Asheville police officer charged with assaulting woman


Asheville police officer charged with assaulting woman

Local media outlets report that 22-year-old Ethan Taylor Russell was arrested at his home and charged early Thursday.

The night before, authorities say Russell held down a woman, covered her mouth and told her to shut up. Deputies also say Russell shoved the woman up against a wall by her neck.

Russell was jailed on a $2,000 bond, and it wasn't known if he had an attorney. City officials said he had been on the police force for just over a year and would not comment further on his employment.

 

Dallas officer arrested, charged


Police: Dallas officer arrested, charged with felony family violence assault

Tristan Hallman

A rookie Dallas officer was arrested Thursday and charged with felony domestic violence assault, police said.

Police say they responded to an injured person call at Methodist Charlton Medical Center. The female victim told police that she and Officer Julian Harris, 27, had an argument that turned into a physical fight at Harris’s Dallas apartment.

Harris, who was hired in June 2013, was arrested and charged with aggravated assault, a second-degree felony. He is currently in Dallas County jail in lieu of $25,000 bail.

If he does bond out, detectives have filed an emergency protective order against him to keep him away from the woman.

Harris has been placed on administrative leave pending the investigation. He was a South Central patrol officer.

In May, he was lauded by the department and the Dallas Police Association forhelping save hooky-playing teens who were swept into a creek during a rain storm.

This post will be updated as more information is provided.

 

Memphis Police Officer Charged With Murder In Wife’s Shooting


Memphis Police Officer Charged With Murder In Wife’s Shooting

A Memphis police officer charged with second-degree murder for fatally shooting her wife has pleaded not guilty.

Authorities charged 34-year-old officer Jaselyn Grant on Wednesday in the death of 29-year-old Keara Crowder. Police say Grant was also charged with attempted murder because she tried to shoot Crowder’s 12-year-old son.

Defense attorney Dewun Settle said after Grant’s arraignment on Thursday that his client “was defending herself.”

Police said the shooting occurred during a domestic argument at the home where the women lived. Investigators said in an affidavit that Grant’s claim of self-defense did not “corroborate other witness statements or the crime scene.”

Records show that the couple had a history of domestic violence, with Grant’s “stressful” job as a police officer possibly playing a role.

“This is a very, very stressful job,” said Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong.

“I don’t think being a police officer exempts you from any of the other pressures of life. We’d hope none of our members would result in violence, especially to the level this particular case has,” Armstrong added.

Grant, who resigned from the Memphis Police Department on Thursday, is currently in jail on a $500,000 bond.

Police in south suburban Matteson say the man who robbed a BMO Harris bank last Friday had been a lieutenant on the Atlanta police force



Steve Miller

MATTESON, Ill. (CBS) – Police in south suburban Matteson say the man who robbed a BMO Harris bank last Friday had been a lieutenant on the Atlanta police force – until he was fired after a DUI arrest.

At the bank robbery last week, Matteson Deputy Police Chief Robert Debeikis says, the robber had a gun tucked into his waistband – and showed it as he demanded money.

Then when the robber left – a chase began – and Debeikis says the robber raised the gun to his head and shot and killed himself.

It was later that police learned the identity of the robber: 44-year-old Maurice Dodd.

Debeikis says Dodd was visiting family in the Chicago area.

But he was from Atlanta – and had been a police lieutenant there – until he was fired after being arrested for DUI several months ago.

“A lot of people recover from DUIs, and I know it’s tough being a police officer losing your job for DUI, but frankly, it’s not the end of the world. I don’t know what the rest of his story was, but it was quite tragic.”

Deputy Chief Debeikis says they’ve learned something about the gun Dodd used to kill himself.

“When we recovered the gun, it did say ‘property of Atlanta Police Department’ on it. So I’m assuming it was from his police job.”

Police recovered $4,100 that was taken in the bank robbery.

Officer reportedly pulled over school bus to deliver son's lunch


 
Officer reportedly pulled over school bus to deliver son's lunch

An Illinois police officer is reportedly under investigation after he allegedly pulled over a school bus to deliver lunch to his son.

A driver with Durham Bus Service filed a complaint last week with the Johnsburg Police Department alleging Lt. Brian Keller used his unmarked black Dodge Charger to stop the bus in McHenry County to deliver lunch to his son on board,the Chicago Tribune reports.

The bus, which was located outside of Keller’s jurisdiction when he stopped the vehicle, was en route to Marion Central Catholic High School in Woodstock, roughly nine miles from where the incident occurred on Nov. 11.

School officials referred inquiries to the bus service. A spokeswoman for Durham Bus Service would only confirm that the bus was transporting high school students at the time.

Keller and the bus driver were unreachable for comment, the newspaper reports. Keller was identified in a report of the incident filed in McHenry County.

“The apparent purpose of the stop was to issue his son his lunch for the day,” the complaint read, according to the Tribune.  “The complainant was advised that documentation would be made, however, she needed to contact (the Lake County Sheriff’s Office) regarding the incident.”

