Pubdate: Wed, 7 Oct 2009
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Page: Front Page, continued on page A10
Copyright: 2009 Los Angeles Times
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/bc7El3Yo
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Authors: Jack Leonard and Joel Rubin
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rampart.htm (L.A. Rampart Scandal)

LAPD OFFICERS CHARGED WITH LYING UNDER OATH

Three Face Criminal Counts of Perjury After a Video Contradicts Their 
Testimony in a Drug-Possession Case.

Three Los Angeles police officers were charged with perjury and 
conspiracy Tuesday for allegedly lying under oath in a 
drug-possession case that was dismissed last year when a videotape 
sharply contradicted their testimony.

The felony charges mark the most serious allegations of police 
perjury in Los Angeles since the Los Angeles Police Department's 
Rampart scandal about a decade ago.

Prosecutors allege in court documents that two officers falsely 
testified during the trial that they saw a suspect throw an object 
that split open to reveal crack and powder cocaine. They said they 
immediately recovered the drugs. A third officer is accused of 
falsely claiming in an earlier court hearing that he did not help his 
two colleagues search for the drugs.

The drug trial ended dramatically when a defense attorney produced 
grainy surveillance video of the area shortly after the arrest took 
place. The quality of the tape, a copy of which was obtained by The 
Times, is poor but shows a group of officers searching for more than 
20 minutes before one announces that drugs have been found.

It is difficult to hear what is being said, but at one point an 
officer seems to make a reference to the arrest report that needed to 
be filled out.

"Be creative in your writing," the officer appears to tell another 
after the drugs are found.

"Oh yeah, don't worry, sin duda [no doubt]," is the reply.

After viewing the video, a judge took the unusual step of declaring 
the defendant to be "factually innocent."

"This is very, very disturbing," said John Mack, president of the 
L.A. Police Commission, the civilian panel that oversees the 
department. "We expect LAPD officers to possess the highest integrity 
and certainly we expect them to be truthful. This is frankly a black mark."

Chief William J. Bratton called the allegations "as serious a charge 
as you can levy against officers," but said he was confident that it 
was an isolated incident.

He and Mack said sweeping reforms in the wake of the department's 
Rampart scandal, in which dozens of officers were accused of serious 
misconduct, including perjury and evidence-tampering, had made it 
much more difficult for officers to engage in such behavior.

"This is not something that we sweep under the rug," Bratton said. 
"When we find it, we deal with it."

Attorneys for the accused officers said their clients would fight the 
charges and noted that portions of the video appear to have been 
edited. The footage, which comes from an apartment complex managed by 
the suspect's mother, also begins after his arrest.

"Once again, Los Angeles is going to be subjected to the sad 
spectacle of officers unfairly charged because the video camera goes 
on either too early, too late or is edited," said attorney Ira 
Salzman, who represents one of the officers. "We don't know how it 
was edited. And if the video was turned on earlier, it would have 
presented a completely different view of the case."

The drug charges rested almost entirely on the word of the police officers.

Officers Richard Amio and Evan Samuel testified that they were on 
patrol in East Hollywood on July 6, 2007, when they recognized 
Guillermo Alarcon, a suspected gang member, standing on the sidewalk 
outside his apartment.

As they shined their car's spotlight at him, they said, Alarcon fled 
down a walkway. The officers chased him into the apartment building's 
carport. There, they testified, they saw Alarcon throw a black box -- 
which turned out to be a key holder -- toward a trash bin.

"As it hit the Dumpster, I observed that once it landed on the floor 
it cracked open," Amio told jurors.

During his testimony, Amio was asked whether it took about 20 minutes 
to find the drugs. "No," he replied, with a laugh. Samuel gave a 
similar account.

The officers said Samuel picked up the box. Inside, they said, he 
found 12 bindles of powder cocaine and two rocks of crack cocaine, a 
total street value of about $260.

Under cross-examination, Samuel and Amio denied that the key holder 
had been found by Officer Manuel Ortiz and that it had to be pried 
open. The questioning climaxed when Alarcon's attorney asked Amio: 
"Are you aware of a video and audio recording that completely 
contradicts what you have testified to today?"

"No, sir," Amio replied.

The video starts shortly after Alarcon was detained in the carport. 
Officers had seen Alarcon close the door to a nearby laundry room. 
The video shows the officers spending roughly 15 minutes looking for 
someone to unlock the door to the room.

The video does not show who found the drugs. But more than five 
minutes after the door is opened, it shows a group of officers 
huddled together talking about trying to open a container. An officer 
appears to say, "Manny found that."

After viewing the tape, prosecutors said they believed about 13 
seconds of audio had been edited out. Nevertheless, they asked a 
judge to dismiss the charges against Alarcon.

Allegations of police officers testifying falsely are hardly unusual 
in criminal cases, but perjury charges against officers are rare. 
Prosecutors and others note that defense attorneys and defendants 
have a vested interest in portraying police as untruthful.

To file a criminal case, prosecutors must believe that someone 
intentionally lied rather than simply made a mistake and that any lie 
could have affected the outcome of a case.

"Perjury charges are rare against anyone, and rare against police 
officers," said Sergio Gonzalez, the L.A. County deputy district 
attorney who oversees the unit that prosecutes police officers.

Gonzalez could recall only one case in recent years in which an 
on-duty police officer was charged with lying in court. Alarcon's 
defense attorney, Deputy Public Defender Victor Acevedo, said he was 
gratified that charges were filed.

"When you have a police officer who comes to court and lies under 
oath . . . how much confidence can you have that this is somebody who 
should be wearing a badge and carrying a gun?" Acevedo said.

All three officers were charged with conspiracy. Ortiz, a nine-year 
veteran, also faces one count of perjury. Amio, who joined the 
department in 2002, is charged with two counts of perjury. Both are 
on administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal affairs 
investigation.

Samuel, who joined the LAPD in 2002 and left for the Chino Police 
Department in 2008, faces four counts of perjury. He was fired while 
on probation in Chino two weeks after The Times reported on Alarcon's case.

The FBI also launched an investigation into the allegations last year. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake