A Jacksonville police officer arrested on multiple drug-related charges by the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office has been fired following an internal investigation by the Jacksonville Police Department.
Initially, a Jan. 4 drug raid conducted by the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office netted not only Jacksonville officer Charles Wells, but his wife, Melissa Wells, at their Cabot home.
Both were arrested and then taken to the Lonoke County Detention facility. A narcotics investigation prompted the search warrant, officials say.
The couple was arrested on nine misdemeanor counts of possession of a prescribed medicine without a prescription and one felony count of possession of a prescribed medicine without a prescription, according to a press release from the Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office.
The press release reads, “Located and seized at the residence were numerous bottles of prescription medication in various names.” Some of the prescription medication allegedly belonged to deceased individuals.
The day after the Wells’ arrest, Jacksonville Police Department public information officer, Capt. Kenny Boyd, said Wells was on leave pending an internal investigation. Boyd said Wells has worked for the department since 1998.
That investigation uncovered several allegations and Boyd said on Wednesday, Jan. 13, that Wells had been fired the day before.
Documents released Jan. 13 by the department revealed that Wells had warrants listing both theft of property and abuse of power offenses issued against him by the Jacksonville District Court. Around 4 p.m. of the same day, Wells turned himself in at the police station in downtown Jacksonville. Wells was then arrested on one misdemeanor count each of theft of property and abuse of office. Bail for his second arrest was set at $1,000.
The incident uncovered during the investigation apparently took place Feb. 5, 2009. One of the documents released by the department alleges two officers, one identified as Wells, had responded to a Madison Street residence in reference to a deceased person. A witness told the other officer that the woman had refused to go to the emergency room at 5 a.m. and she was found unresponsive at 2:30 p.m. That woman had been treated for cancer for about five years.
A funeral home was summoned to the scene and medications prescribed to the woman were collected and listed on the report as destroyed, police say. Those medications included Gabapentin, Spironolactone, Ondanesetron and Clonidine.
During a Jan. 11 search of Wells’ home, Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office deputies reported finding five bottles of prescription medication in the name of the deceased woman.
Those medications were identified as Gabapentin, Spironolactone, Ondansetron and Clonidine. Gabapentin may prevent migraine headaches as well as being used to relieve pain. Spironolactone is a diuretic. Ondansetron is given to patients undergoing chemotherapy to lessen nausea. Clonidine treats various medical conditions ranging from insomnia to Tourette Syndrome.
On Jan. 11, the other officer who responded to Madison Street residence advised that the medicine had been placed into two plastic bags and “Sgt. Wells stated [to the officer] that he would take the medicine to the PD [Jacksonville Police Department] and destroy it.”
Wells had been promoted to the rank of sergeant in 2004 but in 2009 he was demoted to the position of officer, Boyd said.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Officer Nikia Adams Arrested for Being Cruel to Animals
A call to the St. John animal shelter for help to remove a dead dog has landed a New Orleans police officer behind bars.
Nikia Adams was arrested Thursday for allegedly being cruel to animals. St John Parish deputies say Adams was arrested after two of her dogs were found earlier this week severely malnourished.
The St. John animal shelter called deputies after going to Adam’s home Tuesday to help with the removal of a deceased pet.
Adams is now out on bond.
Nikia Adams was arrested Thursday for allegedly being cruel to animals. St John Parish deputies say Adams was arrested after two of her dogs were found earlier this week severely malnourished.
The St. John animal shelter called deputies after going to Adam’s home Tuesday to help with the removal of a deceased pet.
Adams is now out on bond.
Officer Charles Henderson Charged with Pulling Weapon During Altercation While Off-Duty
An off duty Canton Police Officer is accused of pulling his gun on a man during an altercation outside a restaurant. Officer Charles Henderson faces a misdemeanor charge for the threatening behavior.
“It’s always disappointing anytime any of our officers is focused on in a negative manner,“ said Canton Police Chief Vickie McNeill. “That’s hurtful to the department, but we’ll deal with it. He is a part of our department. We’ll look at every side of it and make a decision based on that.“
Yazoo City Police say Henderson got into a scuffle with a man at the Rib Eye Steak House in Yazoo City. When the fight heated up they went outside, and Henderson reportedly pulled his gun on the man.
The Canton Police Chief says Henderson has been taken off the streets and is doing desk duty until the case is heard in justice court.
The chief says officers are not allowed to carry their guns off duty.
“This situation came as a surprise to us,“ said Chief McNeill. “Before we can make a call one way or the other, we first must know the investigative report details.“
Chief McNeill says because he faces only a misdemeanor charge and not a felony, even if he is convicted there’s a good chance he won’t won’t lose his job over it.
“I realize that there are gonna be shortcomings here and there because humans are still human beings,“ said Chief McNeill. “And you can’t make them be anything else other than that.“
The chief says Henderson has been an officer with the Canton Police Department for about three years.
“It’s always disappointing anytime any of our officers is focused on in a negative manner,“ said Canton Police Chief Vickie McNeill. “That’s hurtful to the department, but we’ll deal with it. He is a part of our department. We’ll look at every side of it and make a decision based on that.“
Yazoo City Police say Henderson got into a scuffle with a man at the Rib Eye Steak House in Yazoo City. When the fight heated up they went outside, and Henderson reportedly pulled his gun on the man.
The Canton Police Chief says Henderson has been taken off the streets and is doing desk duty until the case is heard in justice court.
The chief says officers are not allowed to carry their guns off duty.
“This situation came as a surprise to us,“ said Chief McNeill. “Before we can make a call one way or the other, we first must know the investigative report details.“
Chief McNeill says because he faces only a misdemeanor charge and not a felony, even if he is convicted there’s a good chance he won’t won’t lose his job over it.
“I realize that there are gonna be shortcomings here and there because humans are still human beings,“ said Chief McNeill. “And you can’t make them be anything else other than that.“
The chief says Henderson has been an officer with the Canton Police Department for about three years.
Officer Stephen Mitchell Charged with Rape
Pc Stephen Mitchell, an officer with Northumbria police, spoke only to confirm his name, age and address during the brief hearing at Newcastle magistrates’ court.
Mitchell, 41, has been charged with six offenses of rape, two of sexual assault, 16 of indecent assault and 19 of misconduct in a public office.
The allegations involve 19 people are said to have taken place between 1999 and 2007.
He was remanded in custody until Thursday, when his solicitor is expected to make an application for bail.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said Mitchell, who has
served in the Newcastle and Northumberland area commands, was arrested in
Glasgow on Monday and taken back to the North East.
He appeared in court yesterday flanked by two officers and wearing jeans, a white t-shirt and black sweatshirt.
An IPCC spokesman added: "This is an ongoing investigation and anyone with information which they feel could be relevant to the inquiry is asked to contact Northumbria Police.
A spokesman for Northumbria police said that Mitchell, from Whitley Bay, was suspended last year.
The alleged victims are believed to have been suspected criminals, drug addicts and homeless women.
His arrest came following a year-long investigation by Northumbria Police's Professional Standards Department, under the management of the IPCC.
Mitchell, 41, has been charged with six offenses of rape, two of sexual assault, 16 of indecent assault and 19 of misconduct in a public office.
The allegations involve 19 people are said to have taken place between 1999 and 2007.
He was remanded in custody until Thursday, when his solicitor is expected to make an application for bail.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said Mitchell, who has
served in the Newcastle and Northumberland area commands, was arrested in
Glasgow on Monday and taken back to the North East.
He appeared in court yesterday flanked by two officers and wearing jeans, a white t-shirt and black sweatshirt.
An IPCC spokesman added: "This is an ongoing investigation and anyone with information which they feel could be relevant to the inquiry is asked to contact Northumbria Police.
A spokesman for Northumbria police said that Mitchell, from Whitley Bay, was suspended last year.
The alleged victims are believed to have been suspected criminals, drug addicts and homeless women.
His arrest came following a year-long investigation by Northumbria Police's Professional Standards Department, under the management of the IPCC.
Two New York Officers Suspended After Video Shows Them Striking Handcuffed Man
Two New York City police officers were suspended without pay after a video surfaced showing them striking a handcuffed man this month in the Bronx, officials said Thursday. The video was shot after a failed undercover drug operation during which two other officers were wounded when they were hit in a ricochet of shots fired at a charging pit bull.
Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said the Bronx district attorney’s office and the Police Department’s Internal Affairs Bureau were investigating but had not determined if the officers would face criminal charges.
“If you see this film, you see a prisoner who is handcuffed, who is laying on his face, and he is struck by a uniformed officer,” Mr. Kelly said. “We simply are never going to tolerate something like that; we’re going to take swift and firm action when we see activities of that nature.”
Police officials identified the two officers, both from the 52nd Precinct, as William Green, 26, who joined the force in 2005, and John Cicero, 28, who became an officer in 2008.
Mr. Kelly said two supervisors on the scene had been placed on modified assignment, but he declined to say if anyone else would be disciplined. Police officials identified the disciplined supervisors as Sgt. Junior Carela of the 52nd Precinct and Sgt. Phillip Connor of the 50th Precinct.
“They were in the vicinity and either should have known or, at a minimum, reported the fact that this had happened,” a law enforcement official said of the sergeants. He did not want to be quoted by name because the investigation was continuing.
The official said it was unlikely the investigation would be broadened to include other officers who were outside a residential building on Davidson Avenue when the undercover drug operation fell apart on Jan. 5.
Officers Green and Cicero were suspended within 24 hours after a video of the two men hitting the man — filmed by a civilian from an apartment window — was given to the Internal Affairs Bureau by investigators from the district attorney’s office, officials said.
Jeffrey L. Emdin, a lawyer for the handcuffed man, said he gave the footage to prosecutors at the end of last week.
Officials identified the handcuffed man as Jonathan Baez, 24, of the Bronx. Mr. Baez was initially charged with obstructing governmental administration and resisting arrest, but the charges have been dropped. It was unclear what role, if any, he played in the events that occurred after the undercover drug operation fell apart.
Steven Reed, a spokesman for the Bronx district attorney, Robert T. Johnson, declined to characterize the nature of the investigation.
“We are aware of allegations concerning this videotape and this beating, and we are investigating it,” he said.
Albert W. O’Leary, a spokesman for Patrick J. Lynch, the president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, declined to comment on the matter.
The events began about 8 p.m. as officers were chasing a suspect as part of the undercover investigation. During the chase, one officer fired at a pit bull that charged them; a bullet ricocheted and injured two other officers. The police said they did not believe that Mr. Baez released the pit bull.
Mr. Emdin said the videotape suggested that other officers should be investigated “and perhaps arrested.”
“There is no shock among the officers,” Mr. Emdin said. “There is no sign of outrage by any officers who witnessed it, who heard the cries for help. In fact, they just look as if it was business as usual.”
Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said the Bronx district attorney’s office and the Police Department’s Internal Affairs Bureau were investigating but had not determined if the officers would face criminal charges.
“If you see this film, you see a prisoner who is handcuffed, who is laying on his face, and he is struck by a uniformed officer,” Mr. Kelly said. “We simply are never going to tolerate something like that; we’re going to take swift and firm action when we see activities of that nature.”
Police officials identified the two officers, both from the 52nd Precinct, as William Green, 26, who joined the force in 2005, and John Cicero, 28, who became an officer in 2008.
Mr. Kelly said two supervisors on the scene had been placed on modified assignment, but he declined to say if anyone else would be disciplined. Police officials identified the disciplined supervisors as Sgt. Junior Carela of the 52nd Precinct and Sgt. Phillip Connor of the 50th Precinct.
“They were in the vicinity and either should have known or, at a minimum, reported the fact that this had happened,” a law enforcement official said of the sergeants. He did not want to be quoted by name because the investigation was continuing.
The official said it was unlikely the investigation would be broadened to include other officers who were outside a residential building on Davidson Avenue when the undercover drug operation fell apart on Jan. 5.
Officers Green and Cicero were suspended within 24 hours after a video of the two men hitting the man — filmed by a civilian from an apartment window — was given to the Internal Affairs Bureau by investigators from the district attorney’s office, officials said.
Jeffrey L. Emdin, a lawyer for the handcuffed man, said he gave the footage to prosecutors at the end of last week.
Officials identified the handcuffed man as Jonathan Baez, 24, of the Bronx. Mr. Baez was initially charged with obstructing governmental administration and resisting arrest, but the charges have been dropped. It was unclear what role, if any, he played in the events that occurred after the undercover drug operation fell apart.
Steven Reed, a spokesman for the Bronx district attorney, Robert T. Johnson, declined to characterize the nature of the investigation.
“We are aware of allegations concerning this videotape and this beating, and we are investigating it,” he said.
Albert W. O’Leary, a spokesman for Patrick J. Lynch, the president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, declined to comment on the matter.
The events began about 8 p.m. as officers were chasing a suspect as part of the undercover investigation. During the chase, one officer fired at a pit bull that charged them; a bullet ricocheted and injured two other officers. The police said they did not believe that Mr. Baez released the pit bull.
Mr. Emdin said the videotape suggested that other officers should be investigated “and perhaps arrested.”
“There is no shock among the officers,” Mr. Emdin said. “There is no sign of outrage by any officers who witnessed it, who heard the cries for help. In fact, they just look as if it was business as usual.”
Officer Richard Leese Arrested for Drunk Driving
A Clarksville Police Department officer was arrested for driving under the influence on Macedonia Road in an incident early this morning.
Richard Allen Leese, 27, of Dover, was arrested at 1495 Macedonia Road by Deputy Jim Sanders of the Henry County Sheriff’s Department.
Sanders and Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Eddie Forrest responded to a complaint that someone who was possibly drunk had wrecked a truck into the yard at a Macedonia Road residence.
The Sheriff’s Department officers were allegedly greeted by Leese holding out his badge as he told them that he was an officer with the Clarksville Police Department.
Leese allegedly told officers that he had drank three beers between 6 and 7:30 p.m. and said he thought it was about 9 p.m., when it was actually 2:20 a.m.
After failing a field sobriety test, Leese refused to to take a breathalyzer test and was arrested and charged with violation of implied consent and driving under the influence. He was placed in a safe area in the jail pending his bond because of his status as a Clarksville police officer.
Bond was set at $1,500; he is scheduled to appear Feb. 23 in Henry County General Sessions Court.
Richard Allen Leese, 27, of Dover, was arrested at 1495 Macedonia Road by Deputy Jim Sanders of the Henry County Sheriff’s Department.
Sanders and Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Eddie Forrest responded to a complaint that someone who was possibly drunk had wrecked a truck into the yard at a Macedonia Road residence.
The Sheriff’s Department officers were allegedly greeted by Leese holding out his badge as he told them that he was an officer with the Clarksville Police Department.
Leese allegedly told officers that he had drank three beers between 6 and 7:30 p.m. and said he thought it was about 9 p.m., when it was actually 2:20 a.m.
After failing a field sobriety test, Leese refused to to take a breathalyzer test and was arrested and charged with violation of implied consent and driving under the influence. He was placed in a safe area in the jail pending his bond because of his status as a Clarksville police officer.
Bond was set at $1,500; he is scheduled to appear Feb. 23 in Henry County General Sessions Court.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Probation Officer James Stanton Accused of Taking Cash & Sex in Exchange for Favorable Report
A state probation officer accused of taking sex and cash from a woman in exchange for favorable probation reports had sex with her in isolated areas of the Nesbett Courthouse for more than a year before being reported, according to documents filed in court today.
James Stanton, 53, was arrested Tuesday on charges of accepting a bribe and official misconduct after undercover police officers sent the alleged victim in to a meeting with him in his office at the Nesbett on Tuesday wearing a wire, the court documents say.
Stanton works in the state Department of Health and Social Service's Alcohol Safety Action Program, a treatment program often court-ordered for probationers. He is accused of certifying that the woman's court-ordered drug and alcohol urinalysis results came back clean, though the woman admits she was using, police said. Failure to deliver a clean drug or alcohol result in the periodic tests can result in jail time.
The woman is on felony probation in therapeutic court -- a volunteer program for those who want to get clean -- but is identified in court documents only as Jane Doe.
Police say she initially began giving Stanton money -- "hundreds of dollars" -- in December 2008 to ignore positive drug test results or not report probation violations.
By last January, the woman didn't have enough to pay and began performing oral sex on him, according to an affidavit filed in court by Assistant District Attorney Dan Shorey. She later had sex with Stanton in the therapeutic court offices in the Nesbett and in a boiler room in an underground tunnel that connects that building to the next-door Boney Courthouse, he wrote.
In the conversation recorded Tuesday at the courthouse, the woman, who is wearing an arm brace, told Stanton she hurt her arm driving drunk on a snowmachine in her home village, a violation of her probation. Stanton laughed at the news, according to Shorey's affidavit.
At the time, the woman delivered $200 in marked bills as a payoff to Stanton, who accepted the money as they talked about her not being off drugs and alcohol, the affidavit says. The two also discussed their past sexual encounters and whether Stanton had been taking his Viagra, according to the documents. When the woman asked if he needed it, Stanton replied, "not with you," according to Shorey's affidavit.
They then walked down to a conference room, where Stanton allegedly unbuttoned the woman's shirt and touched her breast, the affidavit says. When the woman said she no longer wanted to have sex, and only pay him the cash, Stanton replied, "I don't need any more money," Shorey wrote. The woman left and police arrested Stanton.
Stanton, who is jailed with bail set at $10,000, made an initial appearance in Anchorage jail court this afternoon. Stanton said nothing, but his attorney, Michael Moberly, seeking to reduce a third-party custodian bail requirement, characterized the crime as a "victimless" public administration violation.
District Court Judge Gregory Motyka set a bail hearing for Thursday morning to decide whether Stanton could be released with an electronic monitoring device.
Moberly declined to comment after the hearing.
According to court records, Stanton has no criminal history in Alaska.
Police say they suspect there may be other victims. Anyone with information about the case is asked to call 786-8900.
James Stanton, 53, was arrested Tuesday on charges of accepting a bribe and official misconduct after undercover police officers sent the alleged victim in to a meeting with him in his office at the Nesbett on Tuesday wearing a wire, the court documents say.
Stanton works in the state Department of Health and Social Service's Alcohol Safety Action Program, a treatment program often court-ordered for probationers. He is accused of certifying that the woman's court-ordered drug and alcohol urinalysis results came back clean, though the woman admits she was using, police said. Failure to deliver a clean drug or alcohol result in the periodic tests can result in jail time.
The woman is on felony probation in therapeutic court -- a volunteer program for those who want to get clean -- but is identified in court documents only as Jane Doe.
Police say she initially began giving Stanton money -- "hundreds of dollars" -- in December 2008 to ignore positive drug test results or not report probation violations.
By last January, the woman didn't have enough to pay and began performing oral sex on him, according to an affidavit filed in court by Assistant District Attorney Dan Shorey. She later had sex with Stanton in the therapeutic court offices in the Nesbett and in a boiler room in an underground tunnel that connects that building to the next-door Boney Courthouse, he wrote.
In the conversation recorded Tuesday at the courthouse, the woman, who is wearing an arm brace, told Stanton she hurt her arm driving drunk on a snowmachine in her home village, a violation of her probation. Stanton laughed at the news, according to Shorey's affidavit.
At the time, the woman delivered $200 in marked bills as a payoff to Stanton, who accepted the money as they talked about her not being off drugs and alcohol, the affidavit says. The two also discussed their past sexual encounters and whether Stanton had been taking his Viagra, according to the documents. When the woman asked if he needed it, Stanton replied, "not with you," according to Shorey's affidavit.
They then walked down to a conference room, where Stanton allegedly unbuttoned the woman's shirt and touched her breast, the affidavit says. When the woman said she no longer wanted to have sex, and only pay him the cash, Stanton replied, "I don't need any more money," Shorey wrote. The woman left and police arrested Stanton.
Stanton, who is jailed with bail set at $10,000, made an initial appearance in Anchorage jail court this afternoon. Stanton said nothing, but his attorney, Michael Moberly, seeking to reduce a third-party custodian bail requirement, characterized the crime as a "victimless" public administration violation.
District Court Judge Gregory Motyka set a bail hearing for Thursday morning to decide whether Stanton could be released with an electronic monitoring device.
Moberly declined to comment after the hearing.
According to court records, Stanton has no criminal history in Alaska.
Police say they suspect there may be other victims. Anyone with information about the case is asked to call 786-8900.
Detective John Killackey Charged with Pointing Weapon at Cab Driver
Chicago police detective John Killackey has been charged with misdemeanor theft and assault for stiffing a cab driver on a fare in April and threatening him with a gun when the driver asked for payment, officials said today.
Killackey, 32, is listed in public records as a police detective who joined the police force in 2000. According to a source, the officer is the son of Jack Killackey, the former commander of the Deering police district. The elder Killackey is currently an official at the Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communication.
The driver, Karl Clermont, has said he picked up Killackey on April 23. When they arrived at his destination near Armitage and Damen Avenues, Killackey, who was off-duty at the time, refused to pay his $8 cab fare and pulled a handgun on Clermont, the driver alleged.
Killackey appeared to be intoxicated when Clermont picked him up at about 1:35 a.m. and drove to the Bucktown destination, said George Lutfallah, who first wrote about the case in Chicago Dispatcher, a publication on taxi-related subjects.
