DOMESTIC ABUSE: Police Officer Charged




A  Des Moines police officer is in trouble with the law again.
Forty-six-year-old Stewart Drake was arrested Saturday and charged with domestic abuse causing injury.
According to the Des Moines Register a police report says Drake got into a fight with his wife late Friday after coming home from a bar.
She told police Drake pulled her from room to room by her hair and hit her in the eye.
He was released from the Polk County Jail Monday on bond.
The department fired the 21 year veteran of the police force in 2011 after his wife accused him of domestic abuse. A jury found Drake guilty last year.
An appeal has not yet been resolved.



Chicago, Illinois: A woman filed a federal excessive force lawsuit against a police commander who has been sued by civilians numerous times. She claimed that he pushed his fist into her nose until she bled at a police station after she was arrested after a domestic disturbance. http://ow.ly/iVe7s

Miami-Dade, Florida: A federal appeals court is allowing a woman to file a false arrest lawsuit against officers who arrested her for “being up to no good.” http://ow.ly/iVk0o

Springfield police officer charged with domestic violence




SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (WDTN) - A Springfield police officer finds himself on the other side of the law.
Documents show Noel Lopez has been charged with two counts of domestic violence in Clark County Municipal Court.
The charges stem from incidents last week at a Springfield home.
We're told an attorney entered a not guilty plea on behalf of Lopez. 

Ellsworth officer charged with domestic violence no longer receiving city paycheck




ELLSWORTH, Maine — An Ellsworth police officer charged with domestic-violence assault in January has been placed on unpaid administrative leave, according to the city’s manager.
Andrew Weatherbee, 30, was arrested on Jan. 27 after allegedly pushing down his 32-year-old girlfriend and then repeatedly holding her down after she got upset about a text message he had written, Holden Police Chief Gene Worcester said at the time of the arrest.
Weatherbee had been on paid administrative leave since the arrest, but will no longer receive a city paycheck while he’s out of work, City Manager Michelle Beal said in an email on March 15. Beal said the city would hold off on further action against Weatherbee until his charges are resolved.
“Once the criminal proceedings have been concluded and the city has all the information, we will decide how to proceed,” Beal said.
Weatherbee appeared in Penobscot County Superior Court on March 14. At that time, Justice Kevin Cuddy denied a written request from the alleged victim to ease Weatherbee’s bail conditions to allow him to have contact with her again.
The victim was not present in court, and Cuddy said he would not approve the request until he was able to speak to her in person.
Cuddy also scheduled a May 7 dispositional conference for Weatherbee, who remains free on personal recognizance.
Domestic-violence assault is a Class D crime, punishable by up to a year in prison and a $2,000 fine.
Ellsworth Police Chief John DeLeo has said the department had disciplined Weatherbee in the past, but has declined to provide specifics about any previous disciplinary action.
Weatherbee also was honored one year ago by his peers at Ellsworth Police Department for rescuing a man from a burning car in the early hours of Oct. 9, 2011.

Mentally unbalanced cops: Former Arlington Tx. cop kills wife, then himself




 DeSOTO — A former Arlington police officer who killed his estranged wife and then took his own life Tuesday night had a restraining order against him that was taken out in October.
Catina Murphy, 37, was shot while on the phone with 911 at her mother's home in the 700 block of Timber Trail in DeSoto around 5:30 p.m. A recording of her final call reflected her terror.
MURPHY: "Please send somebody! Send somebody right now! I think my husband, my ex-husband, is going to try to break into the house."
The recording then erupts with screams.
MURPHY: "He's trying to kick the door in!"
DISPATCHER: "Ma'am, can you run out the back?"
The call was disconnected. DeSoto police arrived five minutes later, but it was too late. Both were dead.
The couple's divorce had just become final. The couple leaves behind a young daughter.
Andre Murphy also worked as a Cedar Hill ISD police officer from 2008 until 2012. A district official said he resigned during a restructuring at the district and had not been fired.

