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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query atlanta + police. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query atlanta + police. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, April 27, 2007

Two Atlanta officers plead guilty in elderly shooting case

Following a five month long joint-probe by Atlanta police and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, two of the three Atlanta police officers charged in the 2006 shooting death of an elderly black woman, have pled guilty in federal court to conspiracy charges. Investigators found the police lied when they said a confidential informant told them they could buy drugs at the house. The informant has since recanted his statement.

Former police officers Gregg Junnier and Jason Smith admitted they conspired to mislead investigators following the death of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston. The woman lived alone in one of Atlanta's high drug trafficking areas. She died after she shot at police, who had forced their way into her home.

The attorney for officer Jason Smith said his client understands what he did, and accepts responsibility.

Both officers face a minimum of 10 years in federal prison. The third officer, Arthur Tesler, remains on paid administrative leave from the Atlanta police department pending investigation.

A spokesman for the Johnston-family, Reverand Markel Hutchins, said the family was satisfied with Thursday's developments.

The Fulton County district attorney's office said its' investigation is not finished, concerning the look into corruption within Atlanta's police department.

Monday, December 24, 2007

Atlanta police find dogfighting evidence

Atlanta Police on Friday arrested a 31-year-old man at his home after officers found 15 live pit bulls and the bodies of several others.

A police spokesman says evidence, including fight charts and the remains of several dogs, show that a dogfighting operation was more extensive than they’d initially thought.

Atlanta Police spokesman Officer James Polite says that police investigators, a forensic veterinarian and an assistant district attorney searched the home of Ossia Phillips on Saturday. The veterinarian is now testing the remains to determine the number of dogs and their cause of death.

Investigators also seized several handguns and rifles, along with documents detailing the extent of the operation.

Polite says investigators are still trying to determine how long the ring was operating and how many members were involved. He says more arrests are possible.

Phillips is being held without bond at the Fulton County Jail on charges of dog fighting and animal cruelty.

The new evidence is in addition to a "contraption" found in the woods behind a home where investigators believe dogs were fought.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of dogfighting incidents statewide.

(The 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, March 15, 2007

Senate committee approves limits on "no-knock" warrants

Police say "no-knock" search warrants are a critical crime-fighting tool at times when regular search warrants do not work.
“We have served search warrants before where, as soon as they see you coming, they’re running to the bathroom to either hide evidence or destroy evidence,” says Fayetteville Police Chief Steven Heaton. “And in the case of a gang house, where you’ve got weapons at home, or potentially have weapons at home, they’re hiding weapons and they’re hiding other evidence.”
Heaton says "no-knock" warrants give police a fighting chance in those instances.
But Atlanta Senator Vincent Fort says police are using them "wily nily." He belives if a judge had not given Atlanta police a no-knock warrant, 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston might be alive today.
Johnston died in a gun battle with police in November. The police had obtained a no-knock warrant, although evidence indicates that they had no real proof of crime occuring in Johnston's home.
Fort has offered a bill stating that officers could only obtain no-knock warrants if they could show a judge probable cause that lives would be in danger, and evidence would be destroyed otherwise. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the measure by an unanimous vote. Police say the measure limits their ability to obtain no-knock warrants, but not to the point where it would hinder their work.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Sentencing Today For Officers In Atlanta Drug Raid

Three former Atlanta police officers with roles in a botched drug raid and cover-up will learn their fate when they are sentenced Monday morning in federal court.

Officers Jason Smith, Gregg Junnier and Arthur Tesler all pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to violate civil rights resulting in death. In November 2006, 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston was mistakenly killed by police gunfire during a drug raid on her house in an Atlanta neighborhood.

The following investigation uncovered corruption in the narcotics division of the Atlanta police department. It included the revelation of the officers getting a false "no knock" warrant for the Johnston home.

Federal prosecutors are recommending a sentence of around 12 years for former officer Smith, but with reduced time for cooperation. Junnier is recommended for a substantial reduction to a 10-year sentence, given his early cooperation in the case. Prosecutors expect Tesler would get 10 years in federal prison.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Abducted woman found near Six Flags


McConnell-Hancock. (Final Harvest Church)

A pregnant Ohio attorney who had been missing since Wednesday was found alive Saturday behind a suburban Atlanta amusement park, and police said she reported having been abducted. There were no immediate arrests.

Karyn McConnell-Hancock, 35, who is six months pregnant, told Cobb County police that two men and a woman abducted her. She was last seen outside a juvenile court building in Toledo, Ohio, around 9 a.m. Wednesday, police spokesman Sgt. Dana Pierce said.

