, McAlexander was reportedly suicidal at the time.

A judge acquitted McAlexander of the charges and an appeal by prosecutors was not successful.

She is being held without bond at the Pennington County Jail while she waits for sentencing.

She could be sentenced to 25 years in prison for each of the assault counts, plus a $50,000 fine for each count. The reckless use of a firearm charge comes with a sentence of up to one year in prison and a fine of up to $2,000.

The clerk said a sentencing date had not been set.
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Officer Troy Young Linked to Disappearance of Lotto Winner Abraham Shakespeare

An investigation has been launched into whether a Lakeland police officer took money from a woman linked to the disappearance of Lotto winner Abraham Shakespeare, a newspaper is reporting.

Officer Troy Young, 42, has been suspended amid allegations he took money from Dorice "DeeDee" Moore, a person of interest in the missing-millionaire case, according to the Lakeland Ledger.

The newspaper is reporting Young has said he had contact with Moore about her plans to write a book about Shakespeare.

The Polk County Sheriff's Office this week named Moore as a person of interest in the case.

Officer Wilfredo Rosario Convicted of Sexually Assaulting Several Women

A New York City police officer who is accused of sexually assaulting several women was convicted Friday of telling an 18-year-old that he would destroy a summons he was issuing her in exchange for oral sex.

After the jury found the officer, Wilfredo Rosario, guilty of official misconduct and attempted coercion, Justice Daniel P. FitzGerald of State Supreme Court in Manhattan ordered that he be held without bail. Mr. Rosario will face up to a year in jail behind bars when he is sentenced on Jan. 29.

Mr. Rosario faces unrelated charges — including sexual abuse and rape — involving three other women. Those will be decided in a separate trial.

Because of the conviction on Friday, Mr. Rosario was fired, a Police Department spokesman said.

Steven R. Fusfeld, Mr. Rosario’s lawyer, said he planned to appeal the conviction.

“We really are surprised and disappointed with the verdict,” Mr. Fusfeld said in an interview. “I just don’t think there was enough credible evidence to support the verdict.”

The case stemmed from an encounter in 2002 in which Mr. Rosario and his partner saw a woman, now 26, and her male friend sitting in Riverside Park after hours. Mr. Rosario took the woman to one side of the van, while his partner took the man to the other. The woman testified at trial that Mr. Rosario began asking her normal police questions for the summons, like her address and phone number, before the tenor changed.

He asked her if she was “going to make out” with her friend or have sex with him, she testified. She responded no. After that, the woman said, Mr. Rosario asked her if she would perform oral sex on him, agreeing to throw out the summons if she did.

The woman testified that she told Mr. Rosario that she would give him oral sex later, hoping it would buy her time to get out of the situation. They agreed to meet the following day at 4 p.m., she said. But she never again saw Mr. Rosario, she said, and she reported the incident to the authorities a few days later.


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Officer Kelly Lawrence Suspended for Firing Weapon at Neighbors

Gregg County sheriff ’s investigators are conducting a follow - up investigation after a report was made the evening of Jan. 3 of a Longview police officer pointing and firing a gun at his neighbor’s game room behind their residence.

Officer Kelly Lawrence has been suspended with pay pending investigation. He has been with the Longview Police Department since September 2004.

The call for service was received at 10 p.m. and was dispatched for initial investigation the same night, said GCSO public information officer Capt. Mike Claxton.

A report was made by a field deputy and a supervisorwhich has been submitted through normal procedures to the criminal investigation division, according to a press release from the GCSO.

The initial investigation at the scene identified the complaining home owners and the offender, Claxton said.

Deputies recovered a Daisy Power line BB gun during the investigation, which was retained for investigative purposes.

Friday, January 15, 2010

William Bumbrey III Dies After Being Tasered for Shoplifting

Police Tasered a shoplifting suspect and now he is dead, raising new concerns about the use of what is supposed to be a "non-lethal" weapon. It happened in Pentagon City, Virginia after an officer spotted the suspect inside the metro station.

William Randolph Bumbrey III was accused of stealing some store items from a nearby pharmacy. How that routine shoplifting case led to the use of a Taser and a Bumbrey's death is now under investigation. Arlington County police were on the lookout around 8:00 p.m. Sunday for a shoplifting suspect.

An officer went into Metro knowing it could be a quick and easy getaway. That's where police say the officer found Bumbrey, the stolen goods on him.

"When the officer approached the suspect he became combative and fought with the officer," said Detective Crystal Nosal, with Arlington County Police.

Police say the officer then used his Taser. It should have immobilized the 36-year old suspect but it didn't. A second officer arrived for backup. After Bumbrey was handcuffed, the officers noticed he was having problems breathing and called for medics. Bumbrey died shortly after.

"The officer deployed their Taser. It didn't appear to have an effect on the suspect and the suspect continued to struggle with the officer," said Det. Nosal.

State records show Bumbrey has a conviction on racketeering charges and is a registered sex offender in South Carolina who moved to the District in October. Bumbrey's father lives in Northwest DC.

A friend says the elder Bumbrey called him this morning with the news. "I said your son's dead? What do you mean your son is dead?" Leonard Dixon recalled asking his friend. Dixon says the details were scared.

"All he told me is that they used a Taser gun on him and they couldn't subdue him. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand what goes on," said Dixon.

Metro does have cameras inside the Pentagon City Metro, but Metro officials are unaware if the confrontation between the officers and suspect was caught on tape. It's unclear if the Taser even hit Bumbrey. The results of an autopsy and toxicology tests are pending.

Arlington County police say they have more than a hundred Tasers in the department but use them less than 20 times a year. The department says until now it's never had a possible Taser related death.

