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Showing posts with label Atlanta police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlanta police. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Lawmaker proposes giving cops foreclosed homes

The typical mortgage is 30 years. But walk a beat in Atlanta, and that house could be yours in half that time — and for just a little money down.

As a solution to metro Atlanta’s foreclosure crisis, a lawmaker plans to propose giving foreclosed, abandoned homes to county police officers, who usually can’t afford to live in the neighborhoods they’re sworn to protect.

Of course, the deal would come with a catch: officers must agree to serve 15 years on the force before they get the property deed. And the board of commissioners would have to persuade lenders holding the liens to give several shuttered homes to the county in exchange for tax breaks.

“I thought somebody should be in these homes,” said Fulton County Commissioner Robb Pitts, who plans to introduce the idea to the board. “Here’s a way to help a group of people who put their lives on the line for us on a daily basis at a relatively minor cost.”
Cities across the country are trying to find solutions to filling up houses abandoned by people who couldn’t afford their mortgages. Several are using federal money to buy foreclosed properties and sell them at cut-rate prices or interest rates. Georgia has consistently been in the top 10 in foreclosed properties, with the nation’s sixth highest foreclosure rate in November, according to RealtyTrac, a Web site that tracks foreclosures.

Pitts said he thought of the plan after looking at all the empty homes in his southwest Atlanta neighborhood. The national foreclosure epidemic presents a bittersweet opportunity, he said.
“I think we have a short window because this probably won’t be the situation four or five years from now. If we can take advantage of it now, I think we’ll have a receptive audience,” he said.
For their part, officers would have to come up with $2,500 down payment and be responsible for all taxes, insurance, utilities and maintenance. Pitts said he plans to meet as soon as next week with several “major lenders,” whom he declined to name, to discuss his plan.
“Here’s an opportunity for them to have some goodwill coming from the community in which they do business by helping with public safety,” Pitts said. “If we could get 200 (homes), that would be a good start.”
Some say the idea is a creative and original solution to a crisis.
“I’d think lenders would be very interested in stabilizing neighborhoods in which they have mortgages on other properties,” said Bruce Seaman, an economics professor at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.
Programs that subsidize housing for public servants are being tried in other places. Grand Prairie, Texas, is offering foreclosed properties the city acquired with federal bailout money to government or district school employees, with the city helping with the down payment and closing costs.

The “Ohio Heroes” program offers a 30-year fixed mortgage at a reduced interest rate to first-time homebuyers in that state to military, firefighters, paramedics, police and teachers.

But free homes in exchange for years of public service seems to be a new idea.

And while it sounds like it would require financial institutions to be philanthropic, that is hardly the case, Seaman said.
“How many properties can it be?” Seaman said. “The departments aren’t huge. Lending agencies being asked to participate will find this, upon reflection, a very wise move on their part.”
The Fulton County Police Department has 130 officers, 18 fewer than its target number of 148. The starting salary is $32,646 for high school graduates, and $38,000 for officers with a bachelor’s degree, so finding houses they can afford in the city is tough.

Department spokesman Lt. Darryl Halbert said the agency is excited about the proposal.
“The officers are able to obtain a home for very little down, the community gets a police officer and the department can use this as a recruiting tool,” he said.
If it’s successful, firefighters or others could later be added.
“We can’t be everything to everybody in the beginning,” Pitts said.
Moving police into the neighborhood could help reduce crime and attract buyers to other abandoned homes, Seaman said.

Pitts also still must get the idea past the commission. Chairman John Eaves declined to comment on the issue through his spokesman, Darryl Hicks, who said there is not yet a proposal to consider.

Samuel F. Daniel said he would feel much safer in his northwest Atlanta home with an officer in the neighborhood, where many homes sit dark and are havens for drugs, prostitution, burglary and other crimes.
“I would like for one to move next door to me,” said the 85-year-old veteran. “That way, he’d see a lot of things I see and can’t do nothing about. The crime would probably go further down the street somewhere.”
(AP)

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Atlanta drug raid cop convicted

Another Atlanta police officer has been convicted for his connection to a botched drug raid in which a 92-year-old woman was killed in November 2006. Arthur Tesler on Tuesday in an Atlanta courtroom was convicted on one of three charges against him--the charge of making false statements to investigators. Tesler was acquitted of the other two charges. Tesler faces up to five years in prison. Two other police officers had pleaded guilty for charges against them in this case.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Closing arguments in case against former officer