Pawtucket officer in assault case suspended




PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Pawtucket police have suspended a city police officer with pay while he faces domestic violence allegations involving his ex-girlfriend.
Officer Steven Ricco was charged last month with domestic assault and disorderly conduct. He appeared Wednesday in Providence District Court, where a judge set a trial date of April 17.
His ex-girlfriend alleges she was pregnant with Ricco's child and he assaulted her when she refused to get an abortion. She also told police that Ricco pulled out his service weapon and told her to kill him.
Ricco's lawyer, John Harwood, told WJAR-TV ( ) on Wednesday that the allegations are absurd and outrageous. Harwood said he is gathering information on the ex-girlfriend's background.
Pawtucket police have confirmed that Ricco is suspended pending an internal affairs investigation.

Off-duty Memphis officer charged with assault




MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Memphis police say an off-duty officer has been charged with assault after a fight with his girlfriend.
Police said Friday that 47-year-old Officer Lazarus Settle was arrested and charged with simple assault, driving under the influence and refusal to submit to a blood alcohol test.
Police said an argument between Settle and his girlfriend began when they disagreed about the volume of the car radio.
Settle allegedly forced his girlfriend out of the vehicle after she took his keys. Police said they began fighting over the keys, then fell down a hill, sustaining minor cuts and scratches in the process.
Settles has been relieved of duty pending an investigation. Online court records did not show booking or lawyer information for Settle on Friday afternoon.
Hobart PD officer charged after firing shotgun in standoff at home
A Center Township man identified as a former Hobart Police officer and Porter County Animal Control Officer was taken into custody on Wednesday after he barricaded himself into his home and made death threats against a negotiator, the Porter County Sheriff’s Police said.
Eric Moser, 41, of 1355 Gilleevan Drive, has been charged with intimidation and criminal recklessness, both Class C felonies punishable by a term of two to eight years; and with resisting law enforcement, a Class midemeanor.
According to police, at 8:05 p.m. officers were dispatched to Moser’s home to conduct “a welfare check on a suicidal subject with a weapon.” As they were approaching the residence, Moser fired a 12-gauge shotgun out the back door, police said, and the PCSP Emergency Response Team was mustered and deployed.
At some point during negotiations, police said, Moser made “death threats” to the officer speaking with him.
Moser did, however, finally agree to exit his home but then refused to comply with officers’ commands and so was “shot with less than lethal rounds”: essentially foam-tipped projectiles.
At that point Moser became compliant, police said.
Moser was treated at Porter Regional Hospital, then transported to Porter County Jail.
No officers were injured in the incident, PCSP Sgt. Larry LaFlower told the Chesterton Tribune today.


No bond for ex-officer charged with stalking ex-wife




A Superior Court judge refused to grant bond Friday for a former Richmond County sheriff’s investigator accused of stalking his ex-wife.
Timothy Allen Tobias, 45, of Augusta, was arrested Feb. 27 and charged with aggravated stalking, according to jail records.
His 37-year-old ex-wife told deputies that Tobias, who had been charged before with stalking her, went to her Evans home Feb. 27. She said that after she pulled into her driveway and entered, she heard a knock and saw Tobias outside, according to a Co¬lum¬bia County sheriff’s report.
A deputy found Tobias walking toward the back of the townhouse. When the deputy spoke to him, Tobias walked toward the deputy with a cup in his right hand and his left hand in his pocket, according to the report. The deputy told Tobias to take his hand out of his pocket, and Tobias switched the cup to his left hand and stuck his right hand into his pocket. Tobias didn’t follow the deputy’s instructions to remove his hands from his pockets and to get to the ground.
The deputy put him on the ground and handcuffed him, according to the report. The deputy wrote that Tobias appeared to be extremely intoxicated and smelled like alcohol.
The resident said a restraining order against him was a stipulation of their divorce, according to the report. She said Tobias was on probation for stalking her in the past. He was charged in January 2011 with stalking and again in April 2011 with aggravated stalking, according to sheriff’s Capt. Steve Morris.
He pleaded guilty to two counts of stalking and one count of aggravated stalking in August 2011 under the First Offender Act.
Tobias was a Richmond County sheriff’s investigator until he resigned in October 2010, according to sheriff’s Lt. Calvin Chew. He had been hired in November 1987.