Lake County Undersheriff Raymond Rose acknowledged the complaint, which he said was currently under investigation.

“We received information regarding allegations of inappropriate actions by Lt. Brian Keller,” Rose told the news site in a written statement. “As a result of that, Sheriff (Mark) Curran and I have ordered an internal investigation into the allegations.”

Keller reportedly worked closely with the department’s chief until he recent transfer to a new position at a local court.
 
 

Do cops target blacks?


Do cops target blacks? FBI stats show arrest disparity


Jay Scott Smith

African-Americans were arrested at some of the highest rates in the country in Monmouth and Ocean counties, according to a review of FBI records.

The statistics for 2011-2012 show that in several Shore communities, blacks accounted for up to 44 percent of arrests in towns where the black population was less than 15 percent of total residents, according to the FBI data compiled by USA Today. Of the 19 local police departments that self-reported their arrest numbers to the FBI, the biggest disparities were seen at the Monmouth County Sheriff's Department and the Wall police department in Monmouth, and the Lakewood police department in Ocean.

Arrest rates and race have come into sharper focus in recent weeks following the shooting death of a Michael Brown, a black, unarmed suspect, by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. But while the FBI statistics show the racial disparity, a gulf of opinions divide the reasons. Some people of color will quickly point to the disparity as racial profiling of African-Americans. While it could be an underlying factor, police agencies and others say that there are a number of reasons that go beyond race.

"It doesn't mean that police are discriminating," David Harris, a University of Pittsburgh law professor, told USA Today. "But it does mean it's worth looking at. It means you might have a problem and you need to pay attention."

Harris said that while "disparity is not discrimination," people whose local police departments have disparity issues "would have a legitimate reason to go to his or her police department and say what gives, explain this."

The Monmouth County Sheriff's Department, which had the most arrests of the 19 police agencies in both counties, showed the greatest disparity. In 2011-12, 6,768 arrests made and 3,010 were of black suspects, or 44.5 percent, according to USA Today's analysis. Monmouth County has a black population of 7 percent, or about 46,400 residents. The arrests were mostly because of outstanding warrants, according to the Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office.

In Wall, a township where just 638 of its 26,100 residents are black, 17 percent of their arrests — 468 of them — were African-Americans. In Lakewood, where just 6 percent of the population is black, 35 percent of the arrests in 2011-2012 were of African-Americans.

"The hard questions you want to answer is what's behind those numbers, what types of crimes they are, the and the time period," said Al Della Fave, the spokesman for the Ocean County Prosecutor's office. Of note, the Ocean County Sheriff's Department reported that nearly 45 percent of its arrests in 2011-2012 were of African-Americans.

Calls to Wall Township police and the Monmouth County Sheriff were not returned. Della Fave, who said that a majority of the Ocean County Sheriff's Department's arrests come from outstanding warrants, offered the fluctuating population of the Shore as another explanation for the some of the skewed numbers.

"Our county is strange because we have the summer influx," he said. "We have two populations: we have the winter population and we have the summer population.

"During the vacation season, the population almost quadruples," he added. "You've got to take that into account." Della Fave also said that prosecutor Joseph Coronato, who took office in 2013, would look into the numbers to get a better understanding of why disparity is happening.

We Live It Every Day"

Fred Rush has a long history of witnessing and dealing with racial tension and racial issues in Lakewood. The president of Ocean County's NAACP chapter said that the numbers, particularly in Lakewood, are indicative of a bigger problem between the police and its black residents.

"One would say that it because of the community we live in," Rush said. "We are essentially three communities: the Orthodox, the Hispanics and blacks. It's a big concern of ours and we're trying to deal with it."

Rush said that they have noticed the disparities for years and he also wonders what the real answers are, feeling that no straight answers are given.

"You can ask that question as many times as they want and they will tell you that they don't (racially) profile," Rush said. "But one has to believe to some degree that they do. In Lakewood, that's something that I notice.

"I go to the courts a lot and I'll just sit and look at the disparity," he added. "When you look at the (black) population and then look at our courts. There's a few scattered Caucasians, a lot of Hispanics, and then blacks and that's just on the municipal level."

Rush is currently attempting to get the four Lakewood High School football players that are currently awaiting trial on robbery charges to be tried as juveniles. Rush said that he has been asked by judges why he's in court and he said it's "just to see how justice is being administered."

Lakewood Police Chief Robert Lawson could not be reached for comment.

Rush acknowledged that profiling is not the only reason behind the disparity in arrests, saying that societal factors such as lack of education, unemployment and a damaged family structure help contribute to criminal behavior.

"All that goes on here, and it's not condoned, but I would surely say that this is not a way of life here," Rush said. "Disparities are disparities and discriminatory and it's a big problem here in Lakewood."