When they arrived, Killackey got out of the cab and started to walk away without paying the fare, Luftallah said. Clermont called after him, and he returned to the taxi.
Killackey allegedly brandished a handgun as he told the driver he didn't owe him anything. "Get out of the car and see what happens," the detective said, according to Luftallah.
Clermont called 911, and when officers arrived they found Killackey in a nearby alley; when they saw his identification, his badge and his gun, they learned he was a police officer.
The driver filed a complaint with the Independent Police Review Authority. On Thursday he spoke with prosecutors at the state's attorney's office, Luftallah said.
Killackey was charged Friday, said Andy Conklin, a spokesman for the state's attorney's office.
He has also been relieved of police powers and an internal investigation is under way, said Chicago Police News Affairs Lt. Maureen Biggane. Killackey has been put in an administrative role, she said.
IPRA also is conducting an investigation of its own, said agency spokesman Curtis Tarver.
Killackey, 32, is listed in public records as a police detective who joined the police force in 2000. According to a source, the officer is the son of Jack Killackey, the former commander of the Deering police district. The elder Killackey is currently an official at the Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communication.
The driver, Karl Clermont, has said he picked up Killackey on April 23. When they arrived at his destination near Armitage and Damen Avenues, Killackey, who was off-duty at the time, refused to pay his $8 cab fare and pulled a handgun on Clermont, the driver alleged.
Killackey appeared to be intoxicated when Clermont picked him up at about 1:35 a.m. and drove to the Bucktown destination, said George Lutfallah, who first wrote about the case in Chicago Dispatcher, a publication on taxi-related subjects.
When they arrived, Killackey got out of the cab and started to walk away without paying the fare, Luftallah said. Clermont called after him, and he returned to the taxi.
Killackey allegedly brandished a handgun as he told the driver he didn't owe him anything. "Get out of the car and see what happens," the detective said, according to Luftallah.
Clermont called 911, and when officers arrived they found Killackey in a nearby alley; when they saw his identification, his badge and his gun, they learned he was a police officer.
The driver filed a complaint with the Independent Police Review Authority. On Thursday he spoke with prosecutors at the state's attorney's office, Luftallah said.
Killackey was charged Friday, said Andy Conklin, a spokesman for the state's attorney's office.
He has also been relieved of police powers and an internal investigation is under way, said Chicago Police News Affairs Lt. Maureen Biggane. Killackey has been put in an administrative role, she said.
IPRA also is conducting an investigation of its own, said agency spokesman Curtis Tarver.
Deputy Trenedy Brooks Charged with Statutory Rape
The Morristown Citizen-Tribune is reporting that a suspended Grainger County deputy – who is under investigation by the TBI – has been arraigned on charges of statutory rape and solicitation of a minor, according to Sheriff James Harville.
Trenedy Brooks faces two counts of statutory rape. Investigators said the alleged female victim is 16, according to published reports. Brooks was arrested on Friday and was released over the weekend on a $60,000 bond.
Brooks, 27, was placed on leave in May of 2009 due to being under investigation by the TBI on an unrelated incident. Harville said he is unsure of the status of the TBI investigation.
Trenedy Brooks faces two counts of statutory rape. Investigators said the alleged female victim is 16, according to published reports. Brooks was arrested on Friday and was released over the weekend on a $60,000 bond.
Brooks, 27, was placed on leave in May of 2009 due to being under investigation by the TBI on an unrelated incident. Harville said he is unsure of the status of the TBI investigation.
Durham Officers Accused of Assaulting Student
The executive director of a training program for at-risk youth said Durham police officers assaulted one of her students Tuesday afternoon.
Fran Alexander said she was standing in the lobby of EDGE Training and Placement Tuesday afternoon when she saw two police officers confront 17-year-old Andre Bond. The EDGE program targets students who have been in trouble and tries to give them an education.
Alexander said officers threw Bond against her SUV so hard that it left a dent and then threw him to the ground in front of the school.
"I was afraid they were going to kill him," she said. "One police officer was holding him, and the other one was ... just socking him in the face and in the ribs."
Bond appeared in court Wednesday on charges of assaulting a government official and resisting a public officer. He had no visible injuries, aside from a mark above his right eye.
"He looks OK right about now, but if you would have seen him (Tuesday), his face was bigger than mine," said his mother, Teresa Bond.
Police Chief Jose Lopez said the officers went to the school to arrest Bond for missing a court appearance in a case from August that also involved resisting arrest.
"A lot of the individuals who see the police action may not have seen it from the beginning (and) may not know what the background of the police action is," Lopez said.
The Durham Police Department is investigating the incident, which is standard procedure for any instance in which an officer uses force. Both officers, whose names haven't been released, remain on duty.
Lopez said it was too early to comment on whether the officers did anything wrong. The internal investigation could take several weeks to complete.
"I'm going to wait until the investigation has concluded and going to make a proper determination," he said.
Teresa Bond said she wants the two officers fired. Alexander said the incident only reinforces an image among teens that police cannot be trusted.
"How can I tell these kids that the police are our friends when they come on school grounds and do something like that?" she said.
Fran Alexander said she was standing in the lobby of EDGE Training and Placement Tuesday afternoon when she saw two police officers confront 17-year-old Andre Bond. The EDGE program targets students who have been in trouble and tries to give them an education.
Alexander said officers threw Bond against her SUV so hard that it left a dent and then threw him to the ground in front of the school.
"I was afraid they were going to kill him," she said. "One police officer was holding him, and the other one was ... just socking him in the face and in the ribs."
Bond appeared in court Wednesday on charges of assaulting a government official and resisting a public officer. He had no visible injuries, aside from a mark above his right eye.
"He looks OK right about now, but if you would have seen him (Tuesday), his face was bigger than mine," said his mother, Teresa Bond.
Police Chief Jose Lopez said the officers went to the school to arrest Bond for missing a court appearance in a case from August that also involved resisting arrest.
"A lot of the individuals who see the police action may not have seen it from the beginning (and) may not know what the background of the police action is," Lopez said.
The Durham Police Department is investigating the incident, which is standard procedure for any instance in which an officer uses force. Both officers, whose names haven't been released, remain on duty.
Lopez said it was too early to comment on whether the officers did anything wrong. The internal investigation could take several weeks to complete.
"I'm going to wait until the investigation has concluded and going to make a proper determination," he said.
Teresa Bond said she wants the two officers fired. Alexander said the incident only reinforces an image among teens that police cannot be trusted.
"How can I tell these kids that the police are our friends when they come on school grounds and do something like that?" she said.
Trial for Officer Epaminondas Korkoneas Accused of Shooting Teen Postponed
The trial of a Greek police officer accused of shooting a teenager a year ago was postponed until Friday, just after it had opened amid tight security after threats by anarchists.
Epaminondas Korkoneas, 38, is accused of fatally shooting 15-year-old Alexis Grigoropoulos during a December 2008 night patrol in the bohemian Athens district of Exarchia. The incident sparked several days of riots.
He is on trial for voluntary homicide. The hearing was immediately adjourned following a defence request.
One far-left extremist group threatened to kill the officer, prompting authorities to send more than 400 police to the small town of Amfissa, 200 kilometres (125 miles) northwest of Athens where the trial was held.
The trial was relocated from Athens because of security concerns, and Greece's Supreme Court has rejected bids by the teenager's family to move it back to the capital.
Korkoneas says he fired in the air to disperse youths, including Grigoropoulos, who threw stones at his squad car.
An autopsy report indicated that the boy was hit by a bullet that ricocheted onto him but lawyers for the boy's family point to the testimony of witnesses who say the policeman took aim and fired.
Korkoneas' partner Vassilios Saraliotis, 32, is also on trial accused of complicity to voluntary homicide.
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Epaminondas Korkoneas, 38, is accused of fatally shooting 15-year-old Alexis Grigoropoulos during a December 2008 night patrol in the bohemian Athens district of Exarchia. The incident sparked several days of riots.
He is on trial for voluntary homicide. The hearing was immediately adjourned following a defence request.
One far-left extremist group threatened to kill the officer, prompting authorities to send more than 400 police to the small town of Amfissa, 200 kilometres (125 miles) northwest of Athens where the trial was held.
The trial was relocated from Athens because of security concerns, and Greece's Supreme Court has rejected bids by the teenager's family to move it back to the capital.
Korkoneas says he fired in the air to disperse youths, including Grigoropoulos, who threw stones at his squad car.
An autopsy report indicated that the boy was hit by a bullet that ricocheted onto him but lawyers for the boy's family point to the testimony of witnesses who say the policeman took aim and fired.
Korkoneas' partner Vassilios Saraliotis, 32, is also on trial accused of complicity to voluntary homicide.
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Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Capt. Travis Mosher Accused of Stealing Fire Chief's Vehicle
A top-ranking member of the Manassas Park police department has been accused of stealing a fire department battalion chief's vehicle during an awards banquet for volunteer firefighters, Prince William County police said.
Capt. Travis D. Mosher was the Manassas Park police department's operations commander, but he resigned Sunday, the day after he turned himself in to police, InsideNova.com reported. A dispatcher at the Manassas Park police department said no one was available to speak to the news media Monday regarding the incident and could not confirm that Mosher had stepped down.
According to Prince William County police, the 30-year-old was attending an awards banquet for the Occoquan-Woodbridge-Lorton fire station at 1300 F St. in Woodbridge on Saturday evening, when he allegedly stole a 2005 Ford Excursion assigned to a Prince William County fire department battalion chief.
Investigators say they saw Mosher stealing the SUV on surveillance videos. The vehicle was recovered a little more than three miles from the banquet near the intersection of Golansky Road and Prince William Parkway in Woodbridge, police said. No one was injured, and no accidents were reported.
Mosher, police said, turned himself in Saturday night, and he was charged with grand larceny and petit larceny. He was released on his own recognizance with a Feb. 10 court date.
Calls to Mosher were not returned Monday.
The Manassas Park police department's Web site says Mosher joined the force as a patrol officer in 1997 and was promoted to captain and head of operations for the 35-member force in 2006. Before that he spent one year as a patrol sergeant.
His profile in LinkedIn.com, a social networking Web site, says he is enrolled in Northern Virginia Community College's criminal justice degree program.
Mosher described himself as a "dedicated proactive law enforcement professional with over twelve years of extensive experience in crisis management, budgeting and administration" on his LinkedIn page. He concluded that he is an "outstanding leader with a firm but fair attitude and a reputation for honesty, loyalty and integrity."
Capt. Travis D. Mosher was the Manassas Park police department's operations commander, but he resigned Sunday, the day after he turned himself in to police, InsideNova.com reported. A dispatcher at the Manassas Park police department said no one was available to speak to the news media Monday regarding the incident and could not confirm that Mosher had stepped down.