Closing arguments began today in the trial of a former Atlanta narcotics officer who took part in a botched drug raid that led to the death of a 92-year-old woman. Arthur Tesler's trial is likely the only one that will be held in the November 21st, 2006, killing of Kathryn Johnston. She died in a hail of 39 bullets as plainclothes narcotics officers busted down her door using a "no-knock" warrant. The two other officers charged in the shooting have pleaded guilty to state manslaughter and federal civil rights charges.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Former officer testifies "couldn't take it anymore"

A former Atlanta police officer says he helped cover up a botched drug raid under pressure from fellow officers. Arthur Tesler testified today he was told to memorize a story to cover up events of November 2006 that led to police raiding the home of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston and shooting her to death. Tesler says the story was that he witnessed an informant buying drugs at Johnston's home. But during often tearful testimony, Tesler said he eventually decided to cooperate with federal investigators because he "couldn't take it anymore."

Monday, March 24, 2008

Police officer pleads guilty

An Atlanta police officer has pleaded guilty to breaking into and searching a person's apartment without a warrant. The case against 41-year-old Wilbert Stallings grew out of the investigation of a fatal police shooting of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston in November 2006. Two police officers previously pleaded guilty in Johnston's death. Those officers have been assisting the government prosecute other officers for crimes unrelated to the shooting.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Former police officers to head to prison

Today a federal judge revoked bond for two former Atlanta police officers and ordered them to prison. Gregg Junnier and Jason R. Smith must turn themselves in no later than December 3rd. Junnier and Smith pleaded guilty to lying about last November’s police shooting of Kathryn Johnston. The former officers are cooperating with the federal investigation into Mrs. Johnston’s death.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Rochelle woman asks cops to check her cocaine

ROCHELLE, Ga. — A woman was arrested after she called police to help "get her money back" after she was unhappy with the crack cocaine she purchased.

Juanita Marie Jones, 53, called Rochelle Police late Thursday night after she purchased what she thought was a $20 piece of crack cocaine, according to police reports.

She told officers she broke the rock into three pieces and smoked one, only to discover the drugs were "fake."

She took Officer Joel Quinn and Deputy John Shedd of the Wilcox County Sheriff's Office into her kitchen and showed them the drugs, police said.

She was promptly arrested on charges of possession of cocaine.

In a related story, 25 people have been indicted in a statewide pot-growing operation. Click here and here for more.

(Associated Press)

Monday, June 18, 2007

Atlanta police seek NFL star

Police are seeking troubled NFL star Adam “Pacman” Jones in connection with a shooting early Monday outside an Atlanta strip club.

Atlanta police say the Tennessee Titans cornerback had argued with a group of men over a woman. The men left the club in a Toyota Sequoia. Police believe members of Jones’ entourage followed them in two cars, and opened fire. One person was injured.

Jones had left the scene, however, before things got violent. Police only want to question him as a witness.

The NFL has suspended Jones for a year following an earlier shooting at a Las Vegas strip club. Jones, 23, has been arrested five times. He attended Westlake High School in Atlanta.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Muscogee County drug bust nets suspected dealers, dope and guns

State and Muscogee County law enforcement officials arrested some 60 suspected drug dealers in an ongoing sting operation on Tuesday and Wednesday. Law enforcement officials from numerous local and state agencies took part in the sweeps, which netted 59 arrests on the street in the last two days. Another 17 suspects were already in jail on other charges.

Officials seized thousands of dollars in drugs and weapons, and expect to make further arrests soon.

Muscogee County Sheriff Major Joe McCrea is calling the roundup the largest in the last 15 to 20 years, adding that warrants were issued for 120 suspects:

"The GBI has been here in Columbus for approximately the last ten months, with an undercover group of officers that have been making purchases from various areas throughout the city... The charges primarily deal with the selling of narcotics, be it marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, and other associated, drug-related charges.”

The suspects are scheduled to appear in court on Friday and Saturday.

Friday, May 4, 2007

Atlanta police officers raised concerns before shooting

Some of the Atlanta police officers involved in last November’s fatal shootout with an elderly woman had raised concerns about such raids two months earlier. The Atlanta-Journal Constitution reports that when officers raided 80-year-old Frances Thompson’s home in September, she confronted them with a toy gun because she thought she was being robbed. Police later determined that the people coming and going from Thompson’s apartment were not buying drugs … they were church members visiting because Thompson’s son had just died. Soonthereafter several narcotics officers scheduled a meeting with their boss to voice their concerns. Two months later, plainclothes officers raided 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston’s home, killing her when she opened fire on them.

GPB News Team: