Case# 16C0734 On December 7th, 2016, I, Officer Jeffrey L. Albert, was working as a Police Officer for the Wichita State University Police Department. At approximately 1914 hours dispatch radioed a disturbance coming from Fairmount Towers South. I arrived at approximately 1920 hours and made contact with a white male later identified as Austin Tyler Donnell. Officer DeMario Smith was on scene and started to talk to Donnell. I asked Donnell for his identification, Donnell presented his drivers license and handed it to me. I took down Donnell's information. Officer Smith, Donnell and myself walked back into Fairmount Tower South's lobby. Moments later I made contact with Sargent Brad Agnew, Agnew asked me to grab a camera and meet in room
Upon my arrival, I observed a white male standing outside, Officer Welch then order the suspect to ground who was later identified as Kevin George Plato (Suspect). Mr. Plato had a moderate odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from his breath at this time.
On 11/02/2015, I, Chad Agnew, was working as a patrol officer for the Wichita State University Police, Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas. At approximetely 2222 hours we went to Omega Ct. to assist Sgt. Garwood since he was out on a suspicous character and another call on Omega Ct. Sgt. Garwood advised us to go to the Delta Delta Delta house at the end of the block and speak to the reporting party. I went and made contact with Julie Nolte and Dakotah Gilmore who were inside the residence. We went to a back room and closed the door.
I saw a male White, later identified as Suspect Marcus David Urena in the seating area of the Fillmore Metro Station. I immediately recognized Urena from prior police contacts in the field. I conducted a records check on Urena, through my patrol unit’s (#52) computer and learned that he had an outstanding warrant for his arrest (see attached printout).
On October 31, 1963, A Cleveland Police Department Detective witnessed two men, John Terry and Richard Chilton, doing what he believed to be casing a store in an imminent attempt to commit robbery. The officer, Martin McFadden, performed a pat-down search of the two men whom he testified in court “did not look right.” McFadden said that when he approached the men, having suspected that they were about to commit a robbery, felt they might be armed and fearing for his life, immediately turned them around and patted down their clothing. Consequently, McFadden found a gun on one of the men, Terry, who was arrested, charged with, and convicted of carrying a concealed weapon.
Facts: On October 3, 1974, Memphis Police Officers Hymon and Wright were dispatched to answer a “prowler inside call.” When the police arrived at the scene, a neighbor gestured to the house where she had heard glass breaking and that someone was breaking into the house. While one of the officer radioed that they were on the scene, the other officer went to the rear of the house hearing a door slam and saw someone run across the backyard. The suspect, Edward Garner stopped at a 6-feet-high fence at the edge of the yard and proceeded to climb the fence as the police officer called out “police, halt.” The police officer figured that if Garner made it over
In one of the stories, an African American woman, Ms. B, had been constantly harassed and attacked by Chicago police officers. The first time that Ms. B was attacked, officers forced her into her own apartment and sexually assaulted her. By the time the police officers left the ransacked apartment, Ms. B was physically battered, naked, emotionally traumatized, and terrified about where and how her son and his friend were. “The police officers, who work on a special unit of the Chicago Police Department, never identified themselves as such. They did not produce a search warrant, explain the reason for the ‘search,’ or read Ms. B her constitutional rights as required by law.
On March 5, 2016 Earledreka White, a black 28-year old social worker, was pulled over by a Metro Police officer in Huston, Texas for crossing the double white line. During this incident White was placed in handcuffs and charged with resisting arrest and search, a misdemeanor that carries a potential six-month sentence, and jailed for two days on $1,000 bond. Later on in the case White’s attorney released the surveillance video that shows the arrest with the 911 call playing as it unfolds. While watching the surveillance video I was shocked to see the treatment White was receiving for a traffic stop and the way the metro police officer handled the situation. Before this incident White had no criminal record, but the police officer treated her
On June 2, 1985, Officer Daniel Wright, of the San Francisco Police Department, was dispatched to a lumberyard where a shoplifting had just occurred. Upon arrival, a store employee informed the officer that an Asian man had concealed a bench vice in his jacket and was seen placing it in the trunk of a 1980 Honda Prelude., and when the employee attempted to question the man he quickly fled on foot. Officer Wright looked into the vehicle and discovered a bag that contained a silenced handgun. At this point a bearded man approached the officer with a sales receipt claiming that he had paid for the vice his friend had taken. Officer Wright questioned the bearded man after discovering that he had someone else's drivers' license and the vehicle
In the summer of 1994 an Illinois woman’s buzzer rang at her apartment complex in Waukegan. She went downstairs to check after nobody went upstairs to her apartment. As soon as she reached the door downstairs, two men forced her into a dark colored sedan, kidnapped her, and raped her. Distraught after her attack, the victim wandered until she ultimately found a Seven Eleven close by and the police were called. When the police arrived, the victim said she was attacked by two Hispanic men that looked to be in their mid-twenties and a bit taller than her height of five feet and seven inches. The car that she was forced into was described as dark colored, older, having four doors and tinted windows. The victim’s boyfriend saw Angel Gonzalez’s car in the apartment complex parking lot and it matched the characteristics that the woman used to describe the assailant’s car. Police later stopped Gonzalez’s car and the victim acknowledged that the car was the one she described. She was then asked if Gonzalez was one of her attackers, and she was certain that he was, despite her being in the backseat of the police car while he was in front of it. Not only was he not close enough for her to get a clear view, but he also had facial hair and a birthmark, both characteristics that she did not use to describe her attackers. This led to Gonzalez being in police custody for interrogation where they did not allow him to sleep. When he was interrogated, he
In this case when law enforcement observed a vehicle with a Liberty University parking sticker, the officer stopped him for reasonable suspicion. At this point the officer, asked for the driver to produce a driver’s license which identified the driver as John Smith. The officer further observed that the young man’s attire matched that of the person of interest.
