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This sort of thing is becoming much too common in cities all over the nation and it is
totally outrageous. These Rambo wannabes need the book thrown at them and do
some serious jail time. John Law is not above the law!

--Henrietta

http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/2002/03/17/news/local/
2875060.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp

Police abuse was overlooked
Review shows 293 allegations of wrongdoing, few penalties
BY JOSEPH TANFANI AND DAVID KIDWELL
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Long before federal authorities arrested 14 Miami police officers on corruption and
coverup charges, the department's own investigators had received at least 293
allegations of beatings, thefts and other misconduct against them -- more than twice
the average of other Miami officers, a Herald investigation shows.

Some suspects told of pistol-whippings, bloodied heads and broken noses. Others
told of rip-offs, planted drugs and guns held to their heads. One woman said she was
raped.

But the department's internal affairs investigators and police brass cleared the
officers in case after case, even when independent witnesses or physical evidence
bolstered the charges and cast doubt on the officers' stories, according to a Herald
review of hundreds of department files, court records and dozens of interviews.

Even when some were caught lying, officers escaped serious consequences.

Instead, Miami police brass applauded them for their aggressiveness in nabbing
criminals and handed them choice assignments on hard-charging units such as
street narcotics and SWAT, where they became involved in more suspicious
shootings, beatings and allegations of wrongdoing.

''Maybe we did a lousy job disciplining these cases,'' said Miami Police Chief Raúl
Martinez, acknowledging his department's failures. "We have to do a better job
putting these cases together.''

The high price of that failure is now coming due.

A federal grand jury has issued sweeping indictments, charging the officers with
shooting unarmed suspects, and lying and planting guns in a conspiracy to cover up
their actions.

The shootings resulted in four deaths.

Though 14 were indicted, two officers -- John Mervolion and William Hames -- have
already pleaded guilty and agreed to testify against their colleagues.

Miami taxpayers will pay $3.75 million to settle two of the cases, and more
settlements worth millions of dollars are being negotiated in other civil suits.

''A small clique of police officers came into the department in the early 1980s, a
criminal element sneaked through and some of them have risen high enough so they
can protect each other,'' said H.T. Smith, a community activist and lawyer who has
sued the department in other shooting cases.

''They had to be protected at the top,'' he said. "Every police chief during that 
period
needs to answer that question, because as far as I'm concerned the blood of some
of these people that were killed is on their hands.''

Said Martinez, the police chief: "I have seen no evidence of protection, but I 
certainly
understand why people perceive it. Obviously, these officers have lied, and some of
them were good at it.

"We've been trying for the past year and a half to shore up our problems.''

Lawyers for the officers defend them as hard-working, aggressive cops who took on
Miami's roughest criminals and generated unfounded complaints as a result. They
say the Herald's findings are unfair.

''Of course they are going to have more allegations made against them. They are
working in the most confrontational of circumstances -- SWAT and street narcotics,''
said Roy Kahn, lawyer for indicted Sgt. José Acuña.

Some of the 14 officers had records less tarnished than others, and not all were
accused of lying. But repeated allegations of lies, brutality and thefts dogged some of
these officers for a decade or more:

GUN ALLEGATIONS

Officer most tied to shootings charged

• Arturo Beguiristain had 16 internal affairs complaints and was involved in eight
shootings -- the most shootings of anyone in the department. Twice, independent
witnesses came forward and said they saw him beating suspects; both times,
internal investigators said the charges couldn't be proved or disproved.

Beguiristain never faced more than a reprimand. Instead, his personnel file is stuffed
with accolades and he won the department's Medal of Honor for shooting and killing
an armed bank robber on Biscayne Boulevard.

He now stands accused by federal authorities of helping to plant guns in three
suspicious shootings, including the 1996 SWAT raid that killed 73-year-old Richard
Brown. In that drug raid gone wrong, police fired 123 shots indiscriminately and
wounded one of their own officers.

Beguiristain himself fired 30 shots.

''They are aggressive,'' said Richard Sharpstein, who represents Beguiristain and
Officer Jorge Castello. "That doesn't upset the citizenry, but it upsets the criminals,
and they make bogus allegations.''

SAVED BY SUPERIOR

Officer lied but was kept on by then-Chief Warshaw

• Jesus ''Jesse'' Aguero has 46 internal affairs complaints alleging beatings,
harassment and thefts. Ten of those complaints were sustained, meaning
investigators concluded he broke department rules. Four times, investigators said
they caught him lying.

Twelve years ago, internal investigators found he lied to help an officer accused in
the beating death of drug dealer Leonardo Mercado. Martinez, then an assistant
chief, wanted to fire him. But former Chief Donald Warshaw, now serving time in a
federal prison for stealing more than $70,000 from a police children's charity, gave
him a reprimand instead.