According to Prince William County police, the 30-year-old was attending an awards banquet for the Occoquan-Woodbridge-Lorton fire station at 1300 F St. in Woodbridge on Saturday evening, when he allegedly stole a 2005 Ford Excursion assigned to a Prince William County fire department battalion chief.
Investigators say they saw Mosher stealing the SUV on surveillance videos. The vehicle was recovered a little more than three miles from the banquet near the intersection of Golansky Road and Prince William Parkway in Woodbridge, police said. No one was injured, and no accidents were reported.
Mosher, police said, turned himself in Saturday night, and he was charged with grand larceny and petit larceny. He was released on his own recognizance with a Feb. 10 court date.
Calls to Mosher were not returned Monday.
The Manassas Park police department's Web site says Mosher joined the force as a patrol officer in 1997 and was promoted to captain and head of operations for the 35-member force in 2006. Before that he spent one year as a patrol sergeant.
His profile in LinkedIn.com, a social networking Web site, says he is enrolled in Northern Virginia Community College's criminal justice degree program.
Mosher described himself as a "dedicated proactive law enforcement professional with over twelve years of extensive experience in crisis management, budgeting and administration" on his LinkedIn page. He concluded that he is an "outstanding leader with a firm but fair attitude and a reputation for honesty, loyalty and integrity."
Corrections Officer Curtis Moore Arrested for Shooting His Wife
Police cars and detectives filled the corner of Summerlane Avenue and Summerhurst Street shortly before midnight Monday.
An affidavit says 55-year-old Curtis Glenn Moore called police to his home in the 4800 block of Summerlane Avenue to the report a shooting.
"The husband fired a shot and hit his wife in the torso," said Lt. Col Pruitt from Memphis Police.
Police say they found Moore's wife, 50-year-old Nannette Jefferson shot in the chest. She told detectives that she was trying to walk away from her husband, when he put his foot in the door and shot her. But Moore says Jefferson grabbed him by the collar of his shirt. And then he pulled his gun and shot his wife.
"We don't know what caused the disturbance between them or the argument between them," added Pruitt.
Jefferson was taken to The MED in critical condition, while Moore was brought in for questioning and later charged with aggravated assault.
Family members say that the couple had been married for six years. But the couple had been going through a rough divorce over the past several months.
Moore who worked with the Shelby County Jail for 21 years as a correctional officer is off work with pay pending and administrative investigation.
Neighbors who live on the typically quiet street are still in disbelief.
Moore now sits behind bars at the very jail he worked in as recently as yesterday. Moore is behind bars on a $300,000 bond. He is set to be in court tomorrow at 9 am.
An affidavit says 55-year-old Curtis Glenn Moore called police to his home in the 4800 block of Summerlane Avenue to the report a shooting.
"The husband fired a shot and hit his wife in the torso," said Lt. Col Pruitt from Memphis Police.
Police say they found Moore's wife, 50-year-old Nannette Jefferson shot in the chest. She told detectives that she was trying to walk away from her husband, when he put his foot in the door and shot her. But Moore says Jefferson grabbed him by the collar of his shirt. And then he pulled his gun and shot his wife.
"We don't know what caused the disturbance between them or the argument between them," added Pruitt.
Jefferson was taken to The MED in critical condition, while Moore was brought in for questioning and later charged with aggravated assault.
Family members say that the couple had been married for six years. But the couple had been going through a rough divorce over the past several months.
Moore who worked with the Shelby County Jail for 21 years as a correctional officer is off work with pay pending and administrative investigation.
Neighbors who live on the typically quiet street are still in disbelief.
Moore now sits behind bars at the very jail he worked in as recently as yesterday. Moore is behind bars on a $300,000 bond. He is set to be in court tomorrow at 9 am.
Former Deputy Trenedy Brooks Charged with Rape of Minor
A former Grainger County deputy has been charged with two counts of aggravated statutory rape and solicitation of a minor.
Trenedy Brooks was arraigned on Tuesday and released on a $60,000 bond.
The Grainger County Sheriff's Office arrested Brooks on Friday.
He had previously been put on administrative leave without pay in May of 2009, pending the outcome of a TBI investigation.
TBI spokesperson Kristin Helm indicates the bureau has an open investigation on Brooks, on "similar allegations" but noted it was a separate investigation that included TBI agents seizing a computer from Brooks' home.
Affidavits from investigating officer, Detective Jesse Jarnigan, indicate that the victim is a 16-year-old girl. Brooks is 27.
The affidavit of complaint indicates Brooks picked the girl up at least twice and took her to his home, where he had sexual intercourse with her.
Trenedy Brooks was arraigned on Tuesday and released on a $60,000 bond.
The Grainger County Sheriff's Office arrested Brooks on Friday.
He had previously been put on administrative leave without pay in May of 2009, pending the outcome of a TBI investigation.
TBI spokesperson Kristin Helm indicates the bureau has an open investigation on Brooks, on "similar allegations" but noted it was a separate investigation that included TBI agents seizing a computer from Brooks' home.
Affidavits from investigating officer, Detective Jesse Jarnigan, indicate that the victim is a 16-year-old girl. Brooks is 27.
The affidavit of complaint indicates Brooks picked the girl up at least twice and took her to his home, where he had sexual intercourse with her.
Michael Mineo Awaits Justice for Officer Sodomizing Him
Michael Mineo - the star witness in the trial of a police officer accused of sodomizing him - has a checkered past but says he did nothing to deserve what happened to him.
"I just can't wait for this trial to start," Mineo told the Daily News. "I want justice.
"Do you know how much anger I have? He's going down. He violated me and he tried to sweep it under the rug."
In the trial, starting in Brooklyn Supreme Court this week and expected to last a month, Officer Richard Kern faces 25 years behind bars on charges of sodomizing Mineo with a collapsible police baton on a Prospect Park station subway platform on Oct. 15, 2008.
Officers Alex Cruz and Andrew Morales face four years on charges of covering up the assault.
The three Brooklyn cops, who have all denied the charges and say no assault took place, chased Mineo after spotting him with a joint. Kern allegedly assaulted Mineo as he struggled while being cuffed by a fourth officer.
Mineo's lawyer Stephen Jackson has filed a federal civil suit against the police and says his client is still suffering from posttraumatic stress.
Police officials at first scoffed at Mineo's claims, but prosecutors reinterviewed witnesses, viewed Mineo's medical records and took the case to the grand jury, which voted to indict after two police witnesses came forward.
Mineo - who has been busted for marijuana, stolen credit cards and a melee at a tattoo parlor where he was a body piercer - will be the main witness at the trial.
"The evidence will just speak for itself," said Mineo, who now works at Staples. "Talking about [my] arrests doesn't bother me, not one bit. That has nothing to do with me being sodomized.
"I could have been a murderer - that has nothing to do with it. They could say whatever they want about me. They're trying to bring dirt. I'm ready."
Still, how Mineo behaves on the stand may be as crucial as what he says. "I'm going to hold my composure, but I'm not going to be treated like the one who did something wrong," he said. "I'll look him [Kern] in the eye; he won't even be able to look me in the eye. I pray for Richard Kern. ... He crossed the line and he's going to do time," says Mineo.
"I hope that everything ends up well for him, but I don't forgive him. ... I pray for him. I pray for all my enemies."
"I just can't wait for this trial to start," Mineo told the Daily News. "I want justice.
"Do you know how much anger I have? He's going down. He violated me and he tried to sweep it under the rug."
In the trial, starting in Brooklyn Supreme Court this week and expected to last a month, Officer Richard Kern faces 25 years behind bars on charges of sodomizing Mineo with a collapsible police baton on a Prospect Park station subway platform on Oct. 15, 2008.
Officers Alex Cruz and Andrew Morales face four years on charges of covering up the assault.
The three Brooklyn cops, who have all denied the charges and say no assault took place, chased Mineo after spotting him with a joint. Kern allegedly assaulted Mineo as he struggled while being cuffed by a fourth officer.
Mineo's lawyer Stephen Jackson has filed a federal civil suit against the police and says his client is still suffering from posttraumatic stress.
Police officials at first scoffed at Mineo's claims, but prosecutors reinterviewed witnesses, viewed Mineo's medical records and took the case to the grand jury, which voted to indict after two police witnesses came forward.
Mineo - who has been busted for marijuana, stolen credit cards and a melee at a tattoo parlor where he was a body piercer - will be the main witness at the trial.
"The evidence will just speak for itself," said Mineo, who now works at Staples. "Talking about [my] arrests doesn't bother me, not one bit. That has nothing to do with me being sodomized.
"I could have been a murderer - that has nothing to do with it. They could say whatever they want about me. They're trying to bring dirt. I'm ready."
Still, how Mineo behaves on the stand may be as crucial as what he says. "I'm going to hold my composure, but I'm not going to be treated like the one who did something wrong," he said. "I'll look him [Kern] in the eye; he won't even be able to look me in the eye. I pray for Richard Kern. ... He crossed the line and he's going to do time," says Mineo.
"I hope that everything ends up well for him, but I don't forgive him. ... I pray for him. I pray for all my enemies."
Former Officer Drew Peterson Had Previous Threatened to Kill Wife
Former police officer Drew Peterson threw his wife to the floor one night, grabbed her throat and told her he "could kill her there and then," a one-time co-worker of the wife testified Tuesday at a hearing to determine what evidence can be admitted in Peterson's murder trial.
Kathleen Savio, Drew Peterson's third wife, who mysteriously drowned in a bathtub six years ago, essentially is testifying from the grave during the hearing. Witnesses are expected to tell a judge how Savio discussed and wrote about her fears that Peterson, a former Bolingbrook police sergeant, would kill her.
The hearing, projected to last three weeks, is expected to provide the first detailed look at evidence prosecutors contend ties Peterson to Savio's 2004 death. It stems from a state law that allows a judge to admit hearsay evidence in first-degree murder cases if prosecutors can prove a defendant killed a witness to prevent him or her from testifying.
Issam Karam, who said he worked with Savio at Parkway Imaging in Romeoville in late 2003, testified that Savio told him she had come home one night looking forward to a bath and glass of wine when Peterson threw her to the floor. Savio said the incident occurred after she had changed the locks to the home.
Karam said Peterson grabbed Savio's throat and had a knife. Savio showed him a bruise on her arm, Karam said.
"(Peterson) said nothing that she could do would make her safe," Karam said. "She could not run or hide. He could kill her there and then."
Another witness, Savio's boss, testified that a number of times a Bolingbrook squad car was parked in front of her Romeoville business while Savio was inside. Lisa Mordente said that on one occasion, Savio was returning from lunch and approached another vehicle parked outside and spoke to a man inside.