Police say officers only use the Taser when a suspect fails to comply with orders and the officer fears bodily harm. Unlike the use of a gun, which requires an officer fear for his life, the standards for Tasers are lower because Tasers are not considered deadly force.

Deputy Leo Thao Arrested on Gun Charges

A veteran deputy who recently resigned from the Spartanburg County Sheriff's Office was arrested on a gun charge in New York near the Canadian border Sunday.

An officer in New York told the Herald-Journal Thursday that Leo Thao, 39, remained in the custody of Jefferson County authorities. Thao is accused of carrying a loaded 9-mm handgun in New York without the gun being registered. New York state law classifies carrying a gun without it being registered as a misdemeanor if it is empty and as a felony if it is loaded. The Jefferson County officer said it is a common charge filed against truck drivers.

Thao submitted a resignation letter last week, Spartanburg County Sheriff's Office Public Information Officer Tony Ivey said.

"He tendered a letter of resignation, and the next thing we know, we're getting a call from authorities in New York," Ivey said.

Thao worked at the sheriff's office 14 years, was a master deputy and member of the court security team at the time of his resignation. Ivey said Thao "turned in all equipment," including his service weapon, when he resigned.

The Watertown (N.Y.) Daily Times reported Tuesday that Thao was arrested at U.S. Customs on Wellesly Island and charged with second-degree criminal possession of a weapon. The paper reported that Thao was denied entry to Canada by its Customs officials and sent back to U.S. Customs for further investigation.

Sgt. Greg Huerta Charged with Domestic Battery

A veteran Pocatello police officer has been suspended until he can resolve the domestic violence allegations prosecutors have filed against him.

Police Chief J.R. Miller says Sgt. Greg Huerta, a veteran of more than 20 years with the department, has been suspended with pay. Huerta, 50, was scheduled to be arraigned in one count of misdemeanor domestic battery Thursday.

Huerta did not appear, but has 14 days to do so.

Miller says the department takes domestic violence allegations seriously and has authorized a separate internal investigation.

Citing police reports, the Idaho State Journal says the allegations span several years and include verbal and physical abuse of the victim, with some of the physical confrontations leading to injuries.

Information from: Idaho State Journal, http://www.journalnet.com

Murder Trial for Former Officer Brian Brush Faces Delays

There are more delays in the murder trial of Roseburg-based North River Boats Owner Brian Brush.

47-year-old Brush is accused of shooting his former girlfriend to death in Long Beach, Washington last September. He was set to be arraigned Friday on first-degree murder charges, but his attorney has requested a week long delay. This comes after a mental competency hearing was called off by Brush's lawyer earlier this week.

Brush's formal arraignment has been postponed three times.

Long Beach Police say Brush shot 45-year-old Lisa Bonney in broad daylight on Sept. 11, during an annual classic car rally that draws thousands of people to the Long Beach Peninsula. Bonney was Brush's on-again, off-again girlfriend. According to documents filed with South Pacific District Court in Long Beach, Bonney said she thought Brush was going to kill her during a violent outburst in July of last year.

Brush was hired as a patrol officer with the Medford Police Department in 1988. He left on a medical disability in July of 1994. North River Boats is currently under investigation by the FBI for fraud.

Officer Jerry Nava Resigns After Improperly Pursing Vehicle

A Fort Myers police officer resigned in lieu of being fired today for improperly pursuing a vehicle, according to a department report.

On Dec. 1, Officer Jerry Nava attempted to pull over a Nissan Altima for speeding near the Sam’s Club Plaza on Cleveland Avenue. The vehicle did not stop, so a sergeant gave orders to stop pursuit of the vehicle.

According to internal reports, Nava kept sight of the vehicle and then arrested the driver when he parked in a parking lot.

Nava’s actions break department rules for what constitutes a proper pursuit, the internal report said. Plus, he did not obey orders given by a senior officer.

Top police officials, including Chief Baker, recommended Nava be terminated, but instead he resigned.
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Former Officer Robert Helphenstine Accused of Having Sex with Teen Boy

A former Fallowfield Township police officer accused of having sex with a 17-year-old boy will stand trial.

Officer Robert Helphenstine appeared in court Friday for a preliminary hearing.

He’s accused of picking up a 17-year-old runaway at a Greyhound station in downtown Pittsburgh and having sex with him at his home.

“I believe the hearing went very well. We found that the main witness for the prosecution was incredulous, admitted on the stand that he lied on more than one occasion,” said defense attorney Stephen Misko.

Channel 4 Action News' Sheldon Ingram previously reported that police said Helphenstine, the former officer-in-charge of the department, met the Virginia boy on Liberty Avenue while his trip to California was on a layover.

A new court date has not been set for Misko.

Former Officer Ryan Moore Pleads Guilty to Possession of Marijuana

A former Huntsville Police Officer was sentenced after pleading guilty to possessing marijuana.

Court records showed a small amount of marijuana was found in an equipment bag inside the trunk of Ryan Moore's patrol car.

Moore resigned from the police department and pleaded guilty to charges on September 14th.

Moore, his attorney, prosecution and Moore's friends and family were given a chance to speak before sentencing.

Moore spoke on his own behalf telling the court, "I made a mistake. I didn't turn in the marijuana. I'm sorry to the Huntsville Police Department, my friends and family for dragging them into this. This was truly a misunderstanding."

Moore also explained it's been difficult to find a job with a pending felony charge.

Moore said he has applied to many places but was turned down when the employer found out about his criminal record.

Moore said he is now employed at Publix and found out Friday he passed his managers test.

Moore's friends and family testified Moore knew by 7th grade he wanted to become a police officer.

