Federal Court Dismisses Lawsuit Against Cops Accused Of Stealing $225K

Federal Court Dismisses Lawsuit Against Cops Accused Of Stealing $225K

A federal appellate court on dismissed a lawsuit claiming that 3 police officers alleged to have stolen more than $225,000 in property from two California men, reasoning that the officers did not violate the men’s Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure.

Plaintiffs (Micah Jessop and Brittan Ashjian) claimed that in 2013, three Fresno California police officers executing search warrants at their business and homes seized approximately $150,000 in cash and $125,000 in rare coins. When the two went to the police department the next day, however, only $50,000 had been placed into evidence, which police said was the entire haul submitted in relation to the investigation.

Both Jessop and Ashjian were never charged with any crime stemming from the investigation, filed a lawsuit against the three officers, claiming the theft constituted a violation of their Fourth Amendment right to be protected against unreasonable government seizure.

The officers responded by filing for summary judgment, arguing that as government officials, they were entitled to “qualified immunity.”

Under the doctrine of qualified immunity, government officials are shielded from civil liability for any conduct that does not violate a person’s “clearly established” constitutional rights.

-WTF-?

 

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In an eyebrow-raising opinion, Circuit Judge Milan D. Smith wrote that because the officers had a warrant to justify the initial seizure of the property, and no prior case addressed those specific circumstances, it was not clearly established whether the subsequent theft of that property violated the Fourth Amendment.

“The lack of ‘any cases of controlling authority’ or a ‘consensus of cases of persuasive authority’ on the constitutional question compels the conclusion that the law was not clearly established at the time of the incident.

Although the City Officers ought to have recognized that the alleged theft of Appellants’ money and rare coins was morally wrong, they did not have clear notice that it violated the Fourth Amendment,” Smith reasoned.

WTF…?!?!

“We recognize that the allegation of any theft by police officers—most certainly the theft of over $225,000—is deeply disturbing. Whether that conduct violates the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures, however, would not ‘be clear to a reasonable officer,’” Smith concluded.

How about simple robbery charges???

One of the officers alleged to have committed the 2013 theft, Derik Kumagai, was federally indicted in 2014 for accepting a $20,000 bribe from a suspected drug trafficker. He pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit bribery and in May was sentenced to two years in federal prison.

Jessop and Ashjian have appealed the decision and petitioned for their case to be heard in front of the entire Ninth Circuit.

Federal Court Rules State Judges Cannot Profit From Fines and Fees.

Federal Court Rules State Judges Cannot Profit From Fines and Fees.

 If the court that hears a case could profit from the fines imposed upon and paid by defendants, that’s a violation of the Due Process Clause of the Constitution.

The rulings have capable implications for similar conflicts of interest in the criminal criminal justice system.

In two rulings recently issued the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that criminal court judges in New Orleans, Louisiana have an unconstitutional conflict of interest, because the money collected from fees and fines imposed on defendants goes to subsidize their courts’ operations.

Nick Sibilla of the Institute for Justice summarizes  the two cases in an article for Forbes:

Despite Congress abolishing debtors’ prisons in 1833, and the U.S. Supreme Court declaring them unconstitutional 150 years later, today, thousands of Americans are locked up for failing to pay their debts to the state. But in a one-two punch against modern-day debtor’s prisons, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals issued two unanimous decisions that declared that criminal court judges in New Orleans have an unconstitutional conflict of interest in collecting fines and fees. 

Due to their “institutional interest” in generating court revenue (a “substantial portion” of their budget), the judges of the Orleans Parish Criminal District Court “failed to provide a neutral forum,” which in turn violated the constitutional right to due process.

 

The first case, Cain v. White, centered around half a dozen criminal defendants who pled guilty and subsequently faced fines and fees ranging from $148 to $901.50. When they couldn’t pay up, OPCDC authorized warrants for their arrest, threw them in jail, and set their bond at $20,000….

 

Distressingly, some of the fines and fees were deposited into a “Judicial Expense Fund,” which the Orleans Parish judges have “exclusive authority” over. One quarter of the Fund’s revenue—around $1 million—comes directly from the fines and fees the court collects.

 

Though judges can’t use the Fund to pad their own salaries, they can use it to pay the salaries and benefits of court personnel, as well as a wide array of miscellaneous expenses, including conferences, coffee, drug testing, and pest control.

In a similar vein, the second decision, Caliste v. Cantrell, involved a Louisiana law that sent 1.8% of a commercial bail bond’s value towards the same Fund.

 

As the Fifth Circuit noted, “The bond fees are a major funding source for the Judicial Expense Fund, contributing between 20–25% of the amount spent in recent years.”

Judge Gregg Costa’s opinion in Caliste summarizes the legal issue involved:

“No man can be judge in his own case.” Edward Coke, INSTITUTES OF THE LAWS OF ENGLAND, § 212, 141 (1628). That centuries-old maxim comes from Lord Coke’s ruling that a judge could not be paid with the fines he imposed. Dr. Bonham’s Case, 8 Co. Rep. 107a, 118a, 77 Eng. Rep. 638, 652 (C.P. 1610). Almost a century ago, the Supreme Court recognized that principle as part of the due process requirement of an impartial tribunal. Tumey v. Ohio, 273 U.S. 510, 523 (1927).

 

This case does not involve a judge who receives money based on the decisions he makes. But the magistrate in the Orleans Parish Criminal District Court receives something almost as important: funding for various judicial expenses, most notably money to help pay for court reporters, judicial secretaries, and law clerks. What does this court funding depend on? The bail decisions the magistrate makes that determine whether a defendant obtains pretrial release. When a defendant has to buy a commercial surety bond, a portion of the bond’s value goes to a fund for judges’ expenses. So the more often the magistrate requires a secured money bond as a condition of release, the more money the court has to cover expenses. And the magistrate is a member of the committee that allocates those funds….

 

“Every procedure which would offer a possible temptation to the average man as a judge to forget the burden of proof required to convict the defendant… denies the latter due process of law.” [Tumey, 273 U.S.] at 532…..

 

Judge Cantrell has a direct and personal interest in the fiscal health of the public institution that benefits from the fees his court generates and that he also helps allocate….

 

His dual role—the sole source of essential court funds and an appropriator of them—creates a direct, personal, and substantial interest in the outcome of decisions that would make the average judge vulnerable to the “temptation . . . not to hold the balance nice, clear, and true.” Tumey, 273 U.S. at 532. The current arrangement pushes beyond what due process allows.

Read the Rest Here at Reason and Forbes

Federal Court Dismisses Lawsuit Against Cops Accused Of Stealing $225K

Thetford Township police chief arrested amid military equipment investigation

THETFORD TOWNSHIP (WJRT) – Thetford Township Police Chief Robert Kenny was arrested this week in connection with an investigation into surplus military equipment his department received.

Genesee County Sheriff Robert Pickell scheduled a press conference for Thursday morning to discuss “the arrest and charges” Kenny is facing.

Court records show Kenny is charged with embezzlement and obstruction of justice dating back to 2012.

The sheriff’s office has been investigating Thetford Township’s use of more than $1 million worth of surplus military equipment obtained through the Law Enforcement Supports Office over the past decade.

Kenny obtained the equipment, including a large forklift down to several used sleeping bags, on behalf of the township’s two-person police department.

Thetford Township Supervisor Gary Stevens has challenged Kenny for months to account for the whereabouts of the equipment. Much of it had been stored on private property inside and outside the township.

Earlier this year, a resident dropped off a large forklift and other equipment at the township hall after storing it on his land for years. The forklift then ended up in Stevens’ driveway a few weeks later, leading to a $1,300 towing bill to remove it.

Kenny also turned in an envelope this spring containing nearly $5,000, which he told officials was the proceeds from selling some of the equipment for scrap metal.

In April, the sheriff’s office raided the Thetford Township offices and seized several boxes of evidence.

The Thetford Township Board had planned to seek a public vote in November on whether residents wanted to continue the police department, but those plans were nixed when board members learned it was too late to get a question on the ballot.

Report From ABC12 News Team (8/22/2018)


Thetford Township has to return its military surplus after police chief arrest

  9/11/18

Thetford Township will have to return its federal military surplus – if it can locate it – to the government, if there are no other police departments that want it.

That’s after Thetford Township police chief Robert Kenny was arrested for allegedly embezzling from the program.  

Kenny acquired a large amount of federal military surplus since 2012 – nearly 4,000 items, with a retail value of $2.7 million. 

He was arrested in late August for allegedly pocketing the proceeds from selling some of it. 

Larry Goerge is the state coordinator for the surplus program. He says today, it’s unlikely Kenny would have been able to get so much.

“There’s been a lot of changes in the program since he was originally participating,” says Goerge.  “We’ve covered a lot of those little loopholes that departments would have in the past.”

Kenny faces up to five years in prison for the embezzlement. He was also charged with obstruction of justice after he staged a fake “discovery” of missing money.

Yet another problem came to light after Kenny’s arrest.  The police department wasn’t paying back a loan on a truck it purchased. The loan came from the township’s sewerage department.  

Township supervisor Gary Stevens says he may have to reduce the hours of one of the police department’s two remaining employees, in order to fix the budgets for the police department and the sewerage department.

There are some other consequences from Kenny’s arrest. A day after the arrest, the township’s clerk, a Kenny supporter, resigned.   

There may have to be a special election to replace her, because township trustees who supported Kenny wanted to hire one person and trustees who were instrumental in exposing Kenny’s alleged crimes wanted another.


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