Rush said that a lot of the issues in Lakewood do not receive much exposure. He said that the problems of African-Americans, particularly young black men, being arrested is a distinct problem that goes beyond numbers.

"It's not something that we just noticed," he said. "You can bring out statistics, but we live it every day and we see it. There's more of a propensity for (a black male) to get stopped than for somebody white."

"Do we have problems? Yes. We have tremendous problems," he added. "You don't really have to be extremely educated to see the disparate treatment of our people and especially with the justice system. You don't have to be a rocket scientists to know that."

 


Salem police captain’s duties are curtailed


By Steven A. Rosenberg

Salem police Captain Brian Gilligan, who was suspended last month for working extra detail shifts while on city time, will no longer oversee detail shifts as part of his duties, Police Chief Paul Tucker said.
In a review of department policy, Tucker said Captain Mark Losolfo would oversee detail assignments. Tucker also announced that officers could no longer take half days of vacation time to work details. Gilligan, who has worked for the Salem Police Department for 21 years, will still run the department’s Special Operations Division, which oversees planning of events such as Halloween, parades, and the department’s Street Crime Unit.
Continue reading below
Gilligan, who topped the department’s salary list by earning $168,000 last year, could not be reached for comment.
This marks Gilligan’s second suspension as a Salem police officer. According to Tucker, Gilligan was suspended in 2005 for 30 days for having “an improper relationship with a court employee.”
The policy assessment comes just weeks after Gilligan was suspended for five days, and was forced to forfeit 12 vacation days after Tucker concluded that Gilligan may have worked as many as 24 detail shifts over the last year on city time.
In an interview, Tucker said he began his investigation in the spring after some officers questioned Gilligan’s record keeping. Tucker speculated that some of the hours Gilligan worked on detail shifts may have been on comp time — city police hours that Gilligan had previously worked but did not submit for pay — but the work hours were poorly documented.
In a May 29 letter to Gilligan, Tucker said he had warned the police captain to properly submit his work hours. “You should recall my direct warning to ensure you took appropriate steps to use vacation or personal days if you wished to engage in detail work. You should also recall my telling you that if you didn’t properly document your time off that a year or two from now it will appear as if you were double-dipping,” Tucker wrote.
According to Salem police policy, detail officers earn $40 an hour, and once they begin the shift they are paid a minimum of $160, even if the detail lasts less than four hours. Detail shifts are assigned by seniority, and senior officers, such as Gilligan, can work as many shifts as they sign up for. Last year, Gilligan earned an extra $26,352 in detail pay.
“I think there’s a lesson here for everybody, that you have to be circumspect,” said Tucker, who does not believe the practice of working details on city time is widespread.
Tucker also believes new computer software the department plans to purchase will improve the way work hours are recorded, now still done on paper.
Meanwhile, Mayor Kimberley Driscoll plans to conduct a review of the suspension. “I would like an external review conducted of the circumstances leading to this suspension. I believe having a second set of eyes reviewing the facts involved in this matter will be beneficial to my office, the department, and the citizens of Salem,” she said in a prepared statement.
Driscoll also may soon be looking for a new police chief. Tucker is the lone Democrat seeking to replace outgoing state Representative John D. Keenan of Salem. His opponent in the November election is Daniel Morris, a Libertarian candidate and Salem State student.

Earlier this spring, the Salem City Council rejected a proposal by Driscoll to remove the police chief’s post from the civil service system. That proposal would have allowed Driscoll to recruit a new chief from outside the department. According to Tucker, the current civil service post calls for a chief to be hired from within.


Arrested for 'being stupid': What police officer told a man after slamming him against a wall and cuffing him... because he took his parking ticket TOO FAST




By Snejana Farberov

In Chicago, being disrespectful is now apparently against the law.
A video has surfaced online showing a resident of the Second City being arrested during a routine traffic stop after 'reduly' snatching a parking ticket from the hands of an officer.
When the unnamed arrestee demanded to know why he was being handcuffed, the responding officer offered a terse reply: 'for being stupid.'
The cell phone footage shot by the suspect's friend was first shared on Facebook Monday. It has since drawn 341 'likes' and nearly 800 shares.
It was later uploaded by the user TemperVale onto the video-sharing site LiveLeak, where it has been played more than 20,000 times., and counting,.
According to the post that accompanied the video, the incident involved officers from Chicago Police Department's District 4 covering the southern portion of the city.
 The three men in the video were riding in a car together when the driver allegedly parked on a sidewalk and tried to leave, but was stopped by police.   
The clip clocking in at 2 minutes and 41 seconds shows a hulking police officer in a bulletproof vest approach the motorist holding a parking citation.
The cop goes to hand the ticket to the man, who appears upset and abruptly snatches the piece of paper from the officer's hands.
The suspect's brusque gesture enrages the officer, who yanks the motorist by the neck and then slams him against a nearby wall face first.
As he is being fitted with a pair of handcuffs, the driver demands to know why he is being placed under arrest, to which the officer responds: 'for being stupid.'
The man continues to protest, lamenting: 'I got my ID. Now I'm under arrest ?’
The officer appears unimpressed by the suspect’s arguments, and with the words, ‘You like to go to jail tonight? That's fine with me,’ he leads him to the patrol car and places the restrained man in the backseat.
The arrestee’s friend recording the incident makes a last-ditch attempt to reason with police by pointing out that there are more serious crimes being committed in the rough South Chicago neighborhood than a parking violation.
Last-ditch effort: A friend (right) tried to intervene on the hapless motorist's behalf with the officers, but he failed
‘There's people shooting outside,’ the man says off camera. ‘I had a gun pointed at me the other day and you're going to arrest him?’
But the responding officers appear unmoved by these arguments. 
On Facebook, most commenters have sided with the arrested man, calling out the unidentified officer for being a 'bully.'
Leroy Dabbinzz wrote: 'What law did he break? When the cop handed him the ticket he took it too fast? That's a crime? A crime worthy of assault and imprisonment? I think not. If the guy deserved a citation then write it up give it to him and be on your way.’
However, some people came to the officer's defense, saying that the driver broke the law and then decided to 'act tough' for the camera instead of taking up his case in court.