He graduated from Grissom High School, went on to graduate from Auburn, and then from the police academy.

His father, Douglas Moore told the judge, "I ask for mercy. Ryan has been punished enough. It's been 21 months since he was charged. He was forced to quit the police department."

Prosecutor Don Rizzardi said this has been a hard case.

"I feel Ryan fell under bad influence. He confessed, pled guilty. It takes a man to admit he was wrong. It doesn't make sense to me that he doesn't remember turning in 4 bags of marijuana in his car," he said.

Huntsville Police Internal Affairs Officer also stood before the court.

"It gave us cause for concern but I don't think Ryan Moore belongs in prison," he said.

During sentencing, Judge Karen Hall told Little, "This is not an easy case. I know from what I've read that you must be an upstanding person that made poor decisions. And it seems you were under the influence of a fellow officer whose record wasn't as clear."

Moore was sentenced to a five year split sentence.

He will serve six months at the Madison County jail in active work release.

He has until January 19th to turn himself in.

The balance of his sentence will be suspended. Then he will be placed on a 2 year probation.

The defense has 42 days to appeal.

Former Officer Maurice Morris Sentenced to Seven Years in Prison

A former Riviera Beach police officer who attempted to rape a woman after writing her a traffic ticket was sentenced to more than seven years in prison, according to the State Attorney's Office Friday.

Maurice Morris was convicted of attempted sexual battery by a law enforcement officer, bribery by a public servant and official misconduct.

Morris made a traffic stop October 2008 on a woman in Riviera Beach and wrote her up two traffic citations before following her home to West Palm Beach, the State Attorney's Office said.

The GPS on his police car showed that he was at her home for almost an hour and a half. The victim said that Morris tried to rape her on her couch.

Morris never turned in the victim's tickets and a jury last month convicted Morris.

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Sgt. Scott Krause Convicted of Beating Handcuffed Suspect

A Milwaukee County sheriff's sergeant was convicted Tuesday of beating a suspect handcuffed inside a squad car, where a video camera recorded the entire incident.

Scott Krause, 38, was arrested Oct. 16, within hours of when Ray Calderon had complained to sheriff's officials about being slugged in the face after he asked to use the restroom.

Four days later, Krause was charged with misdemeanor battery and misconduct in public office, a felony. He pleaded no contest to both charges Tuesday, was found guilty, and faces up to nine months in jail on the battery and up to 3½ years in prison on the felony at his sentencing March 5.

Deputy District Attorney Kent Lovern said his office would recommend prison but not a specific term. Lovern said the video is clear and explicit.

"Obviously, such conduct is completely unacceptable . . . and intolerable for a law enforcement officer," he said after the plea hearing.

He said he planned to play the dash cam video at the sentencing but declined news media requests for the video.

His office has reviewed the actions of three other deputies on duty at the jail at the time of the incident and decided no further criminal charges were warranted.

Sheriff's Capt. Aisha Barkow said the three remain on administrative duty pending an internal investigation.

Krause, who has been free on bail and suspended with pay since his arrest, appeared in court with his attorney, Michael Steinle; neither wished to comment after the hearing, held before Circuit Judge Dennis Cimpl.

Calderon's attorney, Jonathan Safran, also attended. He said his client was pleased Krause was found guilty of a felony and is considering a civil lawsuit in the matter. He said Calderon is still receiving treatment for injuries to his eye and his back.

According to the criminal complaint, deputies had arrested Calderon, 34, early Oct. 16 and had taken him to the County Jail, where Krause arrived to assist in the processing. As Calderon sat in the back of the car, he told investigators, he had a strong urge to urinate. Because his hands were cuffed behind him, he tapped on the window with his foot.

Krause opened the door and told Calderon to stop, that he'd get his turn and closed the door. When Calderon again tapped on the window, Krause opened the door, leaned in, slapped Calderon and said, "I told you to stop (expletive) kicking the window, you hear me?" Krause then grabbed Calderon and struck him several times in the face with a closed fist.

An initial news release from the sheriff's office said Calderon was stopped for suspected drunken driving. At a news conference after Krause was charged, Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. said the Wisconsin State Patrol had stopped Calderon - who hasn't had a valid driver's license since 2007 - because he was wanted on two warrants from Winnebago County. Sheriff's deputies were called as backup and transported Calderon to the jail.

Calderon was released from the Winnebago County Jail in November after serving time for driving after revocation.

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Chief Mike Akins Arrested for Child Sex Crimes

A top central Kansas law enforcement officer is accused of rape and child molesting after being arrested Tuesday night at his Inman home.

Inman Police Chief Mike Akins is charged with 17 felonies, including rape, indecent liberties and battery, involving four children 14 years old and younger, and two misdemeanor battery counts.

McPherson County deputies and Kansas Highway Patrol members forcibly entered Akins' home to arrest him after he failed to answer the door.

The 38-year-old joined the Inman Police Department in 2005 and became chief in January 2007.

The Kansas attorney general's office and Kansas Bureau of Investigation are handling the case after being asked a week ago to investigate the chief.

Akins was being held in McPherson County Jail on $250,000 bond.
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Thursday, January 14, 2010

Officer Jeffrey Leavey Arrested for Violating Court Order

A Spokane County Jail deputy accused of attacking his wife last month was arrested again today after police say he violated a court order.

Jeffrey S. Leavey, 40, was booked into jail just after noon. He was arrested at his lawyer’s office after his wife told police he’d been sending her text messages, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

Leavey reportedly sent the woman more than a dozen text messages Wednesday, despite a court order prohibiting him from contacting her.