"She was very shaken up when she came back in, her hand was shaking, she had tears, she was a mess," Mordente said.
Mordente also testified that Savio told her it was Peterson outside and they were fighting over money.
Mordente's testimony highlighted what is sure to be a key part of the trial - the fact that Peterson was a police officer. His attorneys have raised questions about why witnesses didn't notify police if they believed Savio feared Peterson.
Mordente said she didn't call police when she learned Savio died "because it wouldn't have helped."
"Kathleen had stated on several occasions she had called police," Mordente said.
During the hearing, prosecutors will present to Will County Judge Stephen White about 60 witnesses to testify about 15 hearsay statements. White will then decide if the jury can hear any or all of those statements when Peterson stands trial. Peterson has pleaded not guilty to murdering Savio, whose body was found in a dry tub. A trial date hasn't been set.
The Illinois Legislature passed the hearsay law after authorities named Peterson a suspect in the 2007 disappearance of his fourth wife, Stacy, then exhumed the body of Savio and reopened the investigation into her death.
While neither side has talked much about the evidence in the case, from the day Peterson was arrested, Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow has made it clear that allowing Savio to tell jurors why Peterson wanted her dead is crucial to his case.
"In essence, what you're basically allowing the victim of a violent crime to do is testify from the grave," Glasgow, who pushed for passage of the bill, told reporters in May shortly after Peterson was arrested.
The list of witnesses remains under seal, but Savio's niece, Melissa Doman, said her mother, Anna Doman, is among those who have been called to testify.
"It would be about things my Aunt Kitty (Savio) told my mom about how she was afraid for her life, she said she was afraid of Drew," Melissa Doman said, adding that she has not been called to testify.
Also expected to testify are other members of Savio's family, including her sister, Susan Savio. It was Susan Savio who told a coroner's jury shortly after her sister's death that Kathleen Savio had told family members that, "if she would die, it may look like an accident, but it wasn't."
The death initially was ruled an accidental drowning - until Stacy Peterson's disappearance led officials to exhume Savio's body, conduct another autopsy and conclude Savio was the victim of a homicide. Drew Peterson has not been charged in Stacy Peterson's disappearance.
Other possible witnesses who could be asked to testify about the stormy relationship between Drew Peterson and Savio are his former colleagues. Eighteen times in two years, police were called to the couple's Bolingbrook home to respond to reports of trouble between the two, with Savio telling officers that her husband had beaten her and threatened to kill her. Peterson was never charged. Savio was charged with domestic battery and later was acquitted.
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There also are court documents that prosecutors are expected to present into evidence, including a 2002 order of protection in which Savio alleges that Peterson knocked her down, ripped off her necklace and left marks on her body.
"He wants me dead, and if he has to, he will burn the house down just to shut me up," she wrote.
Among the more intriguing possible witnesses are members of the clergy at a Bolingbrook church attended by Stacy Peterson. In the days after her disappearance, there were media reports that she had told a clergyman a couple months earlier that Drew Peterson had confessed to her that he killed Savio and made it look like an accident.
Peterson's attorneys have made it clear that they will attack the credibility of at least some of the witnesses.
"All it is, is rumor, innuendo and gossip," defense attorney Joel Brodsky said after a recent hearing concerning information contained in the 15 statements. "People had ulterior motives for saying what they said or are out-and-out unreliable people."
The defense is not expected to call any witnesses of its own during the hearing.
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Kathleen Savio, Drew Peterson's third wife, who mysteriously drowned in a bathtub six years ago, essentially is testifying from the grave during the hearing. Witnesses are expected to tell a judge how Savio discussed and wrote about her fears that Peterson, a former Bolingbrook police sergeant, would kill her.
The hearing, projected to last three weeks, is expected to provide the first detailed look at evidence prosecutors contend ties Peterson to Savio's 2004 death. It stems from a state law that allows a judge to admit hearsay evidence in first-degree murder cases if prosecutors can prove a defendant killed a witness to prevent him or her from testifying.
Issam Karam, who said he worked with Savio at Parkway Imaging in Romeoville in late 2003, testified that Savio told him she had come home one night looking forward to a bath and glass of wine when Peterson threw her to the floor. Savio said the incident occurred after she had changed the locks to the home.
Karam said Peterson grabbed Savio's throat and had a knife. Savio showed him a bruise on her arm, Karam said.
"(Peterson) said nothing that she could do would make her safe," Karam said. "She could not run or hide. He could kill her there and then."
Another witness, Savio's boss, testified that a number of times a Bolingbrook squad car was parked in front of her Romeoville business while Savio was inside. Lisa Mordente said that on one occasion, Savio was returning from lunch and approached another vehicle parked outside and spoke to a man inside.
"She was very shaken up when she came back in, her hand was shaking, she had tears, she was a mess," Mordente said.
Mordente also testified that Savio told her it was Peterson outside and they were fighting over money.
Mordente's testimony highlighted what is sure to be a key part of the trial - the fact that Peterson was a police officer. His attorneys have raised questions about why witnesses didn't notify police if they believed Savio feared Peterson.
Mordente said she didn't call police when she learned Savio died "because it wouldn't have helped."
"Kathleen had stated on several occasions she had called police," Mordente said.
During the hearing, prosecutors will present to Will County Judge Stephen White about 60 witnesses to testify about 15 hearsay statements. White will then decide if the jury can hear any or all of those statements when Peterson stands trial. Peterson has pleaded not guilty to murdering Savio, whose body was found in a dry tub. A trial date hasn't been set.
The Illinois Legislature passed the hearsay law after authorities named Peterson a suspect in the 2007 disappearance of his fourth wife, Stacy, then exhumed the body of Savio and reopened the investigation into her death.
While neither side has talked much about the evidence in the case, from the day Peterson was arrested, Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow has made it clear that allowing Savio to tell jurors why Peterson wanted her dead is crucial to his case.
"In essence, what you're basically allowing the victim of a violent crime to do is testify from the grave," Glasgow, who pushed for passage of the bill, told reporters in May shortly after Peterson was arrested.
The list of witnesses remains under seal, but Savio's niece, Melissa Doman, said her mother, Anna Doman, is among those who have been called to testify.
"It would be about things my Aunt Kitty (Savio) told my mom about how she was afraid for her life, she said she was afraid of Drew," Melissa Doman said, adding that she has not been called to testify.
Also expected to testify are other members of Savio's family, including her sister, Susan Savio. It was Susan Savio who told a coroner's jury shortly after her sister's death that Kathleen Savio had told family members that, "if she would die, it may look like an accident, but it wasn't."
The death initially was ruled an accidental drowning - until Stacy Peterson's disappearance led officials to exhume Savio's body, conduct another autopsy and conclude Savio was the victim of a homicide. Drew Peterson has not been charged in Stacy Peterson's disappearance.
Other possible witnesses who could be asked to testify about the stormy relationship between Drew Peterson and Savio are his former colleagues. Eighteen times in two years, police were called to the couple's Bolingbrook home to respond to reports of trouble between the two, with Savio telling officers that her husband had beaten her and threatened to kill her. Peterson was never charged. Savio was charged with domestic battery and later was acquitted.
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There also are court documents that prosecutors are expected to present into evidence, including a 2002 order of protection in which Savio alleges that Peterson knocked her down, ripped off her necklace and left marks on her body.
"He wants me dead, and if he has to, he will burn the house down just to shut me up," she wrote.
Among the more intriguing possible witnesses are members of the clergy at a Bolingbrook church attended by Stacy Peterson. In the days after her disappearance, there were media reports that she had told a clergyman a couple months earlier that Drew Peterson had confessed to her that he killed Savio and made it look like an accident.
Peterson's attorneys have made it clear that they will attack the credibility of at least some of the witnesses.
"All it is, is rumor, innuendo and gossip," defense attorney Joel Brodsky said after a recent hearing concerning information contained in the 15 statements. "People had ulterior motives for saying what they said or are out-and-out unreliable people."
The defense is not expected to call any witnesses of its own during the hearing.
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UpDate On Officer Timothy Carson Charged with Bank Robbery
A Minneapolis police officer charged with bank robbery lived in the Center Point area as a child.
Timothy Edward Carson, 28, was charged Jan. 7 in federal court with robbing a bank in Apple Valley, Minn., and could be connected to up to a dozen Twin Cities robberies in late December and early January, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, Center Point-Urbana Superintendent Alan Marshall confirmed Carson attended district schools for the second through ninth grades, before moving away. Efforts to contact Carson’s parents weren’t successful Monday.
Carson was charged after an Apple Valley officer stopped his car the morning of Jan. 6 because it lacked a front license plate. The traffic stop occurred about three miles from a bank that was robbed later that morning.
The officer released Carson after he showed his police identification, but he noticed Carson’s car near the bank while responding to the robbery report about an hour later. Carson was about an hour late for that day’s shift, which began minutes before the robbery.
A police detective and an FBI agent interviewed Carson that evening.
Carson at first denied involvement, but then admitted his role, leading them to clothing used in the robbery, discarded in a trash can outside police headquarters.
Carson began work as a Minneapolis officer in January 2007, according to the Star Tribune. He has been a member of the department’s SWAT unit for nearly two years.
After Carson’s arrest, Minneapolis police named him as a suspect in robberies at convenience stores, a pharmacy, a coffee shop, and at least one other bank in Minneapolis and its suburbs.
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Timothy Edward Carson, 28, was charged Jan. 7 in federal court with robbing a bank in Apple Valley, Minn., and could be connected to up to a dozen Twin Cities robberies in late December and early January, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, Center Point-Urbana Superintendent Alan Marshall confirmed Carson attended district schools for the second through ninth grades, before moving away. Efforts to contact Carson’s parents weren’t successful Monday.
Carson was charged after an Apple Valley officer stopped his car the morning of Jan. 6 because it lacked a front license plate. The traffic stop occurred about three miles from a bank that was robbed later that morning.
The officer released Carson after he showed his police identification, but he noticed Carson’s car near the bank while responding to the robbery report about an hour later. Carson was about an hour late for that day’s shift, which began minutes before the robbery.
A police detective and an FBI agent interviewed Carson that evening.
Carson at first denied involvement, but then admitted his role, leading them to clothing used in the robbery, discarded in a trash can outside police headquarters.
Carson began work as a Minneapolis officer in January 2007, according to the Star Tribune. He has been a member of the department’s SWAT unit for nearly two years.
After Carson’s arrest, Minneapolis police named him as a suspect in robberies at convenience stores, a pharmacy, a coffee shop, and at least one other bank in Minneapolis and its suburbs.
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Officer Ramon Reyes Jr. Pleads Guilty to Fraud
A former Irving police officer pleaded guilty to defrauding a Housing and Urban Development program that sought to revitalize slumping neighborhoods by enticing law enforcers to live there with a 50 percent discount off the list price on a home.