MailOnline reached out to the Chicago Police Department Saturday evening for comment and is awaiting a response.

Bridgeport Police Officers Plead Guilty to Federal Civil Rights Charge



U.S. Attorney’s Office June 10, 2014       •           District of Connecticut (203) 821-3700
Deirdre M, Daly, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, and Patricia M. Ferrick, Special Agent in Charge of the New Haven Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, announced that Bridgeport Police Officers ELSON MORALES, 42, and JOSEPH LAWLOR, 41, pleaded guilty today before U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Alker Meyer in Bridgeport to violating an individual’s civil rights by using unreasonable force during the course of an arrest.
According to court documents and statements made in court, on May 20, 2011, officers MORALES and LAWLOR engaged in a pursuit of a van driven by an individual who was suspected of having a firearm and had failed to submit to a traffic stop. After the pursuit, the individual was apprehended in Beardsley Park in Bridgeport. MORALES used his department-issued Taser to incapacitate the individual during the course of his apprehension. Despite the fact the individual was effectively incapacitated by the initial use of the Taser, MORALES deployed the Taser a second time, and LAWLOR kicked the individual several times.
“The use of unreasonable force during an arrest is not only a clear violation of an individual’s civil rights but also gravely undermines the community’s trust in law enforcement,” stated U.S. Attorney Daly. “The overwhelming majority of officers in the Bridgeport Police Department are public servants who dedicate their lives to protecting the public. However, any law enforcement officer who crosses the line during an arrest risks federal prosecution.”
U.S. Attorney Daly stated that the investigation is ongoing.
“Today’s guilty pleas are such an important reminder to those of us who are sworn to uphold the law, that we are not above the law,” stated FBI Special Agent in Charge Ferrick. “Law enforcement officers of this state, and beyond, should rightfully be held to a high standard. Morales and Lawlor’s actions three years ago profoundly undermined that standard and the public’s faith in law enforcement to protect and to serve. It is an absolute honor and privilege to serve a community and the good men and women of the Bridgeport Police Department know that, where so many have served with both pride and distinction.”
MORALES and LAWLOR each pleaded guilty to one count of deprivation of rights under color of law, a charge that carries a maximum term of imprisonment of one year and a fine of up to $100,000.
Judge Meyer scheduled sentencing for September 2, 2014.
As part of their plea agreements, MORALES and LAWLOR have agreed to resign from the Bridgeport Police Department and not seek employment as a police or peace office during any period of supervision.

This matter is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Anastasia E. King and David E. Novick.


Former Schenectady cop sentenced in road rage incident


GLENVILLE -- A former Schenectady police officer was sentenced Tuesday for two misdemeanors stemming from a “road rage” incident last year where he allegedly pointed his gun at a family.
John Hotaling accepted a plea deal requiring him to serve six months of probation, perform 25 hours of community service and undergo anger management. He also must surrender any firearms for six months and may reapply for a permit next year.
Hotaling maintained he never pulled out his weapon. In court, the district attorney’s office also cited a lack of factual evidence. Hotaling declined to comment after court and referred CBS 6 to his attorney.
“Had we gone forward on the criminal side, I don't think they would have been able to secure a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt,” said Andrew Safranko, Hotaling’s attorney.
Under the terms of the deal, Hotaling must resign or retire from the force. Safranko said Hotaling had already put in his retirement papers effective June 30. Hotaling will still receive his pension for the 20 years he served the department. The court does not have the power to take away pension.
“He was a very good police officer for 20 years. He was an impeccable police officer and he certainly never intended on retire at the 20 year mark,” said Safranko. “He wanted to retire 10 or so years [later].”
Safranko initially said after six months Hotaling could potentially work for another police department, but District Attorney Jim Murphy said it would not be possible under the terms of the deal.
The victim in the case, Jeffrey Arnow, attempted to address the court before the plea deal was accepted, but was denied. Arnow said he wanted the judge to reject the deal.
“It's ridiculous. What can I say?” said Arnow. “Justice has not been served. The common person was let down again. Once again we have a police officer walking away from what was wrong.”