Later, a prostitute accused him of forcing her to perform fellatio in his cruiser. When
investigators went back to the parking lot where it supposedly happened, they
discovered his semen on a discarded Dairy Queen napkin. DNA evidence backed up
the woman's story. Aguero denied the accusation and said the DNA tests were
wrong.

The criminal charges were dropped after the woman refused to cooperate. The
department tried to fire him, but Aguero won an administrative appeal and went back
on the street.

He also was cleared on other allegations.

Among them: beating an assistant pastor, stealing money from suspects, slapping a
motorist who argued with him in traffic and using a racial slur to describe a superior
officer.

When some criticized him, other police supervisors jumped to his defense: ''One of
the most feared officers on the street,'' wrote one sergeant in 1996.

Aguero was rewarded with a spot on an elite street crime unit.

Since then, federal prosecutors say, Aguero has participated in three shootings in
which authorities suspect guns were planted -- including one in which he allegedly
shot a fleeing unarmed man in the back of the head, then knelt by his side and, as he
died, uttered a racial epithet.

Finally, he was fired last year. Federal agents are now reviewing other cases in
Aguero's file, including the alleged sexual assault.

Hugo Rodriguez, his lawyer, said Aguero and the other officers were ordered to clear
out tourist robbers and other armed thugs and are now are being punished for it.

• Police investigators found Alejandro ''Alex'' Macias was lying in two cases in 1989.
In one of them, witnesses said Macias stood by while his partner beat a handcuffed
doctor in a Coconut Grove park; Macias said he never saw the beating and got a
two-week suspension.

''If they ever pulled me over at night I think I would keep running,'' said Dr. Leonard
Frank, now of Seattle, who said he won a $35,000 settlement from the city.

In the other case, investigators said Macias lied when he denied harassing a window
washer by pouring soda on his head. Investigators wanted to suspend him, but then-
Police Chief Calvin Ross, who could not be reached last week for comment, did not.

Now, federal indictments charge Macias lied yet again, by saying a mentally
disturbed man, Jesse Runnels, stuck a gun out his back window before Macias
fatally shot him.

Prosecutors believe the toy gun was dropped by a Miami cop, though they haven't
determined who planted it.

''The bottom line is that Macias is the kind of cop that you want to arrive on the 
scene
when your life is in danger,'' said Bill Matthewman, his attorney.

GUN-PLANTING ALLEGED

Prosecutors say firearm was put at I-95 shooting

• José Quintero, another Street Crimes veteran, was hit with 48 complaints and
investigators found no wrongdoing in 46. He was accused of punching a handcuffed
suspect and of helping to steal $13,000 during a search of a suspected drug dealer's
house. The finding: "Inconclusive.''

After a 1994 traffic stop, a motorist said Quintero and Macias strip-searched a young
passenger and held guns to his head for ''an extended period of time.'' That incident
earned the pair a scolding from their bosses, even though internal affairs dropped
the case because the motorist never gave a formal statement. Macias and Quintero
said they did nothing wrong.

About a year later, Quintero said he found a gun on the scene of a fatal shooting
near I-395 in downtown Miami. It was really a plant, prosecutors say.

''Quintero is a great cop,'' said Sam Rabin, his lawyer.

Together, the 14 indicted officers account for nearly one quarter of all Miami police
bullets fired at people since 1990: 280 rounds. Of the 293 accusations of wrongdoing
by the 14 officers, 83 allege abusive treatment or excessive force, 33 stolen property,
20 untruthfulness and 60 discourtesy.

''We've had a pretty good system in place to identify these officers,'' Martinez said. 
"I
don't think we've done a good job trying to figure out what to do with them once we've
found them.

"We're still struggling with that.''

COMPLAINTS VARIED

Accusations range from assault to theft

The Herald's review of internal affairs files involving the officers shows there were
complaints about narcotics planted in pockets and guns pulled during traffic
confrontations. Some people told stories about being arrested, handcuffed, taken to
darkened streets and stomped on by some of these Miami cops.

Among the people who claimed they were abused: Jorge Mas Santos, now chairman
of the Cuban American National Foundation; a preacher; a doctor and a teen
skateboard champion.

But many of the complaints were discounted.

In one strange case in 1997, two men called 911 and said that three men -- who
seemed to be officers or police impersonators -- had forced their way into their
Northwest 62nd Street house at gunpoint, stolen their money and driven off in a red
Nissan Altima without making any arrests or giving them any paperwork.

A half hour later, dispatchers asked whether any Street Narcotics officers had
worked a raid in the city's north end. No one responded. Then, a supervisor
remembered that Officer Glenn Maura had picked up a city-issued Altima the day
before. When confronted, Maura said he was chasing a drug suspect into the house
-- with Beguiristain and Macias.

All denied taking anything. Maura said in a recent interview he did not remember
details of the incident.