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Officer Thomas Seifert Charged with Assaulting Handcuffed Man
A Miami Township police officer on paid administrative leave since August has been charged with misdemeanor assault in Miamisburg Municipal Court.
Thomas Seifert, 39, is awaiting a jury trial and an administrative hearing after Chief John Krug asked the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office to investigate allegations the officer physically assaulted a handcuffed man in August while on duty, according to court records and investigators.
“I cannot release any more details about the ongoing investigation other than there is one,” Krug said.
Krug’s department was working to fulfill a public records request made early Tuesday afternoon of the police incident reports that led to Seifert’s suspension.
Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Mike Nolan confirmed his detectives investigated Seifert’s actions and found “criminal wrongdoing.” The matter was referred back to Krug’s department, and the Warren County Prosecutor’s Office brought the criminal charges in early January, according to court records.
A jury trial has been set in the case for Feb. 25.
Krug said he asked independent agencies to investigate Seifert’s alleged actions because other officers witnessed them and could testify in court.
Seifert, who lives in Miamisburg, has received his normal paycheck for the last five months while the criminal investigation was conducted, per the police union’s contract with the township, Krug said.
“There are two investigations here, a criminal investigation and an administrative investigation,” he said. “The criminal investigation gets priority over the administrative, and now that we have charges, a pre-disciplinary hearing will likely be held within the next week.”
Township trustees will then be presented with the results of that hearing and decide Seifert’s employment status.
Seifert is not in jail on the charge and his attorney was not available for comment this afternoon,
Thomas Seifert, 39, is awaiting a jury trial and an administrative hearing after Chief John Krug asked the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office to investigate allegations the officer physically assaulted a handcuffed man in August while on duty, according to court records and investigators.
“I cannot release any more details about the ongoing investigation other than there is one,” Krug said.
Krug’s department was working to fulfill a public records request made early Tuesday afternoon of the police incident reports that led to Seifert’s suspension.
Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Mike Nolan confirmed his detectives investigated Seifert’s actions and found “criminal wrongdoing.” The matter was referred back to Krug’s department, and the Warren County Prosecutor’s Office brought the criminal charges in early January, according to court records.
A jury trial has been set in the case for Feb. 25.
Krug said he asked independent agencies to investigate Seifert’s alleged actions because other officers witnessed them and could testify in court.
Seifert, who lives in Miamisburg, has received his normal paycheck for the last five months while the criminal investigation was conducted, per the police union’s contract with the township, Krug said.
“There are two investigations here, a criminal investigation and an administrative investigation,” he said. “The criminal investigation gets priority over the administrative, and now that we have charges, a pre-disciplinary hearing will likely be held within the next week.”
Township trustees will then be presented with the results of that hearing and decide Seifert’s employment status.
Seifert is not in jail on the charge and his attorney was not available for comment this afternoon,
Officer Bryan Platz Arrested for Drunk Driving
A police officer in Coon Rapids, MN, was suspended from his job following a suspected DWI arrest when he was off-duty.
The officer, 35-year-old Bryan Platz, was arrested after rear-ending another car around 10PM Friday night. There were no serious injuries in the accident. When local police noted another officer was involved, they asked the state patrol to handle the situation.
Upon arriving at the scene, state patrol officers believed alcohol may have been a factor in the fender-bender. Officer Platz agreed to provide a blood sample. Those results may take weeks to process, but he has been suspended from duty regardless.
In most cases involving public officials, the department will conduct an internal investigation to consider multiple factors. Those factors include the officer's history of disciplinary problems, whether the officer was in a patrol vehicle or on duty, and if the officer broke department policies in the accident.
Platz has been an officer with the Coon Rapids police force for nearly 7 years. He will be paid during his leave time. No internal investigation was pursued to determine if the officer should be suspended; the action seemed to occur very quickly.
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The officer, 35-year-old Bryan Platz, was arrested after rear-ending another car around 10PM Friday night. There were no serious injuries in the accident. When local police noted another officer was involved, they asked the state patrol to handle the situation.
Upon arriving at the scene, state patrol officers believed alcohol may have been a factor in the fender-bender. Officer Platz agreed to provide a blood sample. Those results may take weeks to process, but he has been suspended from duty regardless.
In most cases involving public officials, the department will conduct an internal investigation to consider multiple factors. Those factors include the officer's history of disciplinary problems, whether the officer was in a patrol vehicle or on duty, and if the officer broke department policies in the accident.
Platz has been an officer with the Coon Rapids police force for nearly 7 years. He will be paid during his leave time. No internal investigation was pursued to determine if the officer should be suspended; the action seemed to occur very quickly.
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Monday, January 18, 2010
Hearing Set for Officer Raymond Ramos Accused of Sexually Assaulting Woman
A hearing is set today for former San Antonio policeman Raymond Ramos. The 30-year-old is accused of sexually assaulting a woman he detained more than two years ago in a park.
According to investigators, the alleged incident happened in November 2007 just after 4 a.m. Police said Ramos who was on-duty and in uniform sexually assaulted the victim at Golden Park in the 7800 block of Somerset Road. He was indicted in the case in June 2008 for civil rights violation of a person in custody and sexual assault.
Ramos worked overnight at SAPD's south patrol office. He had been with the department for two years. His indictment came on the same day as two fellow officers in an unrelated incident. However, both cases involved women who claimed sexual misconduct against on duty policemen.
Ramos' hearing is set to heard before Judge Cathy Torres Stahl in district court 144 Tuesday morning. If convicted, the former officer faces more than 20 years in prison for both charges.
He is also being sued by the alleged victim. She filed suit against the Ramos, the City of San Antonio, SAPD and police Chief William McManus last month.
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According to investigators, the alleged incident happened in November 2007 just after 4 a.m. Police said Ramos who was on-duty and in uniform sexually assaulted the victim at Golden Park in the 7800 block of Somerset Road. He was indicted in the case in June 2008 for civil rights violation of a person in custody and sexual assault.
Ramos worked overnight at SAPD's south patrol office. He had been with the department for two years. His indictment came on the same day as two fellow officers in an unrelated incident. However, both cases involved women who claimed sexual misconduct against on duty policemen.
Ramos' hearing is set to heard before Judge Cathy Torres Stahl in district court 144 Tuesday morning. If convicted, the former officer faces more than 20 years in prison for both charges.
He is also being sued by the alleged victim. She filed suit against the Ramos, the City of San Antonio, SAPD and police Chief William McManus last month.
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Inspector Marvetia Richardson Fired for Lying
The San Francisco Police Department has quietly fired a veteran inspector - the first officer to be dismissed from the force in more than four years - for a litany of misconduct that included lying about an incident in which Antioch police fired a Taser at her.
Inspector Marvetia "Lynn" Richardson, 42, was fired after a closed-door hearing of the Police Commission last month, but the panel made no announcement at the time. City officials confirmed Richardson's firing in response to inquiries from The Chronicle.
Richardson worked for the department for 15 years, most recently in the fraud unit. She had been suspended without pay since 2008, when then-Chief Heather Fong accused her of 11 disciplinary infractions.
Three of the counts stemmed from a June 2007 incident in which an Antioch police officer used a Taser to subdue her in her home on the city's Mokelumne Drive.
Officers were answering a call about someone making threats at Richardson's home. When they arrived, Richardson allegedly ordered them to leave, became belligerent and refused commands to show her hands, prompting the officers to use the Taser, according to the department's charges. She also refused to sign a citation for allegedly resisting arrest.
In November 2008, Richardson sued the Antioch police chief, the officers involved and the city, saying they had violated her civil rights by using the Taser wrongfully. The case is scheduled to go to trial in federal court in San Francisco this fall.
Before she filed her suit, however, San Francisco police officials concluded Richardson had lied about the incident in explaining it to the department's internal affairs unit.
Richardson, they said, told internal investigators that Antioch officers had never warned her they were intending to fire the Taser. They said an audio recording made by officers on the scene contradicted her story.
The department also accused her of misusing the police records system in 2007 to track down and send a letter to a woman, telling her that her husband was cheating on her. Richardson apparently was interested romantically in the woman with whom the husband was having the affair, according to the disciplinary charges.
The husband intercepted the letter and filed a complaint with the city.
Other charges alleged that Richardson had negligently cashed several stolen checks given to her by her tenant as rent, amounting to a total of nearly $26,000. The tenant stole the checks from his parents, according to the charges.
Richardson said she did not know the checks were stolen, but the department maintained that as a fraud investigator she should not have accepted checks from a third party.
Richardson was also accused of sick time abuse. She allegedly called in sick 29 times over the course of a year but failed to file paperwork that would ensure the time off was recorded as sick leave.
Quinton Cutlip, an attorney for Richardson, has argued that some of the charges were unfounded and others were lodged too late to comply with the one-year statute of limitations for disciplinary cases. He did not return calls last week seeking comment.
Richardson also did not return calls seeking comment. She is the first San Francisco police officer to be fired since Officer Anthony Nelson was dismissed in October 2005, after he was found to have lied about his use of force on an anti-war demonstrator whose arm he broke during a 2003 demonstration.
Inspector Marvetia "Lynn" Richardson, 42, was fired after a closed-door hearing of the Police Commission last month, but the panel made no announcement at the time. City officials confirmed Richardson's firing in response to inquiries from The Chronicle.
Richardson worked for the department for 15 years, most recently in the fraud unit. She had been suspended without pay since 2008, when then-Chief Heather Fong accused her of 11 disciplinary infractions.
Three of the counts stemmed from a June 2007 incident in which an Antioch police officer used a Taser to subdue her in her home on the city's Mokelumne Drive.
Officers were answering a call about someone making threats at Richardson's home. When they arrived, Richardson allegedly ordered them to leave, became belligerent and refused commands to show her hands, prompting the officers to use the Taser, according to the department's charges. She also refused to sign a citation for allegedly resisting arrest.
In November 2008, Richardson sued the Antioch police chief, the officers involved and the city, saying they had violated her civil rights by using the Taser wrongfully. The case is scheduled to go to trial in federal court in San Francisco this fall.
Before she filed her suit, however, San Francisco police officials concluded Richardson had lied about the incident in explaining it to the department's internal affairs unit.
Richardson, they said, told internal investigators that Antioch officers had never warned her they were intending to fire the Taser. They said an audio recording made by officers on the scene contradicted her story.
The department also accused her of misusing the police records system in 2007 to track down and send a letter to a woman, telling her that her husband was cheating on her. Richardson apparently was interested romantically in the woman with whom the husband was having the affair, according to the disciplinary charges.
The husband intercepted the letter and filed a complaint with the city.