Leavey was first arrested Dec. 19 at his home in Colbert and placed on paid administrative leave with the Spokane County Sheriff’s Office, where he’s worked for two years.

Leavey reportedly told investigators he’d held his wife down on their bed, told her she couldn’t leave, threw a box at her and hit her in the arms “five to 25 times,” according to court documents. His wife had red marks on her arms and chest, deputies said. He was released from jail on his own recognizance Dec. 21.

Leavey is charged with unlawful imprisonment, two counts of fourth-degree assault and third-degree malicious mischief.

He’s in jail without bail for violating a court order, according to jail records.

Former Sheriff Wesley Wells Pleads Guilty to Lying to Federal Investigators

Acting United States Attorney Kevin F. McDonald stated today that guilty pleas were entered by former Union County Sheriff Wesley Howard Wells, Former County Tax Assessor Willie E. Randall, Jr., and Union County residents Willard Dee Farr and Lapriest Darnell Beacham to charges stemming from four separate indictments issued by a federal grand jury in September 2009 as a result of a long term investigation into public corruption in Union County.

1. Former Union County Sheriff Wesley Howard Wells pled guilty today in federal court in Spartanburg to lying to federal investigators. Evidence presented at today’s hearing established that Wells made sizeable loans to an individual, resulting in significant interest income to Wells. In March 2009, Wells made false statements to federal law enforcement agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation concerning his involvement in concealing his receipt of taxable interest income and the existence of documents acknowledging the same. Wells faces a maximum possible sentence of five years' imprisonment and a fine of $250,000.

2. Former Union County Tax Assessor Willie E. Randall, Jr., pled guilty to conspiracy, extortion, soliciting and accepting bribes, money laundering, structuring financial transactions to evade federal reporting requirements, and knowingly allowing the Union County Tax Assessor’s Office to be used as a “stash house” for the storage and distribution of cocaine and hydrocodone. Randall faces a maximum possible sentence of 190 years' imprisonment and a fine of $5.25 million dollars.

In addition, Randall also pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine and a mixture containing methamphetamine. Randall faces an additional maximum possible sentence of 20 years' imprisonment and a fine of $1 million dollars.
3. Union County Resident Lapriest Darnell Beacham was also named as a co-defendant in a separate indictment along with Willie E. Randall, Jr. Beacham pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine. Beacham faces a maximum possible sentence of 20 years' imprisonment and a fine of $1 million dollars.

4. Union County Resident Willard Dee Farr pled guilty to conspiracy to commit extortion. Farr faces a maximum possible sentence of 20 years' imprisonment and a fine of $250,000.

United States District Judge Henry F. Floyd accepted the guilty pleas and will sentence the defendants at a later date.

Mr. McDonald stated that the case was investigated by agents of the FBI, the IRS-Criminal Investigation, and SLED, and that Assistant United States Attorneys Mark C. Moore, Nancy C. Wicker, and J.D. Rowell of the Columbia office prosecuted the cases.
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Information - SC FBI

Officer David Childers Plead Guilty to Possession of Child Porn

Acting United States Attorney Kevin F. McDonald stated that David Courtney Childers, age 45, of Myrtle Beach, plead guilty in federal court to possession of child pornography, a violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 2252A(a)(5)(B). United States District Judge R. Bryan Harwell accepted the plea and will sentence Childers at a later date.

In June 2008, FBI agents in Illinois conducted an undercover online investigation using the identification of a known child pornographer. Using “peer to peer” sharing software, the agents made contact with Childers, who was offering to share child pornography. Agents downloaded the child pornography, and traced the communication back to Childers’ computer at his Myrtle Beach residence. A search of Childers’ computer confirmed the presence of child pornography. At the time of the incident, Childers was employed as a police officer with Horry County.

Mr. McDonald stated the maximum penalty Childers can receive is a fine of $250,000.00 and imprisonment for 10 years.

The case was investigated by agents of the FBI. Assistant United States Attorney William E. Day, II, of the Florence office handled the case.

Source: FBI

American Law Enforcement Must Demand the Removal of Sheriff Arpaio from Duty

In my 29-year career as a police officer and detective with the Madison Police Department, in Madison, Wisconsin, I have witnessed and experienced many instances of hatred, violence and racism. In most cases, those negative things were not initiated by law enforcement; sometimes, unfortunately, they were.

The 95% of us who sincerely strive to "serve and protect" are tarnished by the 5% of us who intentionally "disserve and destroy." Nowhere is this more apparent in current American law enforcement than in Maricopa County, Arizona, where Sheriff Joe Arpaio has taken the law into his own hands, at the expense of the Constitution, professional ethics, and proper police conduct. Earlier this year, the mayor of Phoenix wrote a letter to the U.S. attorney general's office, asking the FBI and the U.S. Justice Department's civil rights division to investigate Arpaio's aggressive illegal immigration crackdowns. Mayor Phil Brown wrote that Arpaio's sweeps show "a pattern and practice of conduct that includes discriminatory harassment, improper stops, searches and arrests."

Using local law enforcement to enforce Federal immigration laws, as Sheriff Arpaio is doing, weakens the very community links local police and sheriffs' departments work so hard daily to maintain and build upon. Having community members who are afraid of local police should not be the goal of a department; instead, a far more wide-reaching and positive effect is gained by police-community trust, interaction and collaboration.

This might sound too much like social work to Sheriff Arpaio, whose top-down, dictatorial methods favor humiliation, degradation, prisoner abuse, racial profiling, terrorizing Latino residents, and cavorting with local neo-Nazi groups. And according to a 2008 policy report on effective law enforcement by the Goldwater Institute, a libertarian-leaning watchdog group based in Phoenix, Sheriff Arpaio's department "falls seriously short of fulfilling its mission." The report found that Maricopa County has "diverted resources away from basic law-enforcement functions to highly publicized immigration sweeps, which are ineffective in policing illegal immigration."

