Wednesday, July 30, 2014

6 Philadelphia officers charged in corruption case

of Associated Press
The officers once held a suspect over an 18th floor balcony and used a steel bar to beat someone else in the head, authorities said. Another suspect was held captive in a hotel room for several days while he and his family were threatened, they said.
The plan "was to identify suspected drug dealers and use extortionate means or threats to get their money and profits," U.S. Attorney Zane Memeger said.
The scheme ran from 2006 to 2012, when Officer Jeffrey Walker was arrested. He has since pleaded guilty and cooperated in the two-year probe. Walker and a colleague "stole and distributed a multi-kilo quantity of cocaine, like everyday drug dealers do," Memeger said.
The officers arrested early Wednesday were Thomas Liciardello, Brian Reynolds, Michael Spicer, Perry Betts, Linwood Norman and John Speiser.
Defense lawyers said the allegations come from dubious informants — drug dealers and a convicted officer.
"I'm surprised the government will give them so much deference and credence," said lawyer Gregory Pagano, who represents Betts.
All six officers will remain in custody without bail until a detention hearing Monday.
Officials said the six will be suspended by the department while police administrators take steps to fire them.
They had been put on desk duty as the investigation unfolded, and dozens of cases have since been dismissed.
"I took them out of narcotics, but I left them ... on the job," said Police CommissionerCharles Ramsey, who attended a news conference with the U.S. attorney. "I didn't want to do anything to jeopardize that investigation."
The charges in the 26-count indictment include racketeering conspiracy, extortion, robbery, kidnapping and drug dealing. The indictment lists a series of shakedowns that investigators said netted the officers as much as $80,000 in cash at a time, three kilos of cocaine and Rolex watches.
Most of the defendants face at least a seven-year mandatory sentence if convicted.
But the U.S. attorney acknowledged police corruption cases can be difficult to win. He said investigators have to build a rock-solid case before making arrests because "you know that a battle is coming when you get to trial."
The Philadelphia district attorney's office said it notified police two years ago that it would no longer rely on testimony from five of the officers, and as a result no open cases involving them remained. Cases involving the sixth officer, Norman, were now being reviewed, the office said in a statement.
"Now that the federal investigation has been completed, the district attorney's office will review previous convictions involving the six officers and will take appropriate action," the statement said.
Walker pleaded guilty in February to stealing $15,000 from a drug dealer in a plot that also involved planting drugs in his car. His lawyer had said he was cooperating in a wider probe of the drug trafficking unit.
Ramsey has made fighting police corruption a hallmark of his six-year tenure in Philadelphia.
Asked how he might end what has been a series of corruption cases within the narcotics unit, he complained that the police contract bars him from transferring officers between units or making other personnel changes without cause.
FBI Special Agent Edward Hanko, the agency's supervisor in Philadelphia, said the public's "confidence may be shaken, but it should be ... bolstered" by the arrests.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Police: Officer who killed family had raped wife