Other charges alleged that Richardson had negligently cashed several stolen checks given to her by her tenant as rent, amounting to a total of nearly $26,000. The tenant stole the checks from his parents, according to the charges.
Richardson said she did not know the checks were stolen, but the department maintained that as a fraud investigator she should not have accepted checks from a third party.
Richardson was also accused of sick time abuse. She allegedly called in sick 29 times over the course of a year but failed to file paperwork that would ensure the time off was recorded as sick leave.
Quinton Cutlip, an attorney for Richardson, has argued that some of the charges were unfounded and others were lodged too late to comply with the one-year statute of limitations for disciplinary cases. He did not return calls last week seeking comment.
Richardson also did not return calls seeking comment. She is the first San Francisco police officer to be fired since Officer Anthony Nelson was dismissed in October 2005, after he was found to have lied about his use of force on an anti-war demonstrator whose arm he broke during a 2003 demonstration.
Officer Mary Hernandez Arrested for Assaulting Her Son
The police officer arrested Friday for assaulting her son was placed on paid administrative leave, the Santa Rosa police chief said.
Santa Rosa police officer Mary Hernandez will be placed on leave until the investigation into the case closes, Chief Xavier Martinez said.
He added it should conclude by midweek. Following its conclusion, Martinez will give his recommendation to the Santa Rosa city manager.
Once there, the city manager will decide whether Hernandez stays with the police department or not.
Action 4 News also spoke to Hernandez’ family, they said the Friday night incident did not happen the way police report it.
However, they refused to go into specifics, saying they were advised not to comment on the case.
San Benito Police responded to Hernandez’ home on the 1000 block of Chapman Street, at around 9:30 p.m. on Friday night.
Officers arrested Hernandez for allegedly punching her 15 year old son throughout his entire body.
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Santa Rosa police officer Mary Hernandez will be placed on leave until the investigation into the case closes, Chief Xavier Martinez said.
He added it should conclude by midweek. Following its conclusion, Martinez will give his recommendation to the Santa Rosa city manager.
Once there, the city manager will decide whether Hernandez stays with the police department or not.
Action 4 News also spoke to Hernandez’ family, they said the Friday night incident did not happen the way police report it.
However, they refused to go into specifics, saying they were advised not to comment on the case.
San Benito Police responded to Hernandez’ home on the 1000 block of Chapman Street, at around 9:30 p.m. on Friday night.
Officers arrested Hernandez for allegedly punching her 15 year old son throughout his entire body.
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Officer Hamlett Almendarez in Trouble for Having Sex While on Duty
Boys, keep your thingy in your pants until you get home. Or try whacking off before you cum to work. Damn! Such a dumb thing to lose your job over.
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Another officer with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department is in trouble for allegedly committing a sex act while on the job.
Hamlett Almendarez is the second CMPD officer assigned to the Eastway Division within a matter of weeks to lose his job over an alleged sex act.
Several police sources say Almendarez was working on Saturday at 3 a.m. when he took a break at the Fuel Pizza restaurant located on Central Avenue.
According to the CMPD, witnesses reported that Almendarez followed a woman out of the restroom after they allegedly engaged in a sexual act.
A witness called 311 and told a CMPD Sergeant about the alleged incident. The police department was able to pinpoint Almendarez to the accusation by using the GPS locator on his police car. Almendarez reportedly later resigned from the police department.
Almendarez is not charged with a crime. However, his former Eastway Division co-worker, Marcus Jackson, does face several sex assault charges. Jackson was fired after several women say he pulled them over and sexually assaulted them.
CMPD Chief Rodney Monroe says Jackson should have never been hired, but the department failed to do a proper background check.
News of the latest incident has made some East Charlotte residents nervous.
"Especially being a female, if I'm driving by myself, and getting pulled over or something like that," said Makeda Johnson. "It's something to worry about, it really is."
But folks we talked to also said it's important not to judge all police by the allegations against these two officers.
"It's not a reflection on all of them, because some of them out here really do a good job," said Twana Wortham.
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Another officer with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department is in trouble for allegedly committing a sex act while on the job.
Hamlett Almendarez is the second CMPD officer assigned to the Eastway Division within a matter of weeks to lose his job over an alleged sex act.
Several police sources say Almendarez was working on Saturday at 3 a.m. when he took a break at the Fuel Pizza restaurant located on Central Avenue.
According to the CMPD, witnesses reported that Almendarez followed a woman out of the restroom after they allegedly engaged in a sexual act.
A witness called 311 and told a CMPD Sergeant about the alleged incident. The police department was able to pinpoint Almendarez to the accusation by using the GPS locator on his police car. Almendarez reportedly later resigned from the police department.
Almendarez is not charged with a crime. However, his former Eastway Division co-worker, Marcus Jackson, does face several sex assault charges. Jackson was fired after several women say he pulled them over and sexually assaulted them.
CMPD Chief Rodney Monroe says Jackson should have never been hired, but the department failed to do a proper background check.
News of the latest incident has made some East Charlotte residents nervous.
"Especially being a female, if I'm driving by myself, and getting pulled over or something like that," said Makeda Johnson. "It's something to worry about, it really is."
But folks we talked to also said it's important not to judge all police by the allegations against these two officers.
"It's not a reflection on all of them, because some of them out here really do a good job," said Twana Wortham.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Former Deputy Alan Brooks Accused of Secretly Tapeing Couple in Sex Act
Prosecutors charged a former Natrona County reserve deputy with seven felonies in connection with allegations that he secretly videotaped couples engaged in sexual activities inside their Evansville home.
Police say Alan Brooks, 65, wired a Curtis Street home in Evansville with elaborate recording devices and spent the past four years videotaping its residents. Court documents refer to Brooks as the property’s “manager and/or landlord.”
Authorities have confiscated hundreds of incriminating recordings, as well as “multiple hidden cameras” and “recording devices,” according to an affidavit from the case.
Brooks made his initial appearance in Natrona County Circuit Court on Friday. Prosecutors charged him with one count of intercepting electronic communications and six counts of voyeurism.
The Casper resident faces the possibility of 17 years behind bars if convicted of all charges.
Judge Michael Patchen set bond at $10,000.
Brooks told Patchen he was employed with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. At the time the crimes are alleged to have occurred, however, Brooks was also a reserve deputy for the Natrona County Sheriff’s Office. He had served in that capacity for 20-plus years.
Reached Friday afternoon, Sheriff Mark Benton said Brooks was removed from reserve deputy status on Dec. 18 — the day of his arrest. The sheriff declined to comment on the case further.
The investigation into Brooks began on Dec. 17, when a 19-year-old female resident of the house on Curtis Street told Evansville police she had discovered several holes drilled into the ceiling in the home’s bathroom and living room. The woman told police her 26-year-old boyfriend and her had then found “closed-circuit television cameras and recording equipment” in the attic, according to the affidavit.
Police say that while the couple was trying to enter a boarded-up garage at the residence, Brooks showed up and asked what they were doing.
After telling Brooks what they had found, the couple, along with a male friend, ultimately detained him and waited on authorities to arrive. While waiting, Brooks reportedly told the couple and their friend, “Just kill me,” according to the affidavit.
Investigators say that while executing a search warrant on the Curtis Street home early the next morning, they discovered several hundred VHS recordings. At least one of the tapes showed the house’s female occupant and her boyfriend engaged in sexual activity. Another showed the woman showering.
Authorities say a DVD confiscated showed the home’s two previous occupants engaged in sexual activity.
According to the affidavit, police also found a “logging/tally system very similar to an accountant’s book,” during the search of the home. The book seemed to be a who-what-when-where tally of sexual activities that had been secretly recorded, according to the affidavit.
Police also searched Brooks’ residence on West Micro Road in Casper on Dec. 18. That search, authorities say, revealed video recordings of a female bathing in the home’s bathtub. After being contacted by police, the woman in the video said she had “house-sat” for Brooks in late 2008.
In all, authorities say they found secret video recordings of six adults. None of the people in any of the recordings said they had given anyone permission to record them.
Investigators say they discovered printed e-mails that seemed to indicate Brooks is, or has been, a member of a Web site that “reveals that it promotes the downloading, uploading and viewing of still and video images of adults without their consent and/or knowledge,” the affidavit states.
According to the Natrona County Detention Center’s automated line, Brooks remained in jail Friday evening.
Police say Alan Brooks, 65, wired a Curtis Street home in Evansville with elaborate recording devices and spent the past four years videotaping its residents. Court documents refer to Brooks as the property’s “manager and/or landlord.”
Authorities have confiscated hundreds of incriminating recordings, as well as “multiple hidden cameras” and “recording devices,” according to an affidavit from the case.
Brooks made his initial appearance in Natrona County Circuit Court on Friday. Prosecutors charged him with one count of intercepting electronic communications and six counts of voyeurism.
The Casper resident faces the possibility of 17 years behind bars if convicted of all charges.
Judge Michael Patchen set bond at $10,000.
Brooks told Patchen he was employed with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. At the time the crimes are alleged to have occurred, however, Brooks was also a reserve deputy for the Natrona County Sheriff’s Office. He had served in that capacity for 20-plus years.
Reached Friday afternoon, Sheriff Mark Benton said Brooks was removed from reserve deputy status on Dec. 18 — the day of his arrest. The sheriff declined to comment on the case further.
The investigation into Brooks began on Dec. 17, when a 19-year-old female resident of the house on Curtis Street told Evansville police she had discovered several holes drilled into the ceiling in the home’s bathroom and living room. The woman told police her 26-year-old boyfriend and her had then found “closed-circuit television cameras and recording equipment” in the attic, according to the affidavit.
Police say that while the couple was trying to enter a boarded-up garage at the residence, Brooks showed up and asked what they were doing.
After telling Brooks what they had found, the couple, along with a male friend, ultimately detained him and waited on authorities to arrive. While waiting, Brooks reportedly told the couple and their friend, “Just kill me,” according to the affidavit.
Investigators say that while executing a search warrant on the Curtis Street home early the next morning, they discovered several hundred VHS recordings. At least one of the tapes showed the house’s female occupant and her boyfriend engaged in sexual activity. Another showed the woman showering.
Authorities say a DVD confiscated showed the home’s two previous occupants engaged in sexual activity.
According to the affidavit, police also found a “logging/tally system very similar to an accountant’s book,” during the search of the home. The book seemed to be a who-what-when-where tally of sexual activities that had been secretly recorded, according to the affidavit.
Police also searched Brooks’ residence on West Micro Road in Casper on Dec. 18. That search, authorities say, revealed video recordings of a female bathing in the home’s bathtub. After being contacted by police, the woman in the video said she had “house-sat” for Brooks in late 2008.
In all, authorities say they found secret video recordings of six adults. None of the people in any of the recordings said they had given anyone permission to record them.