Two Baltimore cops Suspended After Allegedly Slitting Dog's Throat


Two police officers in Baltimore have been suspended after authorities say they slit the throat of a Shar-Pei that had broken free from her owner's backyard and that had reportedly bitten a stranger. The dog, Nala, was seven years old.
The dog belonged to Sarah Gossard, who told police that Nala had slipped through a gate in her backyard, after which it was discovered by a woman who tried to get the dog home. The dog then reportedly bit the woman, resulting in a superficial wound. The woman then called police.
According to the charging documents in the case, Officer Thomas Schmidt and Officer Jeffrey Bolger responded to the call.
As Bolger got out of the police truck, a witness overheard him say, "I'm going to [expletive] gut this thing," the police report said.
Schmidt and Bolger struggled to get the dog under control, and Palmere said they had the dog restrained, tethered to the dog-control pole. Witnesses told police Schmidt held the dog on the ground while they saw Bolger slit its throat.
Police said that the knife used wasn't issued by the department. Officer Schmidt was placed on paid administrative leave while Officer Bolger, who is allegedly responsible for killing the dog, was released on "his own recognizance Thursday morning after being charged the night before with aggravated animal cruelty, animal cruelty and malfeasance in office." He has been suspended without pay.
Police spokesman Lieutenant Eric Kowalczyk revealed that the investigation is still ongoing.

"Internal affairs is continuing the investigation into the specifics of the incident," police spokesman Lt. Eric Kowalczyk said. Other officers who were at the scene are being questioned about their involvement, police have said, and internal investigators are trying to determine why police commanders only learned of the dog's death Monday, two days after it occurred.


Jury Finds Suspended Opa-locka Officer Guilty Of False Imprisonment, Tampering



MIAMI (CBSMiami) – A jury found suspended Opa-locka police Sergeant German Bosque guilty of felony false imprisonment and tampering with a witness, but found him not guilty of battery.
The jury deliberated for about 2 hours Thursday night before convicting the so-called “dirtiest cop in Florida” on two out of three charges.
“I’m hurt obviously, disappointed, surprised, very surprised,” Bosque told CBS4 News reporter Gaby Fleischman after the verdict. “I’m dubbed the dirtiest and most corrupt, it’s just been out of control.”
Watch Gaby Fleischman’s report, click here.
Bosque, who has been fired a total of eight times by three different agencies, six times by Opa-Locka alone, was arrested for a 2011 incident in Opa-locka in which he allegedly punched a man during a domestic disturbance call.
When Korey Davis tried to go to the police station and file a complaint, Bosque forcefully removed him from the department’s lobby, handcuffed him and placed him in a holding cell for 14 minutes.
Bosque did not threaten Davis with arrest until after Davis tried to file the complaint against him.
Bosque declined to testify in his defense, but maintained his innocence and stood by his actions after the verdict was read.
“You make a bad decision you should get written up, suspended, terminated, as is happened to me in the past and I’ve been able to fight for that, but to get arrested for making the decision,” he said. “What’s important for everybody to know is I’m against bad police men, I’m against dirty cops, I stand on the beside of good officers that are out there.”
The prosecution said they stand by the jury’s verdict.
“It’s just never a good day when you have to bring down a police officer because we expect them to protect us, so it’s kind of bittersweet,” said assistant state attorney Sandra Miller-Batiste.
Bosque’s defense attorney said they plan to appeal.
A judge allowed Bosque to remain free on bond under house arrest until his sentencing hearing. He could face a maximum of 10 years in prison.
The judge also withheld adjudication on the false imprisonment charge, and said he would review the evidence.
“Besides the community to answer to, I have a son, a baby to answer to, my family,” said Bosque. “I like the person in the mirror so one day almighty god, so I know nobody could tell me: ‘GB how could you?’”
During the trial, the defense called only two witnesses. Former Opa-locka Police Chief Cheryl Cason testified that Davis called her as Bosque was trying to get him to give up the child he was holding in his lap in the car.
“Let the child go to bed,” Cason recalled telling Davis. “It’s late, Korey, we can deal with this tomorrow.”
Cason said she eventually directed Bosque to take the child.
“I told him to get the baby, give the baby back to (the mother), and that you could arrest him for obstruction.”
Cason thought the threat of arrest would persuade Davis to surrender the baby.
While Cason helped corroborate Bosque’s claim that he was acting under orders, she also bolstered Davis’s claim that the cop slugged him in the face.
Over the cell phone, the Chief said she heard Davis say, “you hit me in the face.” She then heard someone say “nobody hit you.”
Cason said when Bosque called her from the police station to report that Davis had gone there to file a complaint, the officer made no mention of having handcuffed Davis and putting him in a holding cell.
“Bosque said ‘he wants to file a complaint.’ I said ‘let him file a complaint. To arrest him would seem retaliatory.’”
The chief said she directed Bosque to see that someone took Davis’s complaint, but Bosque didn’t do that, escorting him from the station instead.
Joanna Flores, the mother of the child at the center of the domestic call, testified that she asked Davis to give her the baby repeatedly and he refused, and attempted to back into her when she tried to get into the car.
Other officers who were on the scene have testified they didn’t believe Flores’s claim, didn’t think Davis had committed a crime and the issue was a custody dispute, not a police matter.
On Wednesday the alleged victim, Davis, was cross examined by the defense attorney, who got him to admit he refused police orders to hand over his son at the domestic call scene. Davis, a city employee, even conceded that he was on his cell phone with then Police Chief Cheryl Cason, who told him he should hand over the child, over whom he had no custody rights.
Bosque has a checkered past with the police department. During his career there, he’s been fired, then re-instated, eight times. The last time the city fired him, October 2012, Bosque faced a number of allegations including:
•           Busting a handcuffed suspects skull
•           Beating juveniles
•           Caught with drugs and alcohol in his squad car
•           Ripping off suspects
•           Falsifying reports
•           Participating in an unauthorized chase where four people were killed
•           Calling in sick from Cancun.
Bosque says he has been wrongly portrayed in the news.
“Anybody who doesn’t know me or know about the case exactly, they hate me. I hate myself when I read what the media says about me, and it’s not true.”