As we all know, police need the community's trust to help solve crime and make our country stronger and safer for everyone living here, regardless of immigration status. I'm sure Sheriff Arpaio's department is having a terrible time finding Latino witnesses and victims of crimes willing to report incidents or testify, but that supposes that he cares about them enough to take reports or help develop their cases for court in the first place. Dehumanizing is another strategy used by Sheriff Arpaio, parading inmates through the streets in funky clothes, "sheltering" them in sweltering desert tents, treating them like vermin, forgetting that he is as bound to them by a universal bond of humanity as much as he is bent on eradicating them.

When chief executives of local law enforcement agencies effectively target subgroups of persons who are not committing crimes, they not only alienate the community, they make it much harder for their agencies to recruit high caliber persons with integrity who reflect the faces of the community to take on the very hard job of policing. A sheriff like Joe Arpaio must have the hardest of times making those hires, and the more the world hears about him, the harder it is for more grounded, public spirited police agencies to hire the best of the best.

American law enforcement must demand the removal of Sheriff Arpaio from duty. He is truly a menace to the residents of Arizona, and our country. Simply stated, Sheriff Arpaio has marred the reputation of law enforcement for generations to come.

His warped sense of "justice" has no place in our society, unless we support Japanese internment camps, the ghetto-ization of African-Americans, and the deaths of countless Latinos attempting to survive their own countries' destruction at the hands of US foreign and economic policies by struggling to come here to live, work and protect their families. I call upon the International Association of Chiefs of Police, as well as the US Department of Justice, to work diligently to remove him from the office he has squandered with racism and hate. Those of us in law enforcement working hard to build bridges of respect and trust with our communities don't need another Theophilus Eugene "Bull" Connor erasing our progress.

Originally posted on Imagine2050, by Detective Alix Olson, Madison Police Department, Wisconsin

Charges Will Not be Dismissed Against Officer Vanessa Mason

A motion to dismiss the remaining criminal charges against a Rochester police officer accused of misconduct has been denied.

Judge Joseph Chase issued his findings in an order dated Tuesday in the case of Vanessa Mason. She now returns to court Feb. 4 for a plea hearing.

Mason was put on administrative leave in April and charged with three felonies and two gross misdemeanors. She was accused of tipping off drug dealers about narcotics investigations and taking money to help pick up and deliver drugs.

Paul Beaumaster, Rice County attorney, is serving as special prosecutor for Olmsted County to avoid a conflict of interest because Mason, 32, is a city employee. At a hearing in October, Beaumaster dismissed the two felony bribery charges against Mason. A key witness had recanted his testimony, but Beaumaster would not say if that was behind the dismissal.

The remaining felony alleges Mason gave a warning about an impending narcotics search warrant. The two gross misdemeanor charges allege misconduct by a public employee. She denies all the allegations.

Her attorney, Fred Bruno of Minneapolis, said prosecutors can't prove the charges and asked that the charges be dismissed.

Chase heard the attorneys' arguments in October and gave them time to submit written briefs.

In his opinion issued Tuesday, Chase called it an interesting case involving unique circumstances and questions of law.

The remaining felony count alleges that Mason called an acquaintance, Terrance Burkhalter, a drug dealer, about a planned drug raid at the home of Bryan Piens.

Bruno contends there's no proof she warned the people at Piens' house. He said they were still in the house when the search was conducted. He said the alleged tip-off was to Burkhalter's phone and no connection has been shown or suggested between Burkhalter and Piens.

Burkhalter has recanted a statement he allegedly gave police about letting someone know the police were coming. Chase said Burkhalter's credibility is a question for jurors.

The gross misdemeanor counts allege misconduct on Mason's part, such as providing restricted information and doing warrant checks for Burkhalter and another drug dealer, Jerell Moore, who now is in federal prison.

Chase denied the motions to dismiss those charges.
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Sheriff Arpaio Investigated for Abuse of Power

The chief financial officer for the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office has been summoned to appear this week before a federal grand jury that's examining whether Sheriff Joe Arpaio and others on his staff abused their power.

Loretta Barkell, who manages the sheriff's $271 million budget, said Monday the FBI asked her to appear at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the federal courthouse in downtown Phoenix.

Barkell said she was issued a subpoena on Dec. 18.

Barkell will be at least the third Maricopa County employee testifying that day as County Manager David Smith and Deputy County Manager Sandi Wilson are slated to give their testimony that morning.

Barkell has worked nine years for the sheriff.

Arpaio last week denied knowledge of the grand jury, but Barkell said she told the sheriff and Chief Deputy David Hendershott about the subpoena right after she received it. She said both men told her to tell the truth. Barkell said she has not been told what kind of questions the U.S. Attorney will ask.

Federal grand juries are composed of local residents who meet once a month to hear testimony and determine if there is enough evidence to hold a trial. The proceedings are secret. Witnesses are free to say if they have been subpoenaed.

Sgt. David Cullop Charged with DUI & Partying with Underage Drinkers

Chilhowie town officials a year ago reviewed photographs that appear to show off-duty Police Sgt. David Conley Cullop – who resigned late Tuesday after being charged last week with driving under the influence – partying with underage drinkers.

One of the partygoers pictured is town Mayor Gary Heninger’s son, then just shy of the legal drinking age of 21.

Town officials dismissed the complaint, sent anonymously in the mail, following an investigation by two separate law enforcement agencies, Chilhowie Police Chief Steve Price told the Bristol Herald Courier on Tuesday.

