Sunday, February 24, 2008

Cop Busted for Dine and Dash at Buffalo Wild Wings

FERNDALE, Mich. -- An off-duty police officer is accused of racking up $75 at a restaurant without paying the bill.
Deontaie Turner, 28, was arrested, charged and fired from his job of two years as a patrol officer with the Van Buren Township police for walking out of a Buffalo Wild Wings in Ferndale without paying his tab.
Police Chief Gerald Champaigne said an internal investigation revealed Turner not only dined and dashed, but tried to pull rank. He identified himself as a police office when restaurant management stopped him.
According to restaurant staff, a waiter confronted the officer at the door and tried to get him and his friends to pay, but they left, taking off in a car without its lights on.
Ferndale police stopped the officer and his friends not far from the restaurant.
He was charged with a misdemeanor charge of defrauding an innkeeper and has been fired from his job.\
Video Here

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Cop tasers Cow on Video then Sets it to Music and sends it to friends

ROGERS - The city's police department is investigating one of its own following a complaint of animal cruelty.

In a letter sent Feb. 11, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals accused Rogers Police Department Lt. David Mitchell with using his Taser on a cow and video taping the incident.

"It is our understanding that the alleged incident occurred while Lt. Mitchell was off duty, that the Taser's darts were not removed from the cow's flesh afterward, and that Lt. Mitchell apparently found the incident so amusing that it was recently set to music and distributed as a joke among his friends and colleagues," wrote Stephanie Bell, PETA's senior cruelty caseworker.

Mayor Steve Womack, who has not seen the video, said it was clear the incident happened but not the context in which it happened.

He said the city would take action if "city equipment is being used for someone's personal enjoyment and entertainment."

RPD Chief Steve Helms said he started an internal investigation following a call from PETA that preceded the letter. He would not comment on the specifics of the case.

When the investigation is complete, the department will turn the results over to the prosecutor's office, Helms said. Because animal cruelty is a misdemeanor, any charges would likely be filed by the city attorney's office. He also said that, if convicted of a crime, it is possible Mitchell's employment is terminated.

RPD has been plagued recently with reports of low morale, accusations of racism, and the arrest of one officer for sexual indecency with a child. Helms said he did not know why so many issues were arising in a short period, but he said some were to be expected.

"Any department the size we're getting is going to have problems like this," he said.

Womack said Helms will be responsible for taking any actions deemed necessary following the investigation, including amending the department's policies.

Despite the department's recent problems, Womack said he still had confidence in Helms.>

"I still believe in the chief's ability to do his job," Womack said.

Helms hoped the investigation into the accusations against Mitchell would help maintain the public's perception of the department.

"It shows the public we're dealing with problems that need to be dealt with," he said.

Story Here

Feds to Probe Police Brutality Charge


Feds to Probe Police Brutality Charge
February 21, 2008 - 2:34am
SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) - Police chief Henry Whitehorn said Wednesday the district attorney and the Justice Department will investigate the case of a woman who is seen in a police department video lying in a pool of blood in an interrogation room. Angela Garbarino, 42, said she was beaten after her Nov. 17 arrest on a drunk driving charge.

Wiley Willis, the the police officer who was fired Feb. 5 in connection with the case, said through his attorney that Garbarino fell.

Excerpts from a police video tape show Garbarino struggling with an officer in the interrogation room. But the camera was turned off for a time. When it was turned back on, Garbarino is seen on the floor in a pool of blood.

"I had an opportunity to view the tape. I was outraged at what I observed," Whitehorn said at a news conference at police headquarters. "I immediately ordered an internal affairs investigation. That investigation determined that numerous policy violations had occurred."

Garbarino said Willis, 30, tried to force her to take a breath test against her will and that he beat her after turning off the camera.

Willis' lawyer, Eron Brainard, was not immediately available for comment when called Wednesday by The Associated Press. He told The (Shreveport) Times that Willis did not beat Garbarino.

"After her refusal to take the breath test, officer Willis turned off and saved the videotape in accordance with normal practice," Brainard said in a story published Wednesday. "The suspect again tried to leave the room. In the process of (Willis) stopping her, she fell and injured herself."

Paramedics took her to LSU Hospital in Shreveport, where she was treated for a broken nose, a fractured cheek bone and bruises on various parts of her body. Two of her teeth were knocked out.

Garbarino had been taken into custody for DWI testing after someone saw her crash her vehicle into other cars in a casino parking garage and a light pole on a city street, according to police.

Whitehorn said it is police policy for an officer to turn off the videotape of a sobriety test when testing is over and the officer is preparing to book the offender.

Policy will now be changed to where two police officers are in the room at all times, authorities said.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

NYPD Brawlers and Brethren Busted

A fight outside a Yonkers bar that cost a man his vision in one eye, may cost a number of NYPD members professionally. One of the participants in the brawl on the border of the Westchester city and the Bronx, Thomas Wimmer, has already resigned from the force. Three other officers are suspended without pay after their arraignment Friday on misdemeanor charges related to a beating on McLean Ave. that cracked a man's skull.

Last September, off-duty cops Michael McGhee and Thomas Wimmer got into a fight outside a bar in Yonkers. When partners Stella Ibanez and Jeffrey Alicea arrived on the scene, they witnessed McGhee punch the victim and so handcuffed him. After McGhee identified himself and Wimmer as cops, they let him go and the quartet later concocted a story about neither McGhee nor Wimmer identifying themselves as police.

The judge at the arraignment seemed familiar with the scene of the crime, which consists of a strip of Irish bars near the county line, where victim Peter Cummins was punched after leaving the Rockin' Robin with his girlfriend very early in the morning September 14th. Per the New York Post: "'Little good happens on McLean Avenue at 3:30 a.m.,' said Judge Michael Martinelli."

The three suspended officers and the now-resigned Wimmer pleaded not guilty to blinding Cummins or coming up with a story to cover each other. A fifth man, Patrick Tully, is not a police officer, but was allegedly involved in the fight alongside McGhee and Wimmer.Story here

Deputy Charged for Dumping Paralyzed Man

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — A sheriff's deputy who was videotaped dumping a paralyzed man from a wheelchair onto a jailhouse floor has been charged with abuse of a disabled person, a sheriff's official said Friday.
Surveillance footage from Jan. 29 shows Hillsborough County deputy Charlette Marshall-Jones, 44, dumping Brian Sterner out of his wheelchair and searching him on the floor after he was brought in on a warrant after a traffic violation.
Sterner, 32, said when he was taken into a booking room and told to stand up, Jones grew agitated when he told her that he could not.
Marshall-Jones was suspended without pay, and three other deputies were placed on administrative leave pending an investigation.
Marshall-Jones is charged with abuse of a disabled person, a third-degree felony, said Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee.
If convicted, she could be sent to prison for five years.
Gee said Marshall-Jones was aware of the warrant for her arrest, but that he didn't know when she might turn herself in.
Marshall-Jones could not be reached by phone for comment Friday night. A telephone number listed in her name has been disconnected.
Sterner, who can drive a car but has not been able to walk since a 1994 wrestling accident, was arrested at his Riverview home and taken to the Orient Road Jail on a charge of fleeing and attempting to elude a police officer, according to records. He had called for charges to be filed against Marshall-Jones.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Officer fined $18,00 for arresting firefighter

(KMOV) -- A police officer in Hazelwood will have to pay thousands of dollars for getting into it with a firefighter while he was trying to help an accident victim.

News 4 obtained police video that shows the Hazelwood police officer arresting a fire captain while he's trying to move an injured driver.


Watch raw video from the dashcam
It happened on Interstate 270 back in May of 2003.

Officer Todd Greeves wanted a fire truck moved to open up another lane of traffic.

The Robertson Fire Protection District Captain wanted the truck there to protect emergency workers.

Officer Greeves has been ordered to pay $18,000.

His attorney says he's disappointed and that his client's conduct was not malicious in any way.

Video and story here

Officer fined $18,00 for arresting firefighter

(KMOV) -- A police officer in Hazelwood will have to pay thousands of dollars for getting into it with a firefighter while he was trying to help an accident victim.

News 4 obtained police video that shows the Hazelwood police officer arresting a fire captain while he's trying to move an injured driver.


Watch raw video from the dashcam
It happened on Interstate 270 back in May of 2003.

Officer Todd Greeves wanted a fire truck moved to open up another lane of traffic.

The Robertson Fire Protection District Captain wanted the truck there to protect emergency workers.

Officer Greeves has been ordered to pay $18,000.

His attorney says he's disappointed and that his client's conduct was not malicious in any way.

Video and story here