Pubdate: Tue, 20 Oct 1998
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/
Copyright: 1998 Houston Chronicle
Author: STEVE BREWER

PANEL CLEARS SIX FROM HPD OF HOMICIDE

1 cop indicted on trespass

One of six Houston police officers under investigation in the death of Pedro
Oregon Navarro was indicted Monday on a misdemeanor criminal trespass
charge, while the others were no-billed on all charges.

The indictment of James R. Willis, 28, who has been an officer since
December 1992, ended the Harris County grand jury's extensive eight-week
investigation into the July 12 shooting.

Oregon, 22, died in a hail of bullets fired by officers following up on a
tip from an informant that drugs were being sold in the southwest Houston
home.

Willis' attorney, Brian Benken, said he wasn't sure why only one officer was
indicted and not the others, but that his client will post bail and await
his day in court.

He said he was relieved the officers were cleared of more serious charges
and praised the grand jury.

But the jury's decision was quickly characterized as "disgusting" by
attorneys for Oregon's family, who vowed to proceed with their planned civil
suit and demand a federal civil rights investigation.

Mayor Lee Brown said he will ask Attorney General Janet Reno to investigate
whether Oregon's civil rights were violated. Mayoral spokesman Don Payne
said Brown would formally submit that request today..

Prosecutor Ed Porter said the jury, which has been investigating the case
since late August, has seen all the evidence and was given several possible
options, from no-bill, to lesser offenses to murder.

Prosecutors finished addressing jurors about noon Monday and the panel
reached a decision after a little more than three hours of secret
deliberations.

The man who gave police the tip on July 12 was not a registered confidential
informant and he was not handled by narcotics officers. The officers who
entered the apartment where Oregon lived were in a gang task force in HPD's
Southwest Patrol Division and had no search or arrest warrants.

The officers have contended that Oregon pointed a gun at them. Police
officials have said one officer fired his weapon, hitting another officer in
his bullet-resistant vest and knocking him to the floor. The officers
apparently thought that shot came from Oregon, and they opened fire.

They fired about 30 rounds, 12 of which hit Oregon. Nine struck him in the
back, one in the back of the head, one in back of the shoulder and one in
the back of the hand.

No drugs were found in the apartment and Oregon had not fired at police,
though his gun was found nearby. Oregon also had no drugs or alcohol in his
system and had no criminal record.

The job status of the officers involved was still unclear late Monday.

Besides Willis, the officers involved are David R. Barrera, 28, a five-year
veteran; Lamont E. Tillery, 30, a two-year officer; Pete A. Herrada, 28, a
three-year officer; David Perkins, 30, a four-year officer; and Sgt. Darrell
H. Strouse, 34, who has been with HPD for 12 years.

Strouse has undergone grand jury scrutiny before. In 1992, he was no-billed
by a San Jacinto County grand jury looking into an icehouse brawl involving
him and two other off-duty Houston police officers and their civilian
friends. All three officers were no-billed.

"The department is not in a position to say anything about the grand jury's
decision yet," HPD spokesman Robert Hurst said of the Oregon case. "The six
officers will remain relieved of duty with pay pending the outcome of the
department's internal affairs investigation."

Porter said grand jurors heard from about 25 witnesses, including the
officers, with connections to all facets of the case. Prosecutors said
attorneys for Oregon's family and the officers were also invited to suggest
potential witnesses to grand jurors, a common practice.

"We've done an extensive investigation," said Porter, who presented the
evidence to the panel. "This has been the longest presentation I've ever
been involved in and quite frankly, as I recall, the longest presentation
that anyone can remember around here. We have taken our time. We have
questioned the witnesses thoroughly to try and make sure all the facts were
before this grand jury."

Porter said the investigation basically concerned two areas -- the entry
into Oregon's home and the shooting.

Grand jurors chose not to indict on any charges connected with the shooting,
clearing the officers of any murder charges, Porter said. They also chose to
no-bill five of the officers on any charges connected to the entry.

But Porter or Benken would not speculate on why Willis was charged for the
entry. They would not say if Willis was the officer who handled the
informant or if he was the first person to go into Oregon's home.

That one indictment was insufficient for attorneys representing Oregon's
family, who said they will file a federal lawsuit within 30 days.

Richard Mithoff said, "I am struck by the tragic ironies, considering a few
weeks ago a Hispanic killed a cop and was almost immediately indicted for
murder and here we have six cops killing a Hispanic and two months later
it's a trespass?"

Nugent added, "I'm not surprised, but I'm disgusted."

He said when the federal lawsuit is filed he will be allowed to question the
officers aggressively, which he could not do during the grand jury
proceedings.

"I can't understand the logic, where only one officer is indicted," Nugent
said. "When we file, we will vigorously cross-examine, investigate and
question these officers on why they repeatedly shot a man who was on the
floor of his apartment."

Nugent said he's sure the Justice Department will show interest in Monday's
decision because it was motivated by some kind of "double standard" for
police officers.

"If this had happened in the suburbs, where police broke into a house and
killed the owner, there would be an outcry," Nugent said.

Porter and Harris County District Attorney John B. Holmes Jr. defended the
panel's work and said the decision came down to the facts and the law.

"The bottom line is that nobody knows better what the facts are in the case
than those 12 (grand jurors)," Holmes said.

Benken, attorney for Willis and the other officers, said the six have been
portrayed unfairly in the media as "rogue and renegade cops."

Porter said any perception that evidence was kept from the panel to protect
the officers or that there was a double standard are unfounded.

Holmes said while the officers should clearly have obtained a warrant and
exercised better judgment with the informant, state law says that no one can
use force to protect themselves from an arrest or search by the police --
even if it is illegal.

Holmes and Porter said the legal system provides non-violent remedies for
such situations.

The law allows an officer -- or any person -- to use deadly force if he
perceives a reasonable threat to his life, Holmes said. In this case,
prosecutors say the officers felt there was such a threat.

The charge against Willis is a Class A misdemeanor and if convicted he could
receive up to a year in the county jail and a $4,000 fine. The case has not
been assigned to a court yet.

Chronicle reporters Julie Mason, Jo Ann Zuniga and S.K. Bardwell contributed
to this story.

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Checked-by: Don Beck