Associated Press July 7, 2014 7:58 PM
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Utah police officer who killed his wife, their two children, his mother-in-law and then himself received text messages from his wife just hours earlier threatening to leave him and take their kids and confronting him for raping her, new documents show.
A Spanish Fork Police report shows Joshua Boren and his wife exchanged heated texts the night and morning before the January killings.
In them, Kelly Boren confronted her husband about raping her and told him their marriage was over, The Deseret News reported (http://bit.ly/1oC8lWG ). The couple already had been separated for some time.
Joshua Boren's therapist told authorities that Boren drugged his wife and videotaped himself sexually assaulting her on more than one occasion.
Kelly Boren learned of the assaults when she discovered the tapes in 2013, said Spanish Fork Police Lt. Matt Johnson. She told a few friends, but she did not report the assaults to police because she didn't want to ruin her husband's law enforcement career, the report says.
The night before she was killed, Kelly Boren brought up the alleged sexual assault again, texting the word "rape" to her husband four times, the documents show. "I hate my life because (of) you," she texted. "You killed a part of me."
She wrote in another text: "I don't want to live in fear and hate and anger."
The next morning, Kelly Boren told her husband she would take the kids, prompting Joshua Boren to reply by text: "Don't involve the kids, they are innocent."
The police report says Joshua Boren was sexually abused as a child, struggled with drug addiction as a young man and pornography addiction throughout his life, and had a deep-rooted hatred for his mother.
After his father committed suicide when he was 5, Joshua Boren's mother began using drugs and seeing several men, the report states. One of those men allegedly abused Joshua Boren, and he blamed his mother for not protecting him, his sister told police.
The therapist told police Boren was like a "3-year-old boy stuck in a big man's body."
"Josh was a very troubled individual that felt like he was about to lose his wife and children," police wrote in the report.
Joshua Boren had worked for the Lindon Police Department for only three months when the murder-suicide occurred. Before that, he was a Utah County sheriff's deputy for seven years, Johnson said.
He used the service weapon he was given for his duties as a Lindon police officer when he killed his family members and himself, authorities said. Toxicology reports from the autopsy show he had no drugs or alcohol in his system.
Police said the state medical examiner confirmed what investigators believed: Joshua Boren shot his wife, 32-year-old Kelly Boren; his 55-year-old mother-in-law, Marie King; and his two children, 7-year-old Joshua "Jaden" and 5-year-old Haley, before killing himself.
The shooting happened at the family's home in Spanish Fork, a city of about 37,000 located 50 miles south of Salt Lake City. The events stunned the community, as well as friends and family, said Johnson, who added investigators didn't find anybody who suspected Joshua Boren was capable of such an act.
Though Joshua Boren wasn't living at the house, friends and family said he still came every morning to get the kids ready for school and preschool, Johnson said. He also picked them up every afternoon.
"He was praised as being an excellent father," Johnson said.

Denver police officer accused in sexual trysts appeals her firing

POSTED:   07/09/2014 01:18:06 PM MDT
A Denver police officer has appealed her firing after she allegedly struck a fellow officer with whom she had been having an affair while on duty and threatened to shoot herself with her own service gun.
Stephanie Southard, 26, was fired for sexual misconduct with fellow officer Nathan Sanchez in a patrol car while on duty as many as 30 times and for lying about it. Additionally, she was suspended for 15 days for an act of domestic violence and disorderly conduct.
Southard appealed her firing to the Denver Civil Service Commission. A hearing is scheduled to begin July 17. Sanchez resigned on April 9 while an investigation of his conduct was underway, said Daelene Mix, spokeswoman for the Denver Department of Safety.
Civil Service Hearing Officer Hazel E. Haley has ordered that Southard's hearing be closed to the public in part because the "salacious" nature of the case would trigger a "media circus."
But First Amendment attorney Steven D. Zansberg said he believes it would be illegal to close the hearing because such administrative meetings are presumptively open to the public.
"In large part, what the hearing officer has ruled is that the hearing should be closed for the very reason that this case has attracted media attention," Zansberg said.
Before such hearings can be closed Haley would have to cite a compelling governmental interest, he added.
Haley further explained in her written order that a public hearing would be harmful both to Southard and Sanchez' wife. She could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.
"There is more at stake here than (Southard's) career. There is more than an alleged volatile affair. There is petitioner's past and current mental state. There is the pain of Mrs. Sanchez," Haley wrote.
In an April 14 decision, the city fired Southard, saying she "used poor judgment when she began a relationship with Officer Sanchez. ... Her behavior became criminal in nature and alarming and concerning. She unholstered her gun and used it in a manner communicating to others that she was going to take her life."
Sanchez and Southard had sexual liaisons while on duty for about 1½ years before his wife discovered a text message between them. Sanchez called Southard the same day to end the relationship, which had already turned physical, according to a department disciplinary report.
Sanchez was on routine patrol in a marked squad car on June 20, 2013 when he saw Southard, who was also on duty, following him in her own marked cruiser.
The two officers pulled into a parking lot on the 4600 block of East Alameda Avenue, where Southard reached into Sanchez' car and struck him in the face. She later took her gun out of the holster, held the gun to her face and head as if she was going to shoot herself, the report said.
On Dec. 20, Southard pleaded guilty in Arapahoe County Court to harassment and domestic violence. She is serving an 18-month deferred judgment. Her judgment ordered her to relinquish all weapons and prohibited her from having a gun.
Kirk Mitchell: 303-954-1206, denverpost.com/coldcases or twitter.com/kirkmitchell

Hundreds of Memphis police officers call in sick to protest health care cuts

MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- Hundreds of Memphis police officers have called in sick over the past week, apparently to protest a decision by city officials to reduce their health care subsidies.
The number of officers calling in sick had increased to 554 by Tuesday, said Memphis police spokeswoman Karen Rudolph - about a quarter of the 2,200-person force.
Sources told CBS affiliate WREG that by the end of the week, it's expected everyone in the homicide bureau will be out sick.
The officers have been calling in since June 30. Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong has said the calls are to protest the City Council's vote to reduce health care subsidies for police, firefighters, and other city employees in order to redirect money to the city's troubled pension fund. Officers and firefighters, along with their families, have staged protests at City Hall since the vote on June 17.
Gov. Bill Haslam said Tuesday that the Tennessee Highway Patrol has offered to have troopers fill in for the officers.
Haslam told The Associated Press that Department of Safety and Homeland Security Commissioner Bill Gibbons has been in contact with Memphis Mayor A C Wharton Jr. about the situation. It was not immediately known if the troopers will actually be called in to help.
"We have plans to dedicate a certain number of officers there from the Highway Patrol," Haslam said. "Obviously we can't do that forever, but we do want to step in and help."
Deputies with the Shelby County Sheriff's Office already are helping Memphis police conduct patrols.
Armstrong has said that officers who abuse the department's sick-leave policy will be disciplined. City employees have been notified that anyone calling in will have to speak to their supervisor every day they are out and state what duties their illness prevents them from performing, Wharton said Tuesday. After three days of illness, they must have a doctor's note saying why they can't perform their duties, Wharton said.
The mayor reassured the public that safety has not been compromised due to what is being called the "Blue Flu."
"We intend to do whatever is necessary to keep it that way," Wharton said.

Lunging "pit bull" fatally shot by Coeur d’Alene officer

by BRIANA BERMENSOLO & KREM.com
KREM.com
Posted on July 9, 2014 at 1:28 PM
Updated today at 6:01 AM

COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho—An officer shot and killed a pit bull on Wednesday morning near 8th Street and Sherman. Investigators described the dog as a “vicious” pit bull and said it lunged at the officer. However, the dog's owner said the dog was not a pit bull but a black lab (pictured above).
The incident began Wednesday morning when an officer responded to call about a suspicious van. The caller claimed the driver of van was watching young children from a nearby parking lot. The owners of coffee shop reported the white van because they thought it was possibly connected to child luring case. 
When an officer approached the van with his gun drawn, the dog lunged out of the open driver’s side window according to Coeur d’Alene Police Department leaders. The officer said the pit bull lunged at his face. Investigators said the officer fired one round from his service weapon and shot the dog in the chest. The dog later died. 

The driver of the van, Craig Jones, was not in the vehicle at the time of the shooting. Jones  said he was nearby eating breakfast when the shooting happened.

“This still isn’t even real to me,” Jones told KREM 2 News.
Jones raised the two-year-old black lab named Arfie and said the dog did not have a mean bone in his body.

“If my dog is barking and wondering who's peering through the windows he doesn't care if you're a cop, an attorney, or President Bush.  He doesn't know any difference ,” said Jones.

Coeur d’Alene OD leaders said the officer who shot the dog was distraught following the incidence. Authorities also said they believe the child predator who has been spotted in a similar white van is still on the loose.