Posts Tagged ‘Police’

NOPD Cleaning Up

June 23rd, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »

Nineteen-year NOPD veteran, Michael Roussel, was arrested Tuesday night by the FBI for suspicion of wire fraud.  Sheila Thorne, who spoke on behalf of the FBI, did not go into any further detail on the arrest.  The FBI was called in by Superintendent Ronal Serpas over a week ago after receiving news that there was such events possibly occurring within the department.  This move shows an effort on the NOPD’s part to clean up its act following the recent revelations of the Danziger Bridge and Glover incidents, which exposed corruption within the police force since Hurricane Katrina.

Teen shot 12 times in back by NOPD after allegedly pointing rifle at officers

June 22nd, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

Amid intense scrutiny of the NOPD’s use of excessive force, another brutal incident occurred Sunday night that resulted in the death of a 17 year-old.
Jamyrin Points was shot 12 times, all in the back of his body, after allegedly pointing and raising an assault rifle at three New Orleans police officers.
Marlon Defillo, the New Orleans Police Department’s assistant superintendent, said private surveillance footage shows the main raising the rifle at officers. The tape will be turned over to the district attorney.
A report of gunfire at McCue park in the 2500 block of Franklin Avenue prompted the officers to the scene where they saw a teen running from the area with an assault rifle in his hands, according to Defillo.
Officer Nicholas Williams, officer Lawrence Jones and officer Cleveland Johnson approached Points at the steps of the Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, when Points “raised the weapon and leveled it at the officers,” Defillo said.
The three officers fired 12 times at Points, who was pronounced dead at the scene.
The officers retrieved the assault rifle, with a fully loaded magazine and a bullet in the chamber at the scene.
The coroner’s office reported Points’ wounds were in the back parts of his leg, the upper area of his back, and one in the back of his head.

NOPD Cover-up Unraveled

June 14th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »

On Friday, five former and current NOPD officers were indicted in the Henry Glover case, which occurred a few days following Katrina. Glover was allegedly shot by former officer David Warren in Algiers on September 2, 2005 from a second story balcony. Warren claims that he had no knowledge of his bullet actually hitting someone after he fired at a group of men that were “putting his life at risk.” Glover’s brother, Edward King, and a stranger, William Tanner who had responded to the cries of concern, put Glover’s body in the backseat of a Chevy Malibu and drove to the makeshift SWAT office at a nearby school. Upon arrival, the two were allegedly beaten by Lt. Dwayne Scheuermann and officer Greg McRae, who then drove off with the vehicle containing Glover’s body. Prosecutors contend that the two set the car on fire with the body inside, and covered the story up by charging the owners of the car with looting. Lt. Travis McCabe and Lt. Robert Italiano later “authored and submitted a false and misleading official report” which was intended to end further investigation.

This is not the first case of corruption by the NOPD to be revealed recently from the direct aftermath of Katrina. The Danziger Bridge incident, where two people were killed and four wounded in the days after the storm, has five officers being charged with collaboration to its cover-up. The men being indicted in the Glover case are facing long-term sentencing, depending on the verdict of the case.

Two police misconduct lawsuits settled

January 23rd, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »

By Brendan McCarthy, The Times-Picayune
January 22, 2010, 7:13PM
sportsmans_corner.JPGMichael DeMocker/The Times-Picayune archiveThe Sportsman’s Corner bar was photographed in June 2007.

Attorneys for the city of New Orleans recently settled a pair of high-profile federal lawsuits alleging police misconduct.

One alleged brawl, involving city transit workers and off-duty officers, took place on Mardi Gras night at the Beach Corner bar in Mid-City. The other case centered on an incident in July 2006 inside a Central City bar.

On Friday, the city attorney’s office reached a settlement in federal court with the American Civil Liberties Union, which represents Steven Elloie, a bar manager who alleged he was beaten, twice shocked with a Taser stun gun and falsely arrested inside the Sportsman’s Corner bar.

According to the suit, Elloie was taking inventory in the stockroom that night when the officers “entered the bar in an aggressive and belligerent manner” and announced they were looking for two young black men wearing blue jeans and white T-shirts. The 16 customers inside the bar told the police that no one fitting that description had come in.

Though they had no search warrant or permission to search the bar, the officers began “forcefully opening and attempting to open doors,” and one officer grabbed Elloie and told him he was going to jail, the suit alleged. Elloie said four or five cops then began hitting and kicking him.

Police booked him with resisting arrest and battery on one of the police officers, but the charges were later dropped. The Elloie family filed Public Integrity Bureau complaints with more than a dozen supporting witnesses. The internal affairs division of the NOPD found that Elloie’s claims were “unsubstantiated.”

Elloie’s attorney, Katie Schwartzmann of the ACLU, declined to release the settlement amount, which is in addition to attorney’s fees.

“The settlement in this case is a great outcome for Steven Elloie, but until we have meaningful internal accountability for officers who break the law, we will continue to have problems with police misconduct in this City,” Schwartzmann said in a released statement. “People must be able to trust the police.”

Police spokesman Bob Young did not immediately return a request for comment Friday. The city attorney, Penya Moses-Fields, did not return a request for comment late Friday afternoon regarding the Elloie case.

Some of the same officers involved in the Elloie incident were later involved in another well-publicized case. That case, closed Friday in federal district court, was brought by a Regional Transit Authority employee who alleged he, and some co-workers, were beaten and falsely arrested in a racially charged bar brawl with off-duty officers in 2008. The dismissal came two weeks after the two sides reached an agreement.

Lamont Williams, the RTA worker, alleged that he and three co-workers, who are all black, were subjected to racial epithets, followed outside and beaten by off-duty, plainclothes officers. He also alleged that a police officer pulled a gun from a co-worker’s car, planted it on Williams, then falsely arrested him for possession of a gun – a charge that was later dropped.

The city settled the case for $25,000, according to Moses-Fields.

“The City of New Orleans decided it was a good business decision to settle the cases because litigating them to completion would have cost more than $25,000,” Moses-Fields wrote in an e-mail message. “The City of New Orleans entered into the settlement with absolutely no admission of liability.”

One of the officers, David Lapene, was dropped from the lawsuit “after it became apparent that the officer had absolutely nothing to do with” the incident, Moses-Field noted.

Police attorney Frank DeSalvo said Friday that the “whole case was a sham” and that the small settlement amount shows the allegations had little merit.

Attorney Stephen Rue, who brought the case, said Williams had difficulty identifying the specific officer who punched him. Ultimately, Williams wanted to settle the case and move on, Rue said.

The NOPD’s own initial investigation concluded that five officers broke police conduct rules and then lied to investigators, with at least one officer coercing a civilian witness to lie.

Police Superintendent Warren Riley fired two officers: Sgt. Warren Keller Jr, who allegedly exchanged harsh words with Williams inside the restroom stall, kicking off the imbroglio; and Lapene, who was dropped from the federal suit, and who allegedly threw a punch that landed on William’s face. Both officers have appealed their terminations to the city’s Civil Service Commission.

The NOPD initial investigation also concluded that another off-duty officer, Jennifer Samuel, committed wrongdoing. She was suspended for 80 days.

A criminal inquiry into the officers’ actions was opened, but charges were never filed. Then-District Attorney Keva Landrum-Johnson’s office responded to the NOPD in writing, saying the matter had been refused for prosecution because an essential witness, RTA worker Kennis Hagan, had drowned in an unrelated incident.

Brendan McCarthy can be reached at bmccarthy@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3301.

New Orleans mayoral candidates talk crime fighting in Monday night forum

January 19th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »


By Brendan McCarthy, The Times-Picayune
January 19, 2010, 7:32AM

new orleans mayoral candidates.jpgTed Jackson / The Times-PicayuneRob Couhig, John Georges, Troy Henry, Mitch Landrieu James Perry and Nadine Ramsey, left to right, on Jan. 5. All attended a crime forum sponsored by Silence Is Violence Monday.With their platforms long ago solidified, the top candidates for mayor pounded home the key points of their proposed criminal justice reforms in a forum Monday night.

Attorney Rob Couhig, businessmen John Georges and Troy Henry, Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu, housing activist James Perry and former Civil District Court Judge Nadine Ramsey participated in the forum at Goody’s restaurant on St. Claude Avenue. The event was sponsored by influential community group, Silence Is Violence.

Some overwhelming themes emerged in the 90-minute forum, with candidates largely agreeing to several like-minded reforms. All want to better fund and revamp the New Orleans Recreation Department. All vow to take a more hands-on approach to crime — going to crime scenes, reaching out to the families of homicide victims, and reducing the murder and violent crime rates.

Perry pounced on the issue of accountability, reiterating that he would lower the murder rate by 40 percent, or he would not run for re-election.

“That’s as real as it gets,” he said.

He pointed to continued platform chatter that lacks specific goals, saying he is the one candidate willing to be held accountable.

Landrieu explained the planks of his platform: lowering crime, bettering NORD and revamping the juvenile justice system.

He also spoke of an incident in which he was robbed at gunpoint as a child. “It was a life-changing experience for me,” he said. “It is seared in my brain.”

He called crime the single most important issue facing the city, and said the next mayor has to get it right.

Henry emphasized his experience as a businessman and the importance of having an executive at City Hall. He spoke of performance measures for police, and noted that the criminal justice system’s ankle-bracelet monitoring system needs to be revamped and made more efficient.

Couhig, the lone Republican at the forum, repeated a mantra that the city needs a “dose of tough love” – blunt reforms in many departments, including the police department. He reiterated a pledge not to raise taxes and said the city must fight blight.

“Clean up this city and we are going to clean up some of this crime,” he said.

Georges, who said he takes every murder personally, noted that the city is not as aggressive as it should be in going after sales taxes. He said the administration could get more than $30 million in sales taxes, which could be used to fight crime. He said too much of the police budget is going to police overtime.