The suspects reportedly dumped her out of a vehicle in Georgia on Saturday morning, and she wandered to a back gate to the Six Flags Over Georgia amusement park, Pierce said. The woman flagged down a motorist, who called police at about 6:45 a.m. The park is located in Austell, 15 miles northwest of Atlanta.

She appeared to be in good health. The motorist she flagged down described her as disoriented, according to Toledo police spokeswoman Capt. Diana Ruiz-Krause.

Details on where she was between Wednesday and Saturday, descriptions of her alleged abductors and the vehicle they were driving were unclear. Ruiz-Krause said McConnell-Hancock called her husband Thursday afternoon to say she had been kidnapped. Police were unable to trace the call, which was brief.

The woman's car has not been located, Ruiz-Krause said.

By midday Saturday, the FBI had been called in to assist, Pierce said. An FBI spokesman in Atlanta, Stephen Emmett, declined to comment, referring questions to his counterpart in Ohio. The FBI office there declined to make a spokesman available for comment.

McConnell-Hancock had been having trouble with a client and had received suspicious phone calls, her husband told police in Ohio.

Georgia authorities were interviewing McConnell-Hancock Saturday. Toledo police were making arrangements to travel to Georgia and escort her back to Ohio.

McConnell-Hancock is a former city councilwoman in Toledo.

(Associated Press Writers Stephen Majors and Emily Zeugner contributed to this report from Columbus, Ohio)

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Dead woman found on Delta flight

Delta Air Lines flight attendants found the body of a woman in the restroom of a plane that landed in Atlanta, Georgia, early Wednesday morning, a spokeswoman for the company said.

The crew noticed the restroom was occupied on final approach, spokeswoman Keyra Johnson said. Flight 950 from Los Angeles landed at 5:51 a.m.

Delta officials have not said how long the 61-year-old woman may have been in the restroom.

Atlanta police were notified and met the plane at the gate, Johnson said.

The body was to be taken to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation medical examiner's office for an autopsy later Wednesday, said GBI spokesman John Bankhead.

Authorities were awaiting the results of an autopsy to determine the cause of death, Bankhead said.

The woman's name and hometown have not been released.

Atlanta police stationed at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport respond to calls about dead bodies on airplanes a couple of times a year, police spokesman Officer Eric Schwartz said.

(The Associated Press)

Click here for more GPB News coverage of Delta Airlines.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Atl PD to Release Records on Elderly Shooting

Officials at the Atlanta Police Department are scheduled to release records involving the police killing of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston to a citizen review board. The board's director, Cristina Beamud, said some records were scheduled to be delivered on Monday. The Atlanta City Council issued a subpoena last month ordering the police department to give records to the Atlanta Citizen Review Board concerning the Johnston case and the December 2008 fatal police shooting of robbery suspect Pierre George. Prosecutors are still investigating the George shooting. The police department is still conducting an internal investigation into the Johnston killing.

(Associated Press)

Monday, April 16, 2007

Atlanta investigates another police shooting

Atlanta has another police shooting on its hands. Controversy has barely settled over November’s police shooting of a 92-year-old woman in her home. In this most recent shooting, family members say officers shot and killed 26-year-old Ron Pettaway early yesterday outside a bar near College Park. They say his brother, 27-year-old Roy Pettaway, is in stable condition at an Atlanta hospital. The Atlanta Police Department says the shooting is under investigation.

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.

Friday, April 27, 2007

GBI steps up APD corruption investigation

Investigators say the work of exposing corruption by Atlanta police has only just begun, as two former officers face a minimum of ten years in prison for their part in the shooting death of an elderly Black woman in late 2006.

The two admitted in federal court that they lied to investigators looking into the death of 92-year old Kathryn Johnston.

Gregg Junnier and Jason Smith say there were only doing their jobs when they broke down the door to Johnston's home looking for drugs.

Both testified superior officers told them to do what they had to, to make drug busts, even if it meant planting evidence and lying.

As part of a plea agreement that keeps them out of state prison, the pair will cooperate in an ongoing investigation into corruption within the Atlanta police department.

US Attorney David Namias says the job of rooting our Atlanta's bad cops has only just begun.

"Former officers Junnier and Smith will also help us continue our very active ongoing investigation into just how wide the culture of misconduct extends within the police department. So that we can make sure that any other officer who has broken the law and violated human rights will be brought to justice."

A third officer, Arthur Tesler has been indicated by a Fulton County grand jury. Tesler remains on paid administration leave, pending further investigation.

Sentencing for Junnier and Smith will take place in late May.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Police informant sues Atlanta

The man Atlanta police officers claimed was their confidential informant in a botched drug raid that killed a 92-year-old woman is suing the city. Alex White claims that police kidnapped and held him against his will for hours in hopes he would help them cover up their mistakes during the raid last November. The raid ended in the death of Kathryn Johnston at her northwest Atlanta home. Two police officers pleaded guilty in the incident.