Investigators gave the three officers reprimands for not answering their radios and
for not filling out reports. As for the robbery allegations: "Inconclusive.''

In some cases, investigators had evidence of wrongdoing, but the victims refused to
cooperate.

In 1997, the pastor of Solid Rock in Christ Jesus Holiness Church called internal
affairs and said that, looking from just outside the Brownsville church's entrance, she
had witnessed a police beating. Jessie Mae Brown said she saw two plainclothes
officers pistol-whip a man they believed was dealing drugs, take his money and jump
back into their red convertible as other plainclothes officers were arriving.

''He took the money out of that man's pocket and put it in his own pocket,'' Brown
said in a recent Herald interview. "He beat that boy right down there by the ear on the
back of his head until the blood started coming.

'I said, 'You know you don't have to do that.' And they told me, 'Get out of here, 
lady!'
''

The two officers were Beguiristain and Oscar Ronda, both later charged with lying
about their role in suspect shootings. They said the drug dealer had hit his head on a
fence.

But evidence backed up Brown's account. Beguiristain's gun tested positive for
blood.

The dealer, Howard White, said he had more than $390 in his pocket, but only $130
made it into evidence.

The internal affairs investigator, who never interviewed Beguiristain or Ronda, said
his hands were tied because White refused to file a complaint.

''I was scared and I just wanted them to turn me loose and let me go,'' said White,
who pleaded guilty to the drug charges. "They would come after me for the rest of my
life, every little thing, that's what I felt.''

Like the alleged rip-off, the beating case is now under review by federal 
investigators.

NO PUNISHMENT

Some people win lawsuits but officers not punished

Sometimes, cases were dropped without any investigation.

In November 1991, Mas Santos and friend Carlos Valdes said they were pushed,
grabbed by their hair and belts and marched to the CocoWalk security office by
Beguiristain and another officer, who wanted them to leave at the mall's closing time.

Mas and Valdes later met with then-chief Warshaw, who persuaded them to
withdraw their complaints, according to Capt. Miguel Exposito, who has filed a
lawsuit against the department alleging he was punished for pointing out wrongdoing.

Mas and Valdes declined to comment.

Several times, alleged victims of Miami police misconduct won money in lawsuits,
even though the department hadn't punished the officers.

It happened to Willie Ross, who charged he had $500 stolen in a jailhouse beating by
Officer Rafael ''Ralph'' Fuentes, also one of the 14 officers facing federal charges.

Ross said Fuentes hit him with handcuffs. Medical records showed his hand was
broken.

Ross later won a $16,000 civil judgment. Fuentes denied abusing Ross or taking his
money.

It happened to Ricky Martinez, who was 16 and skateboarding in Bayfront Park when
he made a smart aleck remark to Beguiristain, who wanted him to stop.

''He just went to him, grabbed him and pushed him to the ground. He was bleeding,''
said witness Rosario Roman, an administrator at Miami-Dade Community College.

Martinez was charged with battery on a law-enforcement officer but the charges were
dropped, his lawyer said. And the city gave him a $10,000 settlement.

A PERSONAL STORY

Woman got broken arm while police were in home

His case is not unusual. A Herald review of court records also shows that, in at least
35 of the cases involving these officers, enough questions emerged to prompt judges
and prosectors to drop the criminal charges against the offenders or the people who
made the complaints.

When it was the officers' word against a citizen's, the officers almost always won:
''Inconclusive,'' investigators would write.

Octavia Muldrow was 17 years old and asleep in her upstairs bedroom on June 30,
1993, when José Acuña and SWAT team members burst into her house with a
search warrant.

The police were there on suspicion her brother was fencing stolen property.

''I was upstairs and I heard all this commotion,'' Muldrow recalls. 'I came down the
stairs half asleep and said, 'What's going on?' ''

She said they barked orders at her and she continued to question them.

"I heard somebody say, 'She wants to be a smartass,' and one of them comes after
me.''

She said Acuña dragged her from the stairs and hit her.

''I hit him back, and then we rolled down the stairs,'' she said. "Then all hell broke
loose.''

Muldrow later told investigators that Acuña slugged her, kicked her and stomped on
her arm repeatedly.

''There were three or four of them on me after that,'' she said. "They broke my arm in
three places.''

Acuña denied beating or stomping on Muldrow, saying he broke her arm while
struggling to handcuff her.

According to records, all charges against Muldrow stemming from the incident --
resisting arrest, battery on a police officer, and dealing in stolen property -- were
dismissed.

''They never showed up at the court hearings,'' Muldrow said.

''My momma always told me to leave it alone -- to leave it in God's hands. And now
look. It all comes back around,'' Muldrow said.


-----
Henrietta Bowman
Help Henrietta keep working for Liberty! Visit Henrietta's
Rendezvous.http://www.fourthbranch.org/rendezvous
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