Investigators say they discovered printed e-mails that seemed to indicate Brooks is, or has been, a member of a Web site that “reveals that it promotes the downloading, uploading and viewing of still and video images of adults without their consent and/or knowledge,” the affidavit states.
According to the Natrona County Detention Center’s automated line, Brooks remained in jail Friday evening.
Officer Elliott Porter Arrested for DWI
Arlington police arrested one of their own this weekend.
Arlington police say they received a call from a citizen at about 1:15 a.m. Sunday regarding a man driving erratically southbound on Collins Street. Officers stopped the vehicle in the 3400 block of S. Collins Street and arrested Elliott Porter, 29, an off-duty Arlington Police Officer.
Officer Porter was taken to the Arlington City Jail and charged with driving while intoxicated. Bail was set at $1,000 by the court. He posted bail and was released Sunday morning. Officer Porter has been placed on routine administrative leave. Arlington police say that in addition to the criminal investigation, an internal inquiry will also be conducted.
Arlington police say they received a call from a citizen at about 1:15 a.m. Sunday regarding a man driving erratically southbound on Collins Street. Officers stopped the vehicle in the 3400 block of S. Collins Street and arrested Elliott Porter, 29, an off-duty Arlington Police Officer.
Officer Porter was taken to the Arlington City Jail and charged with driving while intoxicated. Bail was set at $1,000 by the court. He posted bail and was released Sunday morning. Officer Porter has been placed on routine administrative leave. Arlington police say that in addition to the criminal investigation, an internal inquiry will also be conducted.
Deputy Sgt. Edward Henley Accused of Beating His Wife
An Escambia County Florida Sheriff's deputy is finding himself on the other side of the law after he is accused of beating his wife.
Deputies say Sgt. Edward Henley, a deputy of 22 years, struck his wife after coming home from a party.
Deputies received the 911 call around 12:45 Saturday morning. Henley's wife claims the two were arguing on the way home and the argument eventually got physical.
Based on evidence at the scene Sgt. Henley was arrested. He is being charged with False Imprisonment, Battery and Assault. He is being held in the Escambia County Jail with no bond.
Deputies say Sgt. Edward Henley, a deputy of 22 years, struck his wife after coming home from a party.
Deputies received the 911 call around 12:45 Saturday morning. Henley's wife claims the two were arguing on the way home and the argument eventually got physical.
Based on evidence at the scene Sgt. Henley was arrested. He is being charged with False Imprisonment, Battery and Assault. He is being held in the Escambia County Jail with no bond.
Salt Lake Family Wants City to Pay Damages Caused by SWAT Team
A Salt Lake family wants the city to pay for damage from a SWAT team search of their house.
It stems from the Jan. 5 search for the man accused of fatally shooting Millard County sheriff's Deputy Josie Fox.
Police originally believed the suspect, Roberto Roman, was hiding at the Salt Lake City home of his cousin, Guillermo Miramontes. A car believed to be connected to the shooting was spotted in front of the house on the 1000 West block of 300 South. Officers got permission to search the home and ended up firing 10 canisters of tear gas into the house before entering.
Roman was not inside. He later was found with an accused accomplice and arrested north of Beaver.
The Salt Lake Tribune reports damage to the Salt Lake City home is approximately $25,000. The family says it needs to replace the carpet, two couches, six beds, most of their clothing and all of the food that was in the house.
Family members tell the Tribune they're afraid they will get stuck with the cost. The family filed a claim against the city and says it will file a lawsuit if it doesn't get paid.
Community activist Michael Clara, who also is a neighbor of the Miramontes family, says the family has been living in a hotel room.
"Eleven days (after the SWAT search) the health department shows up and says 'Oh, this house, we need to close it because there is too much tear gas in there,'" he told KSL.
He says the family basically has been left homeless.
"The house is uninhabitable. Everything is damaged, the windows are all broken. There's no process in place to help someone in that situation," he said.
Salt Lake City isn't commenting because of the pending claim.
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It stems from the Jan. 5 search for the man accused of fatally shooting Millard County sheriff's Deputy Josie Fox.
Police originally believed the suspect, Roberto Roman, was hiding at the Salt Lake City home of his cousin, Guillermo Miramontes. A car believed to be connected to the shooting was spotted in front of the house on the 1000 West block of 300 South. Officers got permission to search the home and ended up firing 10 canisters of tear gas into the house before entering.
Roman was not inside. He later was found with an accused accomplice and arrested north of Beaver.
The Salt Lake Tribune reports damage to the Salt Lake City home is approximately $25,000. The family says it needs to replace the carpet, two couches, six beds, most of their clothing and all of the food that was in the house.
Family members tell the Tribune they're afraid they will get stuck with the cost. The family filed a claim against the city and says it will file a lawsuit if it doesn't get paid.
Community activist Michael Clara, who also is a neighbor of the Miramontes family, says the family has been living in a hotel room.
"Eleven days (after the SWAT search) the health department shows up and says 'Oh, this house, we need to close it because there is too much tear gas in there,'" he told KSL.
He says the family basically has been left homeless.
"The house is uninhabitable. Everything is damaged, the windows are all broken. There's no process in place to help someone in that situation," he said.
Salt Lake City isn't commenting because of the pending claim.
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Saturday, January 16, 2010
Officer Anthony Fletcher Arrested for Lewd Act with Child
A Riverside police officer is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday on charges he molested a teenage girl.
Anthony Wayne Fletcher, 38, of Eastvale, was arrested Dec. 24 by Riverside County sheriff's detectives. He faces three felony counts of lewd and lascivious acts with a minor and three misdemeanors of annoying/molesting a child.
The incidents in the complaint took place in August, according to a criminal complaint filed in Riverside County Superior Court.
The girl, now 17, said Fletcher fondled her breasts numerous times over two years, all when he believed she was sleeping, sheriff's investigators wrote in a declaration in support of an arrest warrant.
Fletcher's attorney, Mark Johnson, did not return requests for comment Friday. In a brief interview with detectives on Oct. 22, Fletcher denied the allegations, according to the declaration.
The Riverside police weapons expert remains employed by the department, officials said Friday. They declined to comment further.
Sheriff's investigators received the case on Oct. 19, after the girl made the allegations first to a friend and then to her mother, according to the arrest warrant declaration.
The teen said she kept the secret for a long time because she didn't want to hurt her relatives, Investigator Chris Barajas wrote. After learning of a dispute between Fletcher and another family member, she told her mother, the declaration states.
Anthony Wayne Fletcher, 38, of Eastvale, was arrested Dec. 24 by Riverside County sheriff's detectives. He faces three felony counts of lewd and lascivious acts with a minor and three misdemeanors of annoying/molesting a child.
The incidents in the complaint took place in August, according to a criminal complaint filed in Riverside County Superior Court.
The girl, now 17, said Fletcher fondled her breasts numerous times over two years, all when he believed she was sleeping, sheriff's investigators wrote in a declaration in support of an arrest warrant.
Fletcher's attorney, Mark Johnson, did not return requests for comment Friday. In a brief interview with detectives on Oct. 22, Fletcher denied the allegations, according to the declaration.
The Riverside police weapons expert remains employed by the department, officials said Friday. They declined to comment further.
Sheriff's investigators received the case on Oct. 19, after the girl made the allegations first to a friend and then to her mother, according to the arrest warrant declaration.
The teen said she kept the secret for a long time because she didn't want to hurt her relatives, Investigator Chris Barajas wrote. After learning of a dispute between Fletcher and another family member, she told her mother, the declaration states.
Former Officer Todd Vecellio Convicted of Sex Crimes Against Children
A former University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police officer was sentenced Thursday to two years to life in the Department of Corrections after being convicted in an Internet Crimes Against Children case.
Todd Vecellio was convicted of one count each of conspiracy to commit sexual assault on a child by a person in a position of trust, solicitation, criminal attempt to commit sexual assault on a child and enticement of a child by a jury in November.
He received concurrent sentences of two years to life on the conspiracy, solicitation and enticement charges and one year on the attempt to commit sexual assault charge.
District Judge David Thorson had ordered a pre-sentence investigation and psychosexual evaluation prior to sentencing. Vecellio refused to participate citing his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.
Assistant District Attorney Kathy Eberling asked for the prison sentence because a sex offender should not be given the benefit of probation when they have not shown that they are amenable to treatment. An offender cannot participate in treatment if he remains in denial.
She added that this case was all the more abhorrent because Vecellio violated his position of trust as a police officer.
Vecellio’s defense attorney, Ted McClintock, said he believed the District Attorney was urging an unconstitutional policy standard.
He said his client intends to appeal his conviction and that any statements he makes prior to filing that appeal could be used against him in a subsequent retrial.
“They can’t force him to make an admission,” McClintock said. “That would decimate his constitutional right to appeal.”
Thorson said this would be a close case as to sentencing the defendant to probation or prison.
“I don’t second-guess the jury’s decision whatsoever,” he said.
He said Vecellio’s story after his arrest that he was conducting his own undercover investigation was very convenient once he got caught.
“Given the nature of the offence, I don’t see anything mitigating,” he said. “The defendant has basically said he’s not going to participate in treatment.”
Vecellio now has 45 days to file an appeal.
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Todd Vecellio was convicted of one count each of conspiracy to commit sexual assault on a child by a person in a position of trust, solicitation, criminal attempt to commit sexual assault on a child and enticement of a child by a jury in November.
He received concurrent sentences of two years to life on the conspiracy, solicitation and enticement charges and one year on the attempt to commit sexual assault charge.
District Judge David Thorson had ordered a pre-sentence investigation and psychosexual evaluation prior to sentencing. Vecellio refused to participate citing his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.
Assistant District Attorney Kathy Eberling asked for the prison sentence because a sex offender should not be given the benefit of probation when they have not shown that they are amenable to treatment. An offender cannot participate in treatment if he remains in denial.
She added that this case was all the more abhorrent because Vecellio violated his position of trust as a police officer.
Vecellio’s defense attorney, Ted McClintock, said he believed the District Attorney was urging an unconstitutional policy standard.
He said his client intends to appeal his conviction and that any statements he makes prior to filing that appeal could be used against him in a subsequent retrial.
“They can’t force him to make an admission,” McClintock said. “That would decimate his constitutional right to appeal.”
Thorson said this would be a close case as to sentencing the defendant to probation or prison.
“I don’t second-guess the jury’s decision whatsoever,” he said.
He said Vecellio’s story after his arrest that he was conducting his own undercover investigation was very convenient once he got caught.
“Given the nature of the offence, I don’t see anything mitigating,” he said. “The defendant has basically said he’s not going to participate in treatment.”
Vecellio now has 45 days to file an appeal.
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