Experts discuss likelihood of conviction after former police officer charged with manslaughter


WEST VALLEY CITY, Utah — Now that a former West Valley City Police Department detective has been charged in connection with the death of Danielle Willard, some believe the District Attorney will have a hard time winning the case.
It’s rare for a police officer to be charged for an on-duty shooting in Utah. Also, FOX 13 News found that in the last decade, three Utah officers who were charged had their cases dismissed for various reasons.
Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill doesn’t believe Shaun Cowley intended to kill Danielle Willard almost two years ago but that Cowley acted recklessly. And Gill says the facts show Cowley’s life wasn’t threatened. Cowley disputes that. If convicted, he could serve one to 15 years in prison. However, defense attorney Greg Skordas thinks it would be tough for the D.A. to land a conviction.
“Just the whole idea of prosecuting a police officer for doing something in the line of duty, it’s very difficult for a jury,” Skordas said.
“You have to prove that they were reckless in making that split second decision,” added Juan Becerra, head of investigations with Korr Defense Group.
Becerra spent more than 20 years with the FBI and at one point he was investigated for an officer-involved shooting. He questions whether Shaun Cowley can get a fair trial, given all the publicity.
“If this was a private citizen involved in a shooting, would we be showing diagrams? Would we have press conferences prior to charging an individual like this?” Becerra said, acknowledging that federal law enforcement handles cases differently from local jurisdictions.
Becerra said police procedures, especially use of force, and the science behind the shooting will be closely examined as the case moves forward. Meanwhile, it’s not the first time Sim Gill has criminally charged a police officer.
Back in 2011, another former West Valley City officer, Jared Cardon, was charged with reckless endangerment for shooting at a driver who tried to flee after a traffic stop. The D.A. later dismissed the charge, saying expert testimony the case hinged on, had changed.
Now the question is: Can Sim Gill successfully prosecute the Cowley case?
“I see a long road to a conviction if we’re going to be able to prove his state of mind, his recklessness and his reckless disregard for human life,” Becerra said.

Gill said he stands by the case and that detectives from three police agencies unanimously felt the manslaughter charge was warranted. The Utah Fraternal Order of Police believes Cowley has been treated unfairly. Now, a jury will decide who to believe and if Cowley should serve time in a case that could take up to a year to resolve, Skordas said.