But a Herald Courier inquiry raises questions about the veracity of those police investigations: Neither of the two agencies cited by Price have records of ever looking into the matter.

Price, when confronted with this information on Wednesday, acknowledged that official investigations never happened. Instead, Price said, he sought opinions about the pictures from a friend who is a ranking officer with the Smyth County Sheriff’s Department and also from another friend with the Virginia State Police.

“There was nothing to document,” said Price, who dismissed the photos’ relevance. “It’s been over a year ago, and this is a done issue.”

Price refused to name the two law enforcement friends.

Anonymous mail

Cullop, 34, resigned four days after State Police said he smashed head-on into a truck while driving off-duty in the wrong lane across a bridge.

No one was injured in the crash. Police charged Cullop with driving under the influence and with refusal to take a breath test.

The Chilhowie Police Department responded to the accident, but called in the State Police when it was discovered that one of its own was involved.

Cullop, reached by the Herald Courier at his Chilhowie home Tuesday evening, declined to discuss the charges or questions of past conduct.

Heninger said he would not allow his son to be interviewed.

The photos arrived in 2009 on a compact disc anonymously mailed to Councilman Lewis Shortt. Pictures obtained by the Herald Courier appear to show an off-duty Cullop partying with others in January 2008.

Shortt said he didn’t pay much attention to the photos, and that he has only a vague recollection of the matter. He added that he was not sure if the mayor’s son, Garrett Heninger, is among the people with Cullop.

Little credence was given to the photos because they were sent anonymously, Shortt said.

“You can’t go on an anonymous letter,” he said. “If no one comes forward, you can’t do anything about it.”

Mayor Heninger readily acknowledged that his son is among the partygoers pictured sitting next to Cullop.

The son, then 19 or 20 years old, is laughing as he clutches in his right hand an open Coors Light beer bottle.

The father does have his doubts about whether the bottle contained any beer, though. Heninger said his son claimed the bottle was empty of alcohol.

“It’s hard to say about pictures because he dips Skoal tobacco, and he uses a bottle as a spittoon,” Heninger said. “I don’t know if it was alcohol or spit.”

Chief Price made the same argument.

“You’ve got to prove there’s alcohol in them,” Price said. “[Cullop] said there was nothing in them.”

Investigation

On Tuesday, Price said the photos were dismissed as an unfounded complaint after investigations by the Smyth County Sheriff’s Department and State Police cleared Cullop of any wrongdoing.

But there never was an official investigation.

“I don’t know what [Price is] talking about,” Smyth County Sheriff R. David Bradley said Wednesday. “I asked my chief investigator about it this morning, and he doesn’t know anything about it.”

State Police spokesman Sgt. Michael Conroy also couldn’t find records of an investigation. He added that an initial, undocumented inquiry could have been done to determine if an investigation was necessary, however.

On Wednesday, Price said the investigation boiled down to him asking two friends in law enforcement whether the photos were worthy of investigation.

The investigation consisted of “an opinion of a sworn law enforcement officer that there was nothing there,” Price said.

When asked Wednesday, Price said he was not sure if he ever handed the photos to county Commonwealth’s Attorney Roy Evans for a legal opinion.

Evans, when called later, said he vaguely remembered a conversation about pictures a year ago, but was not sure what it was about. He said he would check.

In a follow-up conversation, Evans said that Price did ask for an opinion about a series of photos involving Cullop and possible underage drinkers.

The conclusion, Evans said, was that underage drinking is a misdemeanor with a 12-month statute of limitations. Even if some partygoers were underage, nothing could be done because the photos were a year old.

Evans, asked if he remembered that conversation with Price, laughed and said no. Evans said he had talked with Price minutes earlier and was relaying the police chief’s recollection of events.

“I don’t have a vivid recollection of that event, but [Price] did say that’s what happened, and I don’t doubt it,” Evans said.

Two New Orleans Officers Arrested

Two New Orleans police officers were booked into jail Thursday in separate criminal incidents.

In one case, a 6th District officer was indicted on charges that he participated in kidnapping a woman last summer. His partner, who was indicted last fall, is accused of undressing and raping the woman while she remained shackled, according to court documents.

In Thursday's other arrest, an officer was booked into jail for allegedly firing his weapon into his car at a downtown hotel parking garage while off-duty.

The arrests are the latest in a steady stream of misconduct cases to hit the New Orleans Police Department, which finds itself under federal investigation for possible deadly misconduct in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

NOPD spokesman Bob Young acknowledged the indictment of officer Thomas Clark, 36, on a count of second-degree kidnapping, adding that the allegations stem from the same incident as an alleged rape by Clark's partner, Henry Hollins.

Henry Hollins is being held in lieu of $1.5 million bail.

In November, Hollins was indicted both with aggravated rape and kidnapping. He is being held in jail in lieu of $1.5 million bail, according to court records.

Young said Clark is suspended without pay pending the outcome of the criminal case. Clark, who joined the NOPD in 2001, remained in jail on Thursday evening.

The Clark and Hollins indictments were unusual in that they stemmed from investigations conducted by the Orleans Parish district attorney's office, not the NOPD's Public Integrity Bureau.

Chris Bowman, a spokesman for the DA, acknowledged Clark's indictment, but declined to elaborate on the circumstances of the case.

Court documents allege that Hollins, 46, drove a woman to the intersection of Tchoupitoulas and Felicity streets "where he completely disrobed and raped the victim while she remained in handcuffs."

Hollins then drove the woman to an unknown location and released her from custody, the arrest warrant states.

Months prior to his indictment in the alleged rape, Hollins, a 12-year police veteran, was arrested and booked with domestic abuse for allegedly punching his wife in the mouth with a closed fist.

