Saturday, March 20, 2010

Trusting Police is hard in some areas

The New York Times
  • March 19, 2010

    Linked to Police Misconduct, 185 Drug Cases Are Dropped

    CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) — Charges have been dropped or convictions vacated in 185 drug cases in one of the nation’s most crime-ridden cities, because information gathered in a criminal investigation of five police officers suggested that evidence could have been tainted, a prosecutor announced Friday.

    One of the officers, who resigned, pleaded guilty in federal court Friday to conspiring with other officers to deprive other people of their civil rights.

    The former officer, Kevin Parry, admitted that he planted drugs on suspects, conducted illegal searches, threatened to bring additional charges against suspects who refused to cooperate, stole drugs and money from suspects, and paid informants — many of them prostitutes — with drugs in exchange for information.

    Friday’s announcement and Mr. Parry’s plea were the first information about the situation to emerge since the investigation began in November.

    At least four of the police officers were suspended then. The Camden County prosecutor, Warren Faulk, would not say whether the fifth had been removed from duty.

    The prosecutor’s office reviewed more than 400 cases over the last five years in which one of those five was the arresting or investigating officer, Mr. Faulk said. They seemed to not have behaved inappropriately in some cases, like domestic violence calls, Mr. Faulk said.

    But in 185 cases involving more than 180 suspects, Mr. Faulk said, there was reason to drop charges or vacate convictions. It was not clear how many people were released because of the investigation, but 81 of them had received prison or jail sentences.

    Yvonne Smith Segars, who heads the state’s public defender’s office, called the developments “unprecedented.”


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