New York cop convicted in cannibalism plot



NEW YORK (AP) — Defense lawyers say all Internet users should worry that their online words can end up in federal court after a jury concluded that a New York police officer's plans to kidnap, kill and eat young women he knew were more than Internet chatter.
At the end of one of the most unusual federal trials ever, a jury agreed Tuesday with the government that 28-year-old Gilberto Valle wasn't just fantasizing when he conversed online with others he had never met about killing and cooking his wife and others in a cannibalism plot.
"Yes, they should be cautioned," Valle defense lawyer Robert Baum said outside court of people everywhere. "It sets a dangerous precedent."
The larger principle at stake in the trial was that "people can be prosecuted for their thoughts," Baum said, pausing before adding: "And convicted, which is even sadder to think about."
Baum had just exited federal court in Manhattan, where Valle and others at the defense table dropped their heads as the guilty verdicts were announced by a jury that had deliberated for portions of four days.
U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement: "Today, a unanimous jury found that Gilberto Valle's detailed and specific plans to abduct women for the purpose of committing grotesque crimes were very real and that he was guilty as charged. The Internet is a forum for the free exchange of ideas, but it does not confer immunity for plotting crimes and taking steps to carry out those crimes."
Marcellus McRae, a former federal prosecutor in Los Angeles now in private practice, said it was a stretch by the defense to claim Valle was prosecuted for his thoughts because the jurors were required to find that he took one or more concrete steps to carry out the conspiracy.
"It's not just a thought crime. It's a thought-and-action crime and conviction," he said.
Valle defense attorney Julia Gatto declined to talk about the sentencing scheduled for June 19, saying the defense team was focused only on trying to reverse the conviction on charges of kidnapping conspiracy and illegally accessing a national crime database. She said she will appeal within a month to U.S. District Judge Paul G. Gardephe to throw out the jury verdict or to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Although Valle could face up to life in prison, he is likely to get a much lower sentence.
Gatto, who said she cried with Valle after the verdict was announced, called it a "dangerous prosecution when we start opening our minds and prosecuting what's in our brains and not what's in the real world."
The jury, though, rejected the same "thought prosecution" argument she made throughout the trial.
Jurors left the courthouse without comment. Most did not immediately respond to emails and phone messages or declined to discuss the case.
Valle's mother, Elizabeth, shook her head. "I'm in shock and want to be left alone," she said.
Prosecutors said Valle plotted in lusty, lip-smacking detail to abduct, torture and cannibalize six women he knew, including his wife. While none of the women were ever harmed — and only his wife discovered his schemes — prosecutors said he took concrete steps to carry out his plot.
They said the New York City police officer looked up potential targets on a restricted law enforcement database; searched the Internet for how to knock someone out with chloroform and where to get torture devices and other tools; and showed up on a woman's block after striking an agreement to kidnap her for $5,000 for a New Jersey man who wanted to rape and kill her. That man was also arrested and is awaiting trial.
In one of the numerous online conversations shown to the jury, Valle told a man he met in a fetish chat room, "I want her to experience being cooked alive. She'll be trussed up like a turkey. ... She'll be terrified, screaming and crying."
In another exchange, Valle suggested a woman he knew would be easy prey because she lived alone. The men discussed cooking her, basted in olive oil, over an open fire and using her severed head as a centerpiece for a sit-down meal.
"I'm dying to eat some girl meat," Valle mused in yet another exchange.
During the trial, Valle's wife tearfully testified that she fled the couple's home with her baby and contacted the FBI after putting Internet tracking software on his computer and discovering what he was up to.
Members of the jury recoiled upon seeing what appeared to be mostly staged Internet images from a sexual fetish site Valle visited. The images included photos of wide-eyed women with apples stuffed in their mouths like roasted pigs and a video of a chained, naked woman screaming as flames appeared to scorch her crotch.

Slappin the old lady around


Durham, North Carolina: An internal investigation has found that a former police cops accused of beating a woman during an arrest at a party used excessive force. A news release said the department had “taken, and continues to take, any allegations of misconduct seriously, and works deliberately to ensure that all complaints are thoroughly investigated, and appropriate action is taken when needed.” ow.ly/i7gTt

Irwindale, California: A former police sergeant and two current officers are the subject of criminal investigation – two for alleged sexual improprieties and one for the alleged theft of hundreds of thousands of dollars, officials confirmed. The police chief, in reference to the sexual improprieties allegations, said, “We took this matter very seriously. As soon as the allegation was brought to our attention the employee of concern was placed on administrative leave and we immediately launched an administrative investigation.” ow.ly/i1HhN

Atlanta, Georgia: A former state trooper who was accused of causing a crash that killed a woman and injured three others has been indicted by a grand jury. He has been charged with vehicular homicide, reckless driving, and violating his oath as a public officer. ow.ly/i98rf

Cop Arrested For Meeting Up With Hookers In Wendy's Parking Lot
Last night, the NYPD revealed that police officer Luis Gutierrez was "was arrested and charged...within the confines of the 114th precinct" for official misconduct, conspiracy, and patronizing a prostitute. It turns out Gutierrez was nabbed on Thursday at the meeting place with the hookers—a parking lot of a Wendy's on Northern Boulevard.  According to the Post, "Gutierrez, a married father, was off-duty when he met up with his would-be paramours — but was in uniform and on duty when he allegedly arranged the rendezvous the day before, sources said." A source said, "He was on patrol with another cop and he was talking to the girls in Spanish." It's also suspected that at least one of the hookers "may have been police informants and ratted out the law-enforcement lothario, prompting an Internal Affairs Bureau investigation." Guiterrez, who joined the force in 2001, is suspended without pay.