He was placed on desk duty following the domestic violence arrest in late August. After his indictment in November, NOPD Superintendent Warren Riley said Hollins was suspended without pay.

Clark's attorney, Frank DeSalvo, criticized the district attorney's office for its handling of the case.

"It's extortion," he said.

DeSalvo said that Howard Robertson, the head of the investigative unit for the district attorney, only made the case on Clark because the officer refused to implicate his partner by admitting to certain details of the crime.

"He wanted (Clark) to come in and tell him what he wanted to hear," DeSalvo claimed.

Bowman declined to respond to DeSalvo's accusation, saying "the district attorney's office is not going to try this or any other case in the media."

In Thursday's other arrest, police booked Officer Patrick O'Hern for illegally discharging a weapon on Dec. 12. The incident occurred about 2 p.m. on the rooftop parking lot of the Hilton New Orleans Riverside hotel at 2 Poydras St., said Officer Shereese Harper, a police spokeswoman.

Young said O'Hern fired his weapon several times into his personal vehicle. O'Hern was put on desk duty following the incident and now, after his arrest, is suspended without pay, Young said.

O'Hern was released from the Orleans Parish jail not long after he was booked. It is unclear who is representing him.

Officer Kachina McAlexander Accused of Shooting at Officers

The jury trial has begun for a former Denver Police officer accused of firing her handgun at law enforcement officers in South Dakota.

Kachina McAlexander, who resigned from her DPD job last April, faces three counts of aggravated assault on a police officer and one count of reckless use of a firearm.

Her trial began Tuesday and was continuing Thursday, according to the Custer County court clerk's office.

McAlexander was holed up in a Custer motel room on March 24, 2009 when local officers arrived in response to a report that McAlexander might be suicidal.

The 10-year DPD veteran is accused of firing her weapon at the responding officers, none of whom was injured.

Attempted murder charges were initially filed but then thrown out nine months ago.

At the time, Custer County Sheriff Rick Wheeler expressed disappointment at the ruling.

"I really thought we would get a conviction," Wheeler, who had argued that his deputies' lives were clearly in danger during the incident, said.

McAlexander and her family have not returned repeated calls requesting comment.

According to The Denver Post, McAlexander faced weapons charges in 2006 after firing at a television and at the walls of her home in Adams County. Like the March 24 incident, McAlexander was reportedly suicidal at the time.

A judge acquitted McAlexander of the charges and an appeal by prosecutors was not successful.

A spokesperson for the Adams County District Attorney would not provide information on the case to 9NEWS saying the case information is sealed.

A 2009 request by 9NEWS to view McAlexander's Denver Police disciplinary file was rejected on the grounds that an internal investigation was either ongoing or imminent.

Denver Police declined to discuss McAlexander's situation on-camera after she was charged.

Officer David Barnes Charged with Perjury & Harassment

Authorities say a blogger critical of Phoenix police and an officer accused of feeding him material have been indicted on felony charges.

The Arizona Attorney General's Office says David Barnes is charged with one count of perjury and two counts of harassment and blogger Jeffrey Pataky is charged with one count each of perjury and false swearing.

Barnes is former Phoenix homicide detective and patrol officer who worked on the high-profile Baseline Killer case.

An indictment released Thursday says the two lied about knowing each other and that Barnes repeatedly harassed two Phoenix police officers who are married to each other, through an anonymous letter and e-mails.

Barnes is currently on administrative leave and could not be reached for comment. Pataky says the accusations are "absurd beyond belief" and are in retaliation for his blog called Bad Phoenix Cops, where authorities say some of Barnes' material was posted.

Officer Christine Phinney Charged with Disorderly Conduct & Reckless Driving

A North Charleston police officer is placed on administrative duty and under investigation after Dorchester deputies pulled her over for speeding.

On Christmas Eve, officers charged 41-year-old Christine Phinney, the wife of a Dorchester County Sheriff's Lieutenant, with offenses that could have put her behind bars, but she never went to jail.

"I'm a police officer," yelled Phinney on the dash cam video. "Do you know see my torn lip? Do you not see my lip?"

Police say she was handcuffed and wrestled to the ground. After the small fight she said, "He's going to love it when he gets sued for a (expletive) fat lip."

Phinney worked as an officer with North Charleston Police Department. "I pull people for driving 100 mph, you know what they say? I'm a narcotics officer in an unmarked vehicle. Well just slow it down and have a good night. As long as the show me a badge, I don't care," said Phinney.

She tells the deputy she is Tony Phinney's wife, a lieutenant with the same agency that pulled her over.

Despite her connection, they charged her with disorderly conduct and reckless driving. Maj. John Garrison says the majority of people with those charges get a court date, but they're not taken to jail.

"It's not like there was preference shown it was treated like any other case," said Garrison.

It all started after officers saw Phinney speeding down Central Avenue in Summerville.

They say she drove in the median and passed cars pulled over for the blue lights. Eventually she turned in to the White Gables subdivision and stopped for officers. An incident report says they clocked her going 65 in a 40 mph speed zone.

"In this instance it did involve another police officer. Her supervisors in North Charleston were notified. They responded and requested that they be allowed to take custody of her. They did what they had to do as far as department police and their internal affairs investigation," said Maj. Garrison.

He says she could be fined, spend up to 60 days in jail, and get six points on her license for the charges. He says alcohol was not a factor.

North Charleston Police department has placed Phinney on administrative duty as she is being investigated.
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Officer Leonardo Quintana Arrested for DWI

Austin police officer Leonardo Quintana was arrested in Leander for Driving While Intoxicated Tuesday. Quintana is in the middle of a federal civil rights lawsuit brought against him by the family of Nathanial Sanders II, the 18-year-old he fatally shot at an East Austin apartment complex more than eight months ago.

Quintana was held in Williamson County Jail on $1,000 bail, which was posted by 9:30 a.m Tuesday morning.

Quintana was found at the scene of a crash at the intersection of Osage and Saddle Blanket in Leander at 5:15 a.m. by Leander police officers, according to an arrest affidavit.

After smelling alcohol on Quintana's breath, officers had him perform a field sobriety test and concluded he showed signs of intoxication. Quintana refused to take a breath or blood test.

Quintana fatally shot Sanders, on May 11, 2009, while Sanders was sitting in the back of a Mercedes-Benz station wagon in the apartment complex's parking lot.

With two other APD officers Quintana investigated the vehicle, which was linked to a series of robberies, but only one officer recorded the incident that morning.

A Travis County grand jury in August 2009 no-billed Quintana after determining that he did not violate criminal law.

APD Chief Art Acevedo said in November that Quintana did not use excessive force and that his use of force was "objectively reasonable based on the totality of the circumstances." However, as a result of violating APD's mobile video recorder policy by not recording the incident, Acevedo suspended Quintana for 15 days.

Quintana's attorney Robert Icenhauer-Ramirez said he does not anticipate that the arrest will have any affect on the lawsuit at all.

Icenhauer-Ramirez said he has not spoken to Quintana about the incident, but that "[Quintana] is going to be retaining an independent council" on the matter.

"These are very stressful circumstances that officer Quintana has been under for the last year," Icenhauer-Ramirez said. "I just don't judge people on these sort of minor pitfalls that they get into when they are under this amount of stress."

Austin Police Association President Wayne Vincent said he does not think the

incident affects Quintana's credibility and that Quintana has been "under a

tremendous amount of stress after what he has gone through."

"He is going to have to answer to the charges,” Vincent said. "The police association is going to support him as any family member going through a crisis. He is going to face what has occurred and we will see what happens."

Quintana has been placed on paid, but restrictive leave by Austin police officials for the DWI arrest.
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Baltimore Officer Charged with Raping His Wife at Gunpoint

A Baltimore police officer has been suspended from the force after his arrest on charges that he raped his wife at gunpoint during an argument over her marital infidelity, according to court charging documents.

The 37-year-old officer, an Iraq war veteran, is charged with felonies that include rape, assault and using a handgun in the commission of a violent crime. The officer, whom The Baltimore Sun is not naming to shield the woman's identity, is being held at the Baltimore City Detention Center on $500,000 bail.

The officer joined the Police Department in February 2001 and was most recently assigned to the Special Operations Section.

The officer's attorney, Shaun Owens, declined to comment on the case.

Officer Andrew Gill Resigns After Being Charged with Assault

A probationary police officer in the Town of Lancaster submitted his resignation late Wednesday, two days after he was charged with assaulting a 17-year-old in an off-duty incident.

His attorney confirmed that Officer Andrew T. Gill, 23, resigned from the town police force.

“This was a very difficult decision. He greatly enjoyed being a police officer,” Gill’s attorney, Patrick J. Brown, told The Buffalo News. “He has tremendous respect for the people of Lancaster, and he knows his situation was causing distress for a lot of people.”

Monday, police filed a misdemeanor assault charge against Gill, based on a complaint by a town teenager, Justin Mangold, who said Gill attacked and injured him during a New Year’s party at a home on Via Donato Drive.

Town officials said Tuesday that they were trying to decide whether to suspend or terminate Gill, who began working in the department about two weeks before the alleged Jan. 1 assault.

Mangold had told police that Gill began punching him in the face, without provocation, during a “beer pong” drinking game at the New Year’s party. Mangold’s attorneys, Scott F. Riordan and David S. Kelly, said Mangold suffered a broken nose, black eyes and facial injuries that required hospital treatment.

Gill’s attorney said Gill hit Mangold as a “defensive” measure after the teen moved toward him.

Riordan contended that Gill received lenient treatment from the town because his father, Gerald J. Gill, is a lieutenant in the department’s Detective Bureau. That allegation was denied by Brown.

At this point, it is unlikely that Andrew Gill will pursue a police job with another department, Brown said.

“At the present time, he doesn’t anticipate doing that,” Brown said. “He’s evaluating career possibilities outside of police work.”

Authorities said the assault case is expected to be moved out of Lancaster to another jurisdiction because of the Gill family’s close association with law enforcement.

Speaking about the assault case, Brown said: “Because we don’t know what court we will be in, we’re in a holding pattern right now. We plan to fight it, unless there is some way of resolving it that is fair to all parties.”

Riordan said he is “not surprised” by Gill’s resignation, which means he won’t have a termination on his record that might be a red flag for future employers.

“Now he will be free to apply for police work somewhere else one day,” Riordan said, “and we don’t think that is right.”
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Officer Bryan Crews Terminated for Sending Sexually Explicit Material on His Cell Phone

A Dallas police officer was terminated Thursday for a series of department violations, including sending and receiving "inappropriate and/or sexually explicit material on his cell phone."

Police Chief David Kunkle said the actions of Officer Bryan Crews — a 4 1/2-year veteran of the force — had a tendency to adversely affect, lower, or destroy public respect and confidence in the department.

Police said Crews' other violations included:

• taking unauthorized photos of crime scenes

• failing to follow procedures concerning the return of a citizen's identification card

• failing to provide violators with a copy of their citations

• displaying inappropriate photos to co-workers while on duty

Crews served at the Southeast Patrol Division.
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