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)

Monday, May 25, 2009

ATL Police Sergeant Suspended

An Atlanta police sergeant who said he wanted to beat Mayor Shirley Franklin with a bat has been suspended. Sgt. Scott Kreher, heads Atlanta’s police union. At a recent council meeting, Kreher spoke meeting about the difficulty some officers are having getting workers' compensations from the city. He later apologized for the angry comment about the mayor.

(Associated Press)

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Hawks Player Carjacked at Gunpoint


Williams in action. (Gregory Smith: AP)

Atlanta forward Shelden Williams was carjacked at gunpoint Saturday before the Hawks' game against Charlotte, and two suspects were arrested with his car hours later.

Douglasville City Police said two suspects were arrested late Saturday afternoon at Arbor Place Mall in Douglas County, near Atlanta. The suspects were in Williams' car and were attempting a robbery, according to an officer who answered the phone at the Douglasville Police Department.

Fulton County Police spokesman Gary Syblis said Williams was approached by two men outside a barber shop. One man pulled out a gun and demanded Williams' keys to his 2008 Chrysler, according to Syblis.

Hawks spokesman Arthur Triche says Williams provided police with the license plate number of the vehicle used by the carjackers, leading to a search that led to two suspects being arrested at a mall in Douglas County. Williams' car was found at the scene.

"I'm just glad that he's safe," Hawks coach Mike Woodson said. "Cars and things like that, jewelry, money, all that can be replaced."
Triche said the car was damaged when found.

Williams reported to Philips Arena before the game but missed the team's shootaround. He made his first appearance in the game against the Bobcats late in the third quarter.

Williams told Woodson and other team officials about the incident when he reported for the game. He said the car was stolen outside a barber shop.

Syblis said Williams, a second-year player from Duke, did not identify himself as a player for the Hawks.

Syblis says the incident occured outside a barber shop on Cascade Road in Atlanta.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of the Atlanta Hawks.

(The Associated Press)

Friday, October 31, 2008

Atlanta cop pleads guilty to conspiracy

A former Atlanta police officer pleaded guilty to federal conspiracy charges for his role in a botched drug raid that ended in the shooting death of a 92-year-old woman.

The former officer, Arthur Tesler, faces more than 10 years in prison on a charge of conspiracy to violate civil rights resulting in death. The police originally said officers had gone to the home of the woman, Kathryn Johnston, in northwest Atlanta, in 2006 after an informant said he had bought drugs there. But after finding none, officers tried to cover up the mistake by planting bags of marijuana, prosecutors said.

In May, Mr. Tesler, 42, was sentenced to four and a half years in prison for lying to investigators, but federal prosecutors decided to pursue more charges after reviewing the case.

(AP)

Click here for more GPB News coverage of police affairs.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

2 Crime Victims Kill Suspected Assailants

Police say two crime victims in metro Atlanta killed their attackers in separate incidents on Saturday.

Cobb County police say a Marietta resident, who was shot in his own garage Saturday night, grabbed the wound-be robber's gun and shot and killed the man.

Officials identified the would-be robber as 33-year-old John Harrison of Palmetto. Harrison shot and wounded 38-year-old homeowner, Richard Ellis, in the leg.

In Atlanta, police say a woman fatally stabbed a robbery suspect who broke into her apartment while her 11-year-old child slept.

The suspect was identified as 34-year-old Jerome Davis of Atlanta. The woman's name was not released.

No charges were filed in either case.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation says over 120 thousand gun applications were submitted in 2008, an almost 80-percent jump from the roughly 68 thousand the year before.

Click here for more GPB News crime coverage.

(AP)

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Atlanta police department reorganizes

In the wake of the shooting death of a 92-year-old woman last fall, the Atlanta Police Department has made sweeping changes. Chief Richard Pennington announced an overhaul of the narcotics unit, which includes 14 new investigators and 3 sergeants. A new Lieutenant is taking over the unit, and there are plans to add 30 more officers by the end of the year. Department-wide, more than 140 personnel changes were made.

Kathryn Johnston was shot and killed November 21st when narcotics officers rushed into her home. They had a no-knock warrant based on false information from a drug informant. Two officers already have pleaded guilty in the case while a third officer still faces charges.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Another lawsuit against Atlanta police

The family of a 92-year-old woman gunned down by Atlanta police filed a lawsuit against the city today on the one-year anniversary of the killing. The lawsuit was filed by a niece of Kathryn Johnston. It alleges racketeering, civil rights violations, assault, false imprisonment and negligence. Undercover officers killed Johnston last November when she opened fire on them as they forced their way into her home with a no-knock warrant.

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.

GPB News Team: