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Only a few bad apples huh?...Bad Cops Thread

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-desousa-annapolis-20180202-story.html

De Sousa: Baltimore police corruption limited to a 'very few bad apples'

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh and new police Commissioner Darryl D. De Sousa both played down concerns Friday that corruption could be rampant in the city police force — despite shocking testimony in the criminal trial against the agency’s Gun Trace Task Force members.

The two Baltimore leaders with the most control over the Police Department appeared Friday morning in front of the city delegation in Annapolis. De Sousa was asked about the trial this week — including testimony that an officer possessed trash bags full of drugs that had been looted from city pharmacies.

“Questions abound about where they even got those drugs. Did they actually go to the pharmacies themselves and loot them?” asked Del. Brooke Lierman. “What is your plan to block-by-block restore trust in the police officers that we are depending on?”

De Sousa leapt at a chance offered by Liermam to answer at a later date.

“I’ll save that for later,” De Sousa said. “It’s really a big rollout,” he added of his plans to address corruption.

When Del. Mary Washington asked De Sousa how he planned to change the Police Department’s culture, he started off by emphasizing what has been a frequent refrain from Pugh: “It’s very few bad apples that spoil the entire barrel.”

Pugh introduced De Sousa to the city’s delegates and most of its senators at the Friday meeting, though many of the lawmakers said they already knew the commissioner from his 30 years of service with the Baltimore Police Department. And while many of the lawmakers said they were encouraged that his appointment could help turn back a surge of violence, some said they were dissatisfied with what they heard from De Sousa and Pugh on the issue of police corruption.

“In all communities, no matter what the demographics, people are concerned whether or not they can trust our Police Department,” said Del. Antonio Hayes. “The confidence in our Police Department I think has been eroded dramatically. I think they have an obligation to expand upon, how do they plan on going about restoring the public’s trust?”

Detectives Daniel Hersl and Marcus Taylor of the disgraced gun unit are currently on trial on federal racketeering charges, and more than two dozen witnesses have testified in recent weeks that officers were detaining people without cause and pocketing thousands of dollars in cash that they recovered. Six officers have pleaded guilty in the case, and four of them are testifying for the government.

On Thursday, Baltimore County bail bondsman Donald C. Stepp testified that he partnered for years with Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, the task force’s supervisor, to resell drugs the officer had taken off the street. Stepp said Jenkins brought him bags full of drugs that had been ransacked from pharmacies as unrest erupted across Baltimore in April 2015, after the death of Freddie Gray.

De Sousa said he is working with the FBI to synthesize lessons from the case that will be “immediately implemented in our trainings.”

He said he is building what he called a “constitutional and impartial policing unit” and mentioned plans to bring a police/community engagement program from Howard University to three local colleges. And he said elements of his forthcoming plans to reorganize Police Department staff “are going to specifically address corruption and overtime within the Police Department.”

Earlier testimony in the racketeering trial suggested that officers had been paid overtime for hours they did not work in exchange for seizing guns off the street.

Lierman said she hoped to hear more detail about plans to address corruption.

“This is the very beginning of an ongoing conversation,” she said after the meeting. “We’ll be pressing the new commissioner on his plans.”

Del. Curt Anderson, chairman of the city’s House delegation, said he had hoped for more from De Sousa on how lawmakers can help him put his strategies into action.

“What the hell is the mayor’s violence reduction program going to be? Where are the bills, what is it going to be like?” Anderson asked. “They kind of glossed over that. ... I wanted marching orders from the commissioner.”

City Councilman Brandon Scott, who was in the audience, said he was not surprised to hear Pugh and De Sousa avoid commenting on the Gun Trace Task Force trial because it’s still ongoing.

“The fallout from that will be later on,” he said.

But he repeated calls for De Sousa to fire, or at least reassign, Maj. Ian Dombroski, head of the department’s internal affairs unit. An officer who has pleaded guilty in the Gun Trace Task Force case has testified in the trial that as a lieutenant, Dombroski authorized undue overtime pay for officers as a reward for recovering guns.

Baltimore’s top Coon cop using the few bad apples excuse...
 
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/baltimore-public-trust-erodes-amid-police-scandal-53163477

In Baltimore, public trust erodes amid police scandal

Confidence in Baltimore's sworn protectors has badly deteriorated in recent years, but it may be hitting rock bottom after admissions that corrupt police detectives on an out-of-control unit resold looted narcotics, conducted home invasions and falsified evidence.

With the city under a federal consent decree requiring expansive police reforms, recent courtroom revelations outlining an astounding range of abuses by rogue officers stretching back to 2008 is making it far tougher to convince people in this starkly divided city that a shiny badge promises integrity.

The Gun Trace Task Force, described by federal prosecutors as a "perfect storm" of corruption, was a more chilling reality for some residents than any street gang. Earlier this week, a jury found two Baltimore detectives guilty of robbery and racketeering in an explosive federal investigation that's seen six disgraced law enforcers plead guilty.

"A lot of people were seriously traumatized by these cops," said Akai Alston, a 26-year-old youth outreach coordinator who has turned his life around after a grim adolescence dealing drugs and a conviction for accessory to murder.

Authorities say they're determined to mend fences in a city struggling with a corrosive mix of narcotics, illegal guns and despair rooted in generational poverty. But the attitudes of the many Baltimoreans who mistrust their law enforcers has only been reinforced by the scandal.

"It's only going to make it harder to build the kinds of coalitions for public safety that everybody knows Baltimore needs. It's going to make people suspicious of all officers — not just the bad ones — all of them," said David Harris, who researches police behavior as a professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.

Many locals snort in derision when asked if they trust city police officers. A statehouse lawmaker this week even proposed dismantling the 165-year-old force and rebuilding it from scratch.

Acting Police Commissioner Darryl DeSousa says that weeding out corrupt officers will be one of his top priorities, telling reporters "it sickens me to my stomach" to see what occurred with the elite gun unit.

DeSousa introduced plans for random integrity and polygraph testing and created a new anti-corruption unit, not only to probe the activities of the disbanded unit, but also that of a number of current officers and supervisors whose names came up in the corruption trial.

While rogue detectives admitted to lying for years to cover their tracks, it's an open question as to whether the force's command structure had enough integrity to expose them. In a city obsessed with crime statistics, they were praised for taking guns off the streets.

Yet there was no shortage of red flags that members were crooked.

One task force officer, Jemell Rayam, was suspended for two years after admitting to receiving money from an $11,000 theft by another officer. When his police powers were somehow reinstated in 2012, he was bumped up to the plainclothes gun unit.

Another ex-detective, Momodu Gondo, was shot multiple times outside his home in 2006, just two months out of the police academy. At the time, a commander told TV cameras that the 23-year-old was a "very well-respected rookie," but Rayam told jurors Gondo was actually shot by fellow drug dealers. The two ex-detectives admitted to running interference for a heroin-trafficking ring that included Gondo's childhood buddy.

From the stand in U.S. District Court, Gondo testified that he robbed money for years, never sweating internal affairs.

"It was just part of the culture," he said.

Words and phrases that disgraced detectives used in federal court to describe illegal police tactics appear to have swiftly made their way into the local lexicon.

Ex-detective Maurice Ward testified that the rogue unit carried out as many as 50 "door pops" a night — accelerating their unmarked vehicles at people hanging out on corners, slamming on the brakes, and chasing whoever fled.

They entered homes with no court approval in illegal "sneak and peeks." Motorists driving what the unit's leader, Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, termed as "dope boy cars" — mostly new model Hondas — were sought-after targets, often pulled over on false or flimsy pretexts.

"I wish somebody told me I was buying a 'dope boy car,'" construction worker Russell Anderson quipped as he hopped in a 2017 Honda Accord TLX outside a convenience store.

The illegal tactics were no laughing matter for Andre Crowder.

In 2016, he was driving his mother's Honda Acura with tinted windows when he was pulled over by Jenkins and two members of his thuggish band. They claimed to discover a gun.

Crowder claims they went to his family's house and stole $10,000 in cash — money he says was from selling his own car. By the time he was able to post bail three days later, his 3-year-old son was hospitalized with pneumonia. The toddler died in a hospital eight hours later.

"I never had hard feelings for police before. But after this situation and losing the last days with my little boy, I look at every last cop as corrupt," said Crowder, his voice rising with emotion, before heading off to his job working for the city's solid waste department.

Charges against him were dropped shortly after the detectives were indicted in March.

Ivan Bates, a defense attorney who represents a number of people victimized by the rogue detectives and who is running for the state's attorney's office, is among the critics who say State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby should never have allowed these officers to testify as complaints stacked up over years.

Additionally, U.S. prosecutors have said an assistant state's attorney, who has not been publicly identified, tipped off the dirty officers about the corruption investigation.

Public defenders and Mosby herself say thousands of cases touched by corrupt Baltimore police are likely tainted. Some 125 cases have been dropped so far. Many residents fear some hardened criminals will end up getting released.

"Anyone with sense knows the floodgates are about to open," Alston said in the troubled Sandtown neighborhood. "There's going to be criminals coming back out on these streets."
 
They had a series like this on FX Network called "The Sheild", but it was based on the LAPD.

The show was dope, if you haven't seen it's definitely worth checkin' for!

Over the course of 2 weeks I binge watched all 7 seasons of The Shield shortly after Breaking Bad initially ended........cot [email protected] was an accurate depiction of how crooked cops can be.......oh yeah....f*ck Shane Vandrell
 
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/index.ssf/2018/03/etowah_sheriff_pocketed_over_7.html

Etowah sheriff pockets $750k in jail food funds, buys $740k beach house

In September, Etowah County Sheriff Todd Entrekin and his wife Karen purchased an orange four-bedroom house with an in-ground pool and canal access in an upscale section of Orange Beach for $740,000.

To finance the purchase, Entrekin got a $592,000 mortgage from Peoples Bank of Alabama, according to public real estate records. The home is one of several properties with a total assessed value of more than $1.7 million that the couple own together or separately in Etowah and Baldwin counties.

Some Etowah County residents question how a county sheriff making a five-figure annual salary can afford to own multiple houses, including one worth nearly three-quarters of a million dollars.

But ethics disclosure forms Entrekin filed with the state reveal that over the past three years he has received more than $750,000 worth of additional "compensation" from a source he identified as "Food Provisions."

Entrekin did not deny that he received the money when asked about it via email last week. Ethics forms he filed in previous years do not list any income from such a source.

Entrekin told AL.com last month that he has a personal account that he refers to as his "Food Provision" fund. And Etowah County resident Matthew Qualls said that in 2015 Entrekin paid him to mow his lawn via checks with the words "Sheriff Todd Entrekin Food Provision Account" printed in the upper-left corner. AL.com viewed a photograph of one such check.

Many Alabama sheriffs contend that the practice of keeping "excess" inmate-feeding funds for themselves is legal under a state law passed before World War II. Yet in a number of counties including Jefferson and Montgomery, any money allocated to sheriffs for feeding inmates that is not used for that purpose is instead turned over to the county government.

Entrekin reported on forms he filed with the Alabama Ethics Commission that he made "more than $250,000" each of the past three years via the inmate-feeding funds.

Tom Albritton, executive director of the ethics commission, said via email that the state does not require public officials to disclose exactly how much more income they received from a single source beyond the $250,000 threshold, which he said is "specifically set in the statute."

Meanwhile, Entrekin's annual salary as sheriff is $93,178.80, according to Jeff Little, human resources director for the Etowah County Commission.

Rainbow City Police Chief Jonathon Horton, who worked for the Etowah County Sheriff's Office under former sheriff James Hayes, is currently opposing Entrekin in this year's race for sheriff. One plank of Horton's campaign platform is a pledge to not keep any inmate-feeding funds.

"I believe the funds belong to the taxpayers and any excess funds should go toward things that benefit the taxpayer," he said in a March 1 phone interview. "There's been a tremendous amount of money left over that shouldn't be used as a bonus check."

The money in the account was allocated by federal, state and municipal governments to feed inmates in the Etowah County jail, but was not used for that purpose and was instead personally pocketed by Entrekin.

"In regards to feeding of inmates, we utilize a registered dietitian to ensure adequate meals are provided daily," Entrekin said Sunday via email. "As you should be aware, Alabama law is clear as to my personal financial responsibilities in the feeding of inmates. Regardless of one's opinion of this statute, until the legislature acts otherwise, the Sheriff must follow the current law."

Entrekin and his wife Karen - who worked for years as a probation officer and met her husband in the Etowah County Sheriff's Office, according to a profile by the Alabama Republican Party that described the sheriff as a "rising Republican star" - own several properties in Etowah County and two others in Orange Beach.

The $740,000 Orange Beach home is the most expensive of their properties, but they also own a second single-family house in Orange Beach that was assessed at $200,900 in October 2016, according to Baldwin County real estate records.

Entrekin stated on an annual form he filed with the Alabama Ethics Commission in January that he owned two Orange Beach properties classified as "real estate for investment or revenue production." He stated that he received "less than $10,000" in income from each property last year. He did not list any Etowah County investment properties on that disclosure form.

