Pubdate: Thurs, 16 Dec 1999
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 1999 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Scott Glover And Henry Weinstein, Times Staff Writers

LAWSUIT ACCUSES 2 LAPD OFFICERS OF WRONGFUL ARREST

Courts: Man says he was held on false drug charge. Both policemen, who are
not linked to Rampart scandal, have since left the department.

Allegations that officers planted evidence spread to another Los
Angeles Police Department division Wednesday in a lawsuit accusing two
officers of falsely arresting a man. It also alleges that one of the
officers committed perjury to put the man in prison. Jimmy Lee Render,
33, filed suit in federal court over his Nov. 2, 1997, arrest. He
alleges that Officers Christopher Coppock and David Cochrane, both of
the Central Division, taunted him after he denied having drugs, put
him in a patrol car and told him that when he got to the station, "he
was going to have some drugs."

Render's drug conviction was overturned in October when the defense
accused the officers of illegal conduct and prosecutors failed to
argue against it.

Coppock and Cochrane have since left the department amid serious, but
unrelated, misconduct complaints. Coppock resigned after he was
accused of a false arrest in another case. Cochrane was fired for
making false and misleading statements during an internal LAPD
investigation. He also was facing internal allegations of planting
cocaine on another man he arrested.

Last month, the district attorney's office sent letters to defense
attorneys for people arrested by Cochrane and Coppock, notifying them
of the misconduct allegations leveled against the two officers.

The officers' complaint history was such a concern that prosecutors
also dismissed a 1998 heroin possession case against a defendant
unrelated to Render's arrest.

Render's allegations broaden the scope of the LAPD corruption probe
beyond the troubled Rampart Division and could add to the ballooning
number of criminal convictions already under review by prosecutors and
defense attorneys alike.

LAPD Cmdr. David J. Kalish said he could not discuss the details of
the case because of the pending litigation. However, he said,
"Whenever allegations of misconduct come to our attention, they are
thoroughly investigated. And when the allegations are proven to be
true, the department takes appropriate action--as with these officers."

Render's corruption case is one of the first to emerge that has no
connection to former Officer Rafael Perez, the key figure in the
ongoing investigation into police crimes and misconduct. In fact,
sources close to the LAPD's task force say Render's arrest was not
part of the probe.

According to the initial police report, Cochrane and Coppock were on
patrol in full uniform when they spotted Render sitting on the
sidewalk on the southeast corner of East 5th Street and South Crocker
Avenue, in an area known for a brisk narcotics trade.

Cochrane wrote in his report that he and his partner saw Render
holding a clear plastic bag containing what appeared to be numerous
rocks of crack cocaine. Render was staring down into the bag, sifting
through the rocks with his finger, the report states.

As the officers approached, Render looked up and appeared startled,
Cochrane wrote, adding that the suspect jumped to his feet, stuffed
the bag in his pocket and ran.

He stumbled about a block away, cutting his eye when he fell, and the
officers, who had chased him, seized a bag containing 14 pieces of
what appeared to crack cocaine and $328, the report says. Render was
arrested and charged with possession of rock cocaine for sale.

Render offers a strikingly different account. He says in court papers
that he was standing with a group of other men when Cochrane and
Coppock ordered them all against a wall. He ran when one of the
officers began to search him, because he thought he had an outstanding
warrant for drinking in public and was afraid that he would lose his
new job, he contends.

He said that he got tired about a block away and stopped running, and
that the officers caught up. Render said Coppock placed him on the
ground and Cochrane hit him three or four times on the side of his
head, causing the cut above his eye.

The officers then took him to their patrol car and made him empty his
pockets, he said, adding that they asked him what he had, an apparent
reference to drugs or weapons.

"When he replied, 'Nothing,' the officers stated that when he got to
the station he was going to have some drugs," says a writ filed by
Deputy Public Defender Dennis Plourd.

Render said he initially thought he had been arrested for evading
police. When he learned of the true charges, he told his girlfriend to
file a complaint with the LAPD's Internal Affairs division.
Nonetheless, according to court papers, he agreed to a plea bargain
Jan. 29, 1998, and was sentenced to three years in state prison.

Plourd, the defense attorney, said Render faced the choice of going to
trial and risking eight years in prison or accepting a plea bargain
and serving 1 1/2 years in prison.

Plourd said that he tried to get the district attorney's office to
dismiss Render's case but that prosecutors declined.

"I was flabbergasted," because the prosecutors had to know from the
other complaint, which was filed within days of Render's, that there
were problems with the officers, he said. The other complaint is the
one that led to Cochrane's firing and Coppock's resignation.

Despite the overturned drug conviction, Render remains in prison on
other charges. His federal lawsuit, filed by Venice attorney Stephen
Yagman, seeks unspecified damages.
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