Pubdate: Wed, 01 Nov 2000
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Authors: Fredrick Kunkle and Petula Dvorak, Washington Post Staff Writers
Note: Staff writers Maureen O'Hagen, Allan Lengel, Phuong Ly, Ian Shapira 
and Manuel Roig-Franzia and Metro researcher Bobbye Pratt contributed to 
this report.

MD. MAN SOUGHT IN SLAYING OF TROOPER

A drug dealer who had pocketed $3,000 from an undercover narcotics 
detective fatally shot the officer when a sting operation went afoul Monday 
night on a street in Northeast Washington, police said.

Maryland State Trooper Edward M. Toatley, posing as a drug buyer, had given 
the money to the dealer and was waiting for him to return with drugs. 
Instead, the man came back with a gun, yanking open the door of Toatley's 
vehicle and shooting him in the right side of his head, police said.

The drug deal was intended to culminate a three-month investigation by a 
joint task force of the FBI, Maryland State Police and Prince George's 
County police. A backup team of federal agents was watching from a van 
parked down the street, using video cameras and microphones to record the 
transaction.

Police said the dealer, whom they identified as Kofi Apea Orleans-Lindsay, 
23, a native of Ghana, decided to rob Toatley rather than sell him drugs.

Orleans-Lindsay escaped on foot and was the subject of an extensive police 
search.

"We feel that there's a possibility that he's still in the area," D.C. 
Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey said last night, as scores of law 
enforcement officers canvassed the neighborhood where the shooting 
occurred, about a mile from the District-Prince George's County boundary.

About a dozen additional phone lines were installed at a command center 
established at the 5th Police District headquarters on Bladensburg Road NE 
to receive "scores and scores" of tips, said Executive Assistant Chief 
Terrance W. Gainer. Numerous sightings of the suspect also were 
reported--some as far away as New York--but none panned out, Gainer said.

Toatley, 37, a 16-year officer and father of three, died at Washington 
Hospital Center about 2 1/2 hours after the shooting, which happened about 
8:40 p.m. Monday.

Col. David B. Mitchell, head of the state police, said it did not appear 
that the gunman knew Toatley was a police officer.

"Things happened last night that show [the suspect] did not know Ed's 
identity as a trooper," Mitchell said.

The shooting occurred as the joint task force was closing in on a 
Maryland-based drug ring whose dealers drive into the District to buy 
narcotics, police said.

Toatley and Orleans-Lindsay apparently arrived for a prearranged meeting at 
Fourth and Aspen streets about 8 p.m. Monday, police said. Orleans-Lindsay 
locked his silver Mercedes-Benz and got into a SUV driven by Toatley. 
Orleans-Lindsay directed Toatley to where the drug deal was to be 
completed, evidently unaware that they were being trailed by the 
surveillance team.

They stopped at Queens Chapel Road and Douglas Street, where the backup 
team listened from a block away as the details of the drug buy were 
finalized. A video camera recorded Orleans-Lindsay leaving the vehicle, 
ostensibly to get the drugs. There was no indication that anything had gone 
wrong, according to Assistant D.C. Police Chief William McManus.

After the shooting, the surveillance team immediately leapt from the van, 
but Orleans-Lindsay ran off, ducking into about an acre of thick woods.

Mitchell said that the drug buy had been well planned and that Toatley was 
an officer seasoned by dozens, if not hundreds, of undercover missions.

The search quickly led to the small brick ranch house in Silver Spring 
where Orleans-Lindsay lived with his mother. As a helicopter hovered above 
yesterday, about 25 FBI agents and state troopers surrounded the house in 
what proved a fruitless search.

Neighbor John Murphy, 52, said that Orleans-Lindsay was quiet but that he 
had a "gut feeling" something was wrong, because there was a steady flow of 
late-night visitors to the house. He said the FBI and police had raided the 
house about a year ago and carried out computer equipment.

Yesterday afternoon, a woman who identified herself as Orleans-Lindsay's 
mother declined to comment.

An arrest warrant issued yesterday charged Orleans-Lindsay with 
first-degree murder while armed, a capital offense, McManus said. He said 
Orleans-Lindsay has been arrested five times in the Washington area on 
charges ranging from auto theft to narcotics trafficking. He is wanted on 
paternity warrants.

In a plea bargain in June 1999, Orleans-Lindsay was convicted of two counts 
of possession of cocaine, according to court documents. He was sentenced to 
10 years for the first charge and four years for the second charge. The 
sentence was suspended, and he was placed on three years of supervised 
probation.

Yesterday, state troopers gathered with family members at Toatley's home, a 
gray clapboard house amply festooned with Halloween decorations, in 
Halethorpe, a suburb south of Baltimore. A uniformed trooper turned away 
reporters at the door.

On Toatley's street, neighbors expressed shock at the death of a man who 
was known in the area as charming and outgoing.

"Every time he looked up, he was all smiles: 'Hey, Joe. What's up? How ya 
doin'? How are you feeling?' " said Joseph Foice, 40, a neighbor. "He asked 
me how I felt because of my heart condition. He'd say, 'Don't worry. Things 
always work out for the best.' "

State police declined to release a picture of the slain officer, fearing 
that it would endanger his undercover partners.

Gov. Parris N. Glendening (D) offered a $25,000 reward for information 
leading to the arrest and conviction of Toatley's killer. That sum is in 
addition to $10,000 offered by the state police and $1,000 by Washington 
Metro Crime Stoppers.

The shooting appeared to be the first of an officer working with the 
Baltimore-Washington Interdivisional Safe Streets Task Force, FBI officials 
said.

"We've had people shot at. We can't recollect anybody who has been 
seriously injured or killed," said Special Agent Peter Gulotta, a spokesman 
for the FBI's Baltimore field office.

Officially begun in 1992 by then-FBI Director William Sessions, Operation 
Safe Streets grew out of a effort by the FBI and District police to target 
gang- and drug-related homicides.

As of March 31, the FBI had assigned 805 special agents to Safe Streets 
units across the country. They are joined by 251 officers from other 
federal agencies, such as the Drug Enforcement Administration, and 1,096 
state and local police officers who have been deputized as federal agents.

Toatley, whose wife, Inez, is a civilian employee of the state police, was 
the father of an 18-year-old son, a 5-year-old son and an 18-month-old 
daughter. The 38th Maryland state trooper killed in the line of duty, he 
was hailed by colleagues for his professionalism and dedication.

"It doesn't take a scientist to figure out that Ed was working with the 
worst of the worst. The feds just don't deputize anyone. You have to be the 
cream of the crop," said Lt. Nick Paros, vice president of the Maryland 
State Troopers Association.

Toatley, who was president of the Coalition of Black Maryland State 
Troopers, worked with Paros in lobbying the state legislature for better 
benefits, Paros said.

Last month, Toatley helped roast Mitchell at a fundraiser for the Concerns 
of Police Survivors--a support group for the families of officers killed in 
action.

"Whoever thought two weeks ago that the organization he was roasting at 
would be helping out his family?" Paros said.

Staff writers Maureen O'Hagen, Allan Lengel, Phuong Ly, Ian Shapira and 
Manuel Roig-Franzia and Metro researcher Bobbye Pratt contributed to this 
report.
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