In Etowah County, Entrekin is identified in county real estate records as the sole owner of one property in Gadsden and another in Hokes Bluff. He and his wife are listed as jointly owning a handful of other properties in Gadsden, where Karen Entrekin is listed as the sole owner of one more property.
 
http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/crime/article205818424.html

Police shoot 22-year-old black man holding 'tool bar' in his backyard

Covering crime, police and courts in the Sacramento region

Two Sacramento Police Department officers are under investigation after fatally shooting 22-year-old Stephon Clark late Sunday night on the 7500 block of 29th Street.

Clark was shot in the backyard of the home he shared with his grandmother, grandfather and some siblings, his 25-year-old brother Stevante confirmed Monday afternoon. Police believed he was armed with a gun, though no firearm was found at the scene.

At 9:18 p.m., officers responded to reports that a thin, 6-foot-1 black man wearing a black hooded sweatshirt and dark pants was hiding in a residential backyard after breaking car windows in the south Sacramento neighborhood, according to a department media release.

Sacramento County Sheriff's deputies circling overhead in a helicopter spotted Clark at about 9:25 p.m. and told police that he had just shattered a window on a house with what deputies described as "a tool bar." The deputies then saw Clark run south toward the front of the residence, where he appeared to be looking for another car to break into, the release said.

When police confronted Clark and ordered him to show his hands, he immediately ran around the back of the residence, according to the release.

Two officers followed Clark out back and saw him turn around with an object extended in their direction. Believing it to be a gun, the officers fired multiple rounds at Clark at 9:26 p.m., hitting him several times, the department said.

Police radio audio retrieved from the online archive Broadcastify indicates a dispatcher alerted Sacramento police at around 9:13 p.m. about a man “who broke some car windows” and was hiding in the backyard of a home on the 7500 block of 29th Street.

At around 9:25 p.m., what sounds like a Sacramento County Sheriff’s helicopter unit reported seeing a suspect “in a backyard that was looking into the window” two houses south of where police were called.

The air unit described the suspect picking up a “tool bar, or some sort of thing.”

“Ok, he’s breaking the window. He broke the window, running south, running to the south,” the person said, later asking for more units to respond.

Audio dispatch indicated the man sought by police fled to the front yard of a third house and was looking into a car there.

“Ground units got, it looks like they might be getting one at gunpoint,” a man said at around 9:26 p.m. He radioed in that the two ground units were chasing the man southbound to nearby a field.

Less than a minute later, an officer, who sounds out of breath, says “He’s down, no movement.”

After the involved officers waited approximately five minutes for backup to arrive, Clark was handcuffed and officers began attempting life-saving measures. Sacramento Fire Department personnel pronounced him dead shortly after arriving at the scene.

Thirteen minutes after Clark was shot, a man called 911 from inside the house where he lived on 29th Street, police spokesman Sgt. Vance Chandler said. The police dispatcher told the man to stay inside and that officers would contact him if needed.

Shortly after midnight, Stevante Clark said, his grandmother peeked through the blinds to her back door and saw Stephon's body laying on the ground.

"I can tell you that we're conducting a thorough investigation and taking this very seriously, as we would with any officer-involved shooting," Chandler said.

Curtis Jackson, 51, was lying in bed around 10 p.m. in his home on nearby Twilight Drive when he was awakened by gunfire. He counted four rounds being fired, he said.

"I didn't hear no car screeching or nothing, just 'pop, pop,' and then a helicopter," Jackson said. "(Police) were yelling 'stay in the house, suspect on the run,' so that's what I did."

Both officers involved with the shooting were placed on paid administrative leave. One has been an SPD officer for four years, the other for two. Each had four years experience with other law enforcement agencies before joining SPD.

Body-camera footage of the shooting will be released within 30 days, per a city policy approved in November 2016. The Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office, city attorney’s office and the city Office of Public Safety Accountability will investigate the shooting as well as SPD homicide detectives, internal affairs and Crime Scene Investigation units.

A Sacramento High School alumnus with a fondness for sneakers and video games, Clark left behind two young sons, Cairo and Aiden. Though his birth certificate read "Stephen," Clark altered the spelling of his name to differentiate it from that of his father, Stevante said.

Chandler declined to speculate what the deputy meant by "tool bar," and the sheriff's department declined to comment on the case, noting it was under SPD's jurisdiction.

SMH...
 

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