In the most direct attack on another contender, Georges aimed at a salvo at Landrieu, saying that being lieutenant governor is nothing like being mayor. Georges pointed to his business acumen in lobbying for the crowd’s votes.

Ramsey, meanwhile, pushed the importance of faith-based organizations and the role of the community in combating crime. She said a new police superintendent will have to possess a long term commitment to solving crime and will have to address low morale in the police department.

Brendan McCarthy can be reached at bmccarthy@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3301.

Triple homicide investigation yields ‘very good leads,’ police say

January 9th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »


By Brendan McCarthy, The Times-Picayune
January 08, 2010, 10:07PM

Three people, including a brother and sister, were fatally shot and another woman critically wounded late Thursday night in a home invasion in the St. Roch neighborhood.

Inside a bedroom, the suspects killed two women with an assault rifle and wounded a third woman. They used a handgun to execute a young man in the rear yard, authorities said. They spared only a toddler.
MURDERS010910.jpg

The attack took place shortly before midnight inside a shotgun double in the 2700 block of Urquhart Street, a tough, residential neighborhood with houses cheek by jowl.

New Orleans police officers, responding to a report of a burglary, found the door ajar. Inside they discovered the female victims.

Kewanda Harris, 30, was killed by an assault rifle in one of the bedrooms. Her partner, Karen Matthews, who is in her 20s, had been fatally shot as well, according to John Gagliano, the spokesman for the Orleans Parish coroner who released the identities. Relatives and a neighbor confirmed their relationship.

Another woman, 26, was found alive but severely wounded. She was taken to LSU Interim Public Hospital in critical condition.

Desmond Harris, Kewanda’s 23-year-old brother, had been shot in the head and fell face-down in the rear yard, authorities said.

Police believe that the motive in the slayings revolves around drugs, which were often sold from the house.

“It appears that the shooting involved the sale and distribution of narcotics from that home,” said Marlon Defillo, assistant police superintendent. “We are trying to determine whether it was a drug rip-off or something else.”

Defillo said Friday evening that detectives had worked through the night and were pursing some “very good leads.”

By midmorning Friday, the house had been cordoned off, its front door affixed with a sticker from the coroner’s office. Two homicide detectives huddled in the cold as crime scene technicians snapped photographs in the rear yard of the coffee-colored home, which had sheets covering the windows.

Next-door neighbor Wallace Welsh, 45, said people frequently sold drugs in and around the home, and that drug sales are an ongoing issue in the neighborhood. Welsh, who confirmed their identities and relationships, said he heard little at the time of the incident and learned of the shooting when police arrived. He said he is haunted by what he saw.

Karen Harris, 44, a cousin of both Desmond and Kewanda Harris, said in an interview that her relatives grew up in the Magnolia public housing complex and recently settled into the Urquhart apartment.

She added that Desmond was the outgoing sibling, a “hard-working and fun-loving man,” employed at the Cat’s Meow nightclub on Bourbon Street. A manager there declined to comment Friday.

She also said Kewanda Harris was quiet, respectful and very much in love with her girlfriend.

Karen Harris had no answers for the motive in the killing of her cousins.

“I’m trying to find out myself,” she said.

Brendan McCarthy can be reached at bmccarthy@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3301.

DUI – DWI Gotchas! 3 Popular Police Drunk Driving Tests

March 12th, 2008 | Posted in DUI/DWI, Local Issues, Traffic by bloom | No Comments »

man_being_arrested.jpgIf you haven’t heard it before now, then here it is: no DUI – DWI defense attorney is going to recommend that you voluntarily take a Breathalizer test when you’re pulled over for suspicion of driving drunk.

Why? Because it will give a reading on your BAC (blood alcohol content) that will automatically correlate with the state law definition of intoxication. State laws across the country define driving drunk by the percentage of alcohol in the blood stream. Usually it’s at 0.08%.

Someone who doesn’t feel tipsy, or with even the slightest buzz, can still read drunk on a Breathalizer. It’s very hard to defend against those numbers.

So, what can the police do if they pull you over, and you just say no to the machine?

They can give you “field sobriety tests” which you’ve probably seen a lot, if you watch Fox TV’s COPS  with any regularity ….

Three of the most popular field sobriety tests are the One Leg Stand, the Walk and Turn, and the HGN.

Continue Reading »

Memorial Day Weekend Traffic Violations and DWI/DUI

May 30th, 2007 | Posted in DUI/DWI, NOPD, Traffic by bloom | No Comments »

Don’t let a holiday traffic violations ruin your good driving record!! Call Bloom Legal today to prevent any blemishes on your driving record that could lead to higher auto insurance premiums or the suspension of your license.

 Blooml Legal, LLC is a full service law firm in the greater New Orleans area handling a myriad of legal problems like criminal defense, personal injury and insurance litigation.

Available 24/7. Call 1-877-NOLATIX for immediate help.