In spring of 2011, the man wrote a letter to the Virginia Law Weekly, claiming he was stopped and harassed by 2 police officers. The police officers told him that he fit the description of a man they were searching for so they searched him and put their hands on him. Days later the man was investigated and said the two officers who investigated him were present when he was interrogated by the FBI. He claimed 51 percent of the 63 people police reported they killed in Virginia from 2000 to 2013 were white, 49 percent of the fatalities were black,that the FBI pressured him to recant his story of being harassed and racially profiled. In yet another article by Mike Riggs, states that a woman was shot and killed in a church parking lot. According to the officer when he went to take her licence she rolled his arm in the window and drove off, dragging the officer, forcing him to shoot her. A carpenter who saw the whole thing started “what the police said was a lie.” He said “ the cop was right next to the vehicle of the women and had one hand on the door handle and the other on his weapon. “The woman then rolled
CI-20 is credible in that his statement regarding the crime of John Brown tossing a homemade dynamite under a passing pickup truck from the summer of 1995. To verify his statement, Lt. Nenning provided a statement from Fred Green, who was one of the victims from the incident CI-20 told Detective shield. Therefore, veracity and basis of knowledge can be attributed to CI-20’s statement of observation. Therefore, CI-20 can be deemed truthful and reliable for providing his observation that was corroborated by Deputy Hughes’ investigation and report with Fred Green. The degree of specificity of CI-20’s observation and claims is also accurate in that time at which the crime occurred, and the similarities are identical to those that Fred Green stated as well. CI-20 also voluntarily gave information that he is personally acquainted with John Brown, that he was present during the incident
On August 9th, Officer Wilson was on seemingly routine patrol in his Chevrolet Tahoe. While traveling on Canfield Drive, Officer Wilson observed Michael Brown and his friend, Dorian Johnson, walking down the middle of the roadway. Due to the fact that Brown and Johnson were impeding traffic and forcing vehicles
On October 31, 1963 officer Martin McFadden, dressed in plain clothes on patrol, observed three men acting walking back and forth in front of a jewelry store. With over 35 years of police experience under his belt, he was suspicious that the men were about to rob the store. The men walked back and forth in front of the store 24 times. As the men walked back and forth, they would stop and look in the same store window of the store. They would then group together and talk quickly. After this conference, a different man of the group would walk the same route in front of the store and look into the same window. Acting on this suspicion, he got out of the car and approached the men. He asked them their names and when all the men did was mumble, McFadden grew even more suspicious. Fearing for his own safety, McFadden patted down the outer clothing of the three men: Richard Chilton, John W. Terry, and Katz. This search revealed that two of the three men were armed; Chilton had a revolver and Terry had a pistol. Terry, Chilton, and Katz were all brought to the police station where Terry and Chilton were charged with carrying concealed weapons. Katz was not arrested because he didn’t have a weapon on his person.
While my partner and I were on foot patrol, checking all local business to insure they were locked and secure, we noticed an office had been destroyed. Once we noticed the office building, we looked around and saw a suspicious vehicle parked not far from the office building. We proceeded to approach the vehicle. Once we got to the vehicle we noticed there was a man inside. I tapped on the driver’s window and asked for identification. The smell of alcohol consumed car and breath. The suspect was identified as Charlie. Not long after the suspect was identified, he was arrested and brought down to the station where he was read his miranda rights and officers began to question him.