Suspended officer mandated to submit DNA



By Ed Drantch

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) – The Erie County District Attorney is looking to find how an off-duty police officer was involved in a brutal assault case at a Buffalo bar on May 11th that left an air guardsman in a coma.
State Supreme Court Justice John Michalski signed an order, mandating suspended Buffalo Police Officer Rob Eloff submit a DNA sample. That sample could potentially connect Eloff to evidence taken from Mollys Pub, the night Tech Sgt. Bill Sager was assaulted.
Jeff Basil, the manager of Mollys Pub, is accused of first-degree assault. His bail was reduced Friday and he was released. Basil is accused of pushing Air National Guardsman Bill Sager down the steps, causing critical injuries and leaving Sager in the ICU.
Prosecutor Christopher Belling says both Eloff and Jeff Basil were there when a surveillance feed was disconnected, early Sunday morning, May 11th. That was after Sager was allegedly pushed down the stairs, by Basil.
Belling said, “Therefore, we swabbed all the connectors and that material is being processed at this time. In order to complete the processing, we need a known sample from Mr. Eloff and that’s all we’re requesting at this point in time your honor, is that Mr. Eloff be directed to give a buccal sample.”
The buccal sample is taken from the inside of the cheek.
Defense Attorney Herb Greenman says because there was no lab report saying DNA was found on those connectors, there is no reason Eloff, who was not in court, should have to submit this sample.
“The people indicate that Mr. Eloff was sort of in the area where something might have taken place,” said Greenman. “A person’s mere presence in the area is insufficient to establish probable cause, it’s not an issue of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”
With Michalski’s ruling, Eloff will be tested Monday. Basil, who was released on bail, Friday, has already submitted a DNA sample.
The investigation into the Mollys Pub assault continues. So far, Basil is the only person charged in the assault.
District Attorney Frank Sedita says, typically, DNA samples are submitted voluntarily, but Eloff has not voluntarily submitted anything.



Guilty Pleas In Police Brutality Case



BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) _ Two police officers accused of violating a man’s civil rights by using unreasonable force, kicking and stomping him in an encounter captured on a videotape, plead guilty on Tuesday.
Elson Morales and Joseph Lawlor pleaded guilty in Bridgeport to deprivation of rights under color of law.
The video showed police officers kicking and stomping Orlando Lopez-Soto after he was shot with a stun gun and fell to the ground in Beardsley Park in May 2011 following a car chase. It’s unclear who recorded the video, which was posted online.
Prosecutors said Morales used his stun gun a second time after the man was effectively incapacitated and Lawlor kicked him several times.
“The use of unreasonable force during an arrest is not only a clear violation of an individual’s civil rights but also gravely undermines the community’s trust in law enforcement,” U.S. Attorney Deirdre Daly said.
The investigation is ongoing, she said.
Morales, 42, and Lawlor, 41, agreed to resign from the Bridgeport Police Department. They each face up to a year in prison when they are sentenced Sept. 2.
Morales’ attorney, Michael Fitzpatrick, said he has “accepted responsibility for his role in the matter.”
“We are prepared to proceed to sentencing with the hope and expectation the court will impose a sentence that’s fair and just to all parties involved,” Fitzpatrick said.
A message was left for Lawlor’s attorney.
The city recently settled the case by agreeing to pay $198,000 to Lopez-Soto.
Lopez-Soto said in his lawsuit that he was motionless on the ground and not resisting when the officers kicked and stomped him. He said he suffered pain, a bad cut to his lip that left a scar, body and face contusions and a fracture to his hand.
All three officers seen in the video, which surfaced in January 2013, were placed on paid administrative duty pending a police internal affairs investigation. NAACP leaders at the time called on police officials to arrest and fire the officers.
Lawlor wrote in a police report that Lopez-Soto struggled with officers after falling to the ground when Morales zapped him with a stun gun. Lawlor said Lopez-Soto was wearing a gun holster on his belt, and officers later found a loaded handgun and drugs in Lopez-Soto’s van.
Lopez-Soto pleaded guilty to drug and gun charges in July 2012 and was sentenced to five years in prison.
The third officer, Clive Higgins, has not been charged. His attorney declined to comment.
Lopez-Soto agreed with the disposition of the case, said his attorney, Robert Berke


Family organizes march against police brutality in Kingsland


Officer's conduct is under review, but police chief supports him

Author: Joy Purdy

KINGSLAND, Ga. -
A family in Georgia claims police brutally beat a loved one during his arrest last month, handcuffing him and then using a Taser on him.
But the Kingsland Police Department said 27-year-old Centauris Simon struggled with police, even after being handcuffed.
Simon's family was so angry that family members planned a march to coincide with Kingsland's City Council meeting Monday night, walking from the site of Simon's run-in with Kingsland police to the public council meeting at City Hall.
Next week, the police department's use of force board will review the case and determine whether Officer Douglas Wellner used excessive force.
Mary Matthews said Wellner stunned her her nephew with a Taser in the head and body several times while he was handcuffed.
“The way he was treated was unjustified and if we continue to let this happen in our community it will continue to happen,” Matthews said.
She and the group addressed the city council on Monday during its regular meeting.
“I stand before you tonight not to condone my nephew's behavior but to ask that the behavior of Officer Wellner is investigated,” Matthews said to the council.
Kingsland Police Chief Darryl Griffis said Simon's arrest didn't go down that way, and he said he's given Simon's family proof of that.
“They have all the material that I have as of today regarding the investigation,” Griffis said. “That's including the investigative file as well as three in-car videos and audio footage of the incident.”
Griffis said the story Matthews and others told council members was not a complete account.
He said Simon fought with Wellner and at one point, was on top of the officer, even biting him.
“He was resistant throughout the whole face of this whole ordeal,” Griffis said. “When he ran, Officer Wellner pursued him for basically three city blocks. Mr. Simon tried to further escape by jumping into the open door of a civilian car.
“He was bitten twice. The defendant picked him up and slammed him down on the ground. He had bruises across the waistline where his gun belt rides on his waistline, and he was bruised there. And he has a few injuries about his face.”
Griffis said Kingsland police had been looking for Simon for about a year on arrest warrants for eight separate felony counts. He said his own preliminary finding is that Wellner did not violate any policy of procedure.