HAVERHILL — A Haverhill police officer who was demoted in 2004 and nearly lost his job is being held without bail on charges of stalking his estranged wife and the man she is dating.
Patrolman Victor “Manny” Pellot was arrested by state police Wednesday night after he allegedly chased the couple through the city in his personal vehicle, confronting them at one point, and then continuing the chasing on Interstate 495.
Pellot’s wife and the man she is dating told a state police investigator that at one point during the chase, Pellot stopped his car in front of their car on Main Street, blocking them in. They said Pellot then walked to the side of their vehicle and punched the side view mirror, while yelling at his wife.
The chase continued onto I-495 south, police said. After the couple called 911 to report they were victims of “road rage,” a state trooper told them to drive to the Methuen Police Department to report what had happened, police said.
Pellot, 50, of Haverhill was arraigned on two counts of stalking yesterday in Newburyport District Court, where he pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Assistant District Attorney Nathaniel Sears asked Judge Peter Doyle to hold Pellot until a hearing on Monday where a judge will decide whether he should continue to be held as a danger to society or be released pending a probable cause hearing.
Pellot’s lawyer, Douglas Louison of Boston, objected. He said there were conditions of release that would ensure the safety of the public.
Louison said Pellot surrendered his gun and his police identification to Haverhill police Wednesday night, and that his father would turn in his license to carry a firearm to Haverhill police following yesterday’s hearing. Pellot’s parents and his brother were in the courtroom yesterday.
“He is a Haverhill police officer with a 29-year unblemished record,” Louison said, noting Pellot’s wife declined taking out a restraining order against him.
In fact, Pellot was demoted to patrolman and suspended for a year in 2004 by Mayor James Fiorentini after police Chief Alan DeNaro sought to fire Pellot for being present in uniform in 2002 and 2003 during illegal drug sales at his cousin’s house.
Pellot returned to work as a patrolman in September 2005. In June 2007 the Civil Service Commission began hearings on appeal of his suspension. Pellot asked the commission to reinstate his sergeant’s rank and return back pay lost because of the mayor’s 2004 decision to suspend him for a year and demote him. Pellot said previously he knew nothing of the drug deals at his cousin’s home and was there only to keep an eye on a troubled family member. In May 2008 the commission upheld Pellot’s suspension and demotion.
Yesterday, the judge ordered Pellot held without bail pending a dangerousness hearing Monday. The judge also issued Pellot a 60-day warning, meaning if he gets in trouble with the law while his case is pending, he can be held up to 60 days without bail. Doyle also ordered Pellot to stay away from his wife and the man she is dating.
“Holding him for three days seems extraordinary,” Louison said.
Following the hearing, Louison told The Eagle-Tribune that charges against a police officer are routinely heard before a judge in a court other than the one officers usually appear in as part of their job. He was referring to the case being heard in Newburyport court. Louison said Pellot was placed on administrative leave by the Haverhill Police Department as of Wednesday night.
David Van Dam, Mayor James Fiorentini’s chief of staff, said Pellot has been suspended without pay pending the disposition of his court case.
According to a police report, Pellot and his wife of 24 years have been separated since September 2011 and are in the process of divorcing.
During an interview conducted at the Methuen Police Station, Pellot’s wife told State Police Lt. Paul Zipper that she began dating a Merrimack, N.H., man in July of last year and that since then Pellot confronted them four times.
She said that in once instance, the man dropped her off at her job in North Andover and Pellot suddenly appeared and began yelling at her. In another instance, she said she was being dropped off at her home in Haverhill after a date when Pellot pulled up behind their car. She said they drove to the Haverhill Police Station and Pellot followed them. She said that when they got to the station, Pellot approached their car and yelled at them.
“At this time, an unidentified Haverhill police officer intervened and pulled Manny away from the vehicle as he was attempting to get at (the boyfriend) who had locked his vehicle,” Zipper wrote in his report.
The latest incident occurred Wednesday about 6 p.m., when Pellot allegedly chased the couple through Haverhill and onto the highway, ending when the couple drove to the Methuen Police Station to report what happened.
Zipper wrote in his report that Pellot also sent harassing text messages, made phone calls to both individuals and left several threatening voice mails, including one to his wife in December in which he said, “I am going to kill you.”
Victor Pellot was questioned at the Haverhill Police Station Wednesday night and then arrested on the stalking charge. He was taken to the Newbury State Police Barracks, where he was fingerprinted, photographed and processed without incident, according to Zipper’s report. Pellot was held on $10,000 cash bail pending his arraignment yesterday in Newburyport District Court.
Pellot has been commended several times during a career that began in 1985. He is credited with running into a burning building on Winona Avenue in January 2000 and saving the life of an 83-year-old woman. He also was part of a team of officers that ended two armed standoffs without firing their guns. He was promoted to sergeant in 1999, becoming the city’s first Hispanic superior officer.





Del. police officer charged with bigamy
The Wilmington Police Department has arrested one of its own officers, Wilbur Justice, 45, and charged him with bigamy and forgery.
Justice, of Wilmington, Del., was arrested as the result of an internal investigation that began Feb. 6, according to a press release by the department.
At the time, the Delaware Alcohol Tobacco Enforcement agency notified police that a background investigation revealed Justice was married to two women at the same time.
The investigation showed that Justice was first married in August 2008.
However, authorities say he submitted a marriage application in 2012 stating he was not married. The marriage to his second wife took place on September 1, 2012.
Justice had been a Wilmington Police Officer for three years and is in the Uniformed Services Division.
Justice was taken into custody without incident at home on Wednesday. He is suspended without pay pending the result of the investigation.