Attorney Weighs In On Excessive Force Charges Against Buffalo Police Officers


BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Three Buffalo police officers have been charged with using excessive force and conspiring to use excessive force while acting as a law officer. "I would say that these officers have a lot to think about. These are serious charges. They all have decent lawyers. They're presumed to be innocent unless proven guilty," said John Elmore.A grand jury returned a five-count indictment last week against Greg Kwiatkowski, Raymond Krug, and Joseph Wendel. The indictment stems from an incident that took place on May 31, 2009, involving four teens. "The allegations here are these 17-year-old teenagers were arrested. At least one of the police officers used a BB gun and shot one of the youths in the leg. And while the youths were in the police car, they were punched and then taken to the police station, where they were subject to further physical abuse," said Elmore.Elmore is no stranger to police brutality cases. He once served on a panel created by the state attorney general to hear claims of excessive force and police misconduct in Niagara Falls. He says for the grand jury to return an indictment means there's strong evidence to support the allegations. But getting a conviction could still be a challenge."One of the difficulties in prosecuting a police officer is what's known as the ‘blue wall of silence.’ There's an unwritten rule among police officers in many police departments that a police officer will not testify against another police officer accused of wrongdoing or misconduct," said Elmore.Elmore says the one thing that has broken that wall is technology. A cell phone recording of a Buffalo police officer hitting and kicking a suspect resulted in several officers being suspended and one officer resigning earlier this spring. Elmore says these officers are the exception, not the rule."Ninety-nine percent of our police officers are good, hard-working police officers that do their job to protect and to serve the public, and those that don't do that and those that harm the public violate peoples' civil rights. They deserve and should be prosecuted," said Elmore.The three officers are scheduled to be arraigned Monday





Trial debates police actions


A federal jury is hearing arguments on a man’s claim that Cottage Grove officers violated his civil rights

By Jack Moran

  A federal jury began hearing evidence Monday in a civil rights trial stemming from a man’s claims that he was beaten and wrongfully arrested by Cottage Grove police officers who confronted him while investigating a burglary report.
Charles Duncan, an attorney for Matthew Waggoner, told jurors in U.S. District Court in Eugene that his client is entitled to more than $624,000 in damages to cover medical bills and lost income, and for having his constitutional rights violated by police.
Waggoner claims that police involved in the incident tackled him, causing him to suffer a serious knee injury. He alleges that one of the officers kicked him in that same knee while escorting him to a jail cell.
He spent four days in Cottage Grove’s city jail on charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. The charges were later dismissed, and he was not prosecuted for any crime.
An attorney representing police in the case, meanwhile, said the officers who used force to take Waggoner into custody handled the situation appropriately.
“They did what they were supposed to do,” attorney Robert Wagner told the jury while making an opening statement in the trial.
Wagner said Waggoner was drunk and fought with officers who approached him. Police deny Waggoner’s claims that the officers struck him with a nightstick and used a stun gun while placing him under arrest.
The incident occurred after four officers arrived in the 1000 block of Adams Street on the afternoon of Dec. 15, 2010, to investigate a burglary report. They found Waggoner walking in the area, and confronted him.
Duncan gave the jury the following account to explain why Waggoner was in the area that day: He said Waggoner had stayed overnight at a woman’s home in the neighborhood, and that the pair drank alcohol together in the hours before the woman fell asleep and Waggoner decided to return to his own house.
Waggoner locked the door behind him as he left the woman’s home, but then discovered he had left his cellphone inside. He was trying to find a way back into the house when a neighbor called 911 to report a possible burglary.
“He only wanted his cellphone back,” Duncan told jurors.
Waggoner claims police were immediately aggressive with him and that he didn’t immediately identify them as officers.
But Wagner, the attorney representing police, said it was daylight when the incident occurred, and that Waggoner “was completely uncooperative” and resistant when the officers tried to detain him in order to determine whether he had tried to break into the woman’s home.
Once he was handcuffed and placed in a police vehicle, Waggoner banged his head against a window and kicked at the doors, Wagner said.
The four officers involved in the incident are Tami Howell, Jarrod Butler, Doug Skaggs and David Burgin.
Waggoner initially alleged in his lawsuit that police had refused to provide him medical treatment at the jail, but Duncan told jurors that he would not attempt to prove that claim. Waggoner also had accused an officer at the jail of using a racial slur referring to his Japanese ancestry, but his attorney did not mention that allegation while making his opening statement.
The trial continues today, and is scheduled to wrap up by Thursday.