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Several pounds of cocaine missing from police property room
December 21, 2011The Repository, CantonRep.com, cantonrep.com
BYLINE: Lori Monsewicz CantonRep.com staff writer
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Canton, OH
CANTON — Several pounds of cocaine from a 2007 criminal case are missing from the Canton Police Department’s Property Room, prompting an internal investigation.
Chief Dean McKimm said Wednesday he asked the FBI to assist and that some police department employees may be given a polygraph test.
John Dysart, supervisory senior resident agent in charge of the Canton FBI office, confirmed McKimm’s request.
“He asked if we could help with a few things so they could sort it out,” Dysart said. “He asked if we could lend a hand.”
The missing cocaine is already spoiled.
McKimm said officers hoping to use some of it months ago for K-9 training found it “rancid” and not useable.
Then again, McKimm said, the cocaine just may have been discarded with the trash.
“I don’t have any evidence that anything illegal was done,” he said. “One possibility is that it just got straight thrown away with some other trash generated by the destruction process.”
Officers discovered about a week ago that the box containing possibly four or five kilos — about 9 to 11 pounds — was missing. McKimm could not immediately recall the case linked to the cocaine.
The officers had been preparing for a “property destruction” during which police receiving a court release are permitted to destroy old evidence no longer needed in criminal cases. How it’s destroyed depends on the type of evidence, McKimm said.
“Cocaine and drugs are usually burned, guns are melted, paper is shredded and then discarded,” he said.
Usually, the effort involves the use of an incinerator at a local factory.
The evidence in the property room is inventoried and moved to a location where it can be prepared for destruction, the chief said.
Typically, some items are consolidated into boxes while the boxes they had been in become trash and are discarded.
“What I believe is the property was mishandled and possibly thrown away with some of the trash that was discarded during the preparation for the destruction,” McKimm said.
“But we have to cover all the bases, and we’re certainly going to investigate so that we can eliminate any possibility of any criminal activity by any officer.”
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International Association for Property and Evidence
“Law Enforcement Serving the Needs of Law Enforcement”
www.IAPE.org
Evidence tech to serve 3 years for theft
December 21, 2011Sequim Gazette, sequimgazette.com
BYLINE: AMANDA WINTERS Sequim Gazette
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Clallam County, WA/strong>
A former Sheriff’s evidence technician received a three-year prison sentence for stealing $8,644 on the job.
Staci Allison, 41, showed no emotion when taken into custody after her sentencing hearing to serve 36 months in prison.
Allison was charged with theft and money laundering in May 2009, six months after 129 empty evidence bags that once contained $51,251 were found stuffed in a plastic tube in the Sheriff’s Office evidence room where she worked.
Assistant Attorney General Scott Marlow prosecuted the case, proving to the six women and six men on the jury Allison stole more than $8,000 by removing it from evidence envelopes inside evidence bags and deleting the computer records. She is suspected of stealing the larger amount, but Marlow charged her based on what he thought he could prove.
Allison’s defense attorney, Ralph Anderson, argued the deletions were made as a test of the system and the evidence room was a mess and poorly managed, making it easy for anyone to steal from it.
During the trial, Allison testified she didn’t know who stole the money and she continues to maintain her innocence.
Anderson filed a notice of appeal in Clallam County Superior Court on Dec. 15 during the sentencing hearing.
Before Clallam County Superior Court Judge Ken Williams sentenced Allison to three years in prison, Anderson argued for a first-time offender waiver and 90 days in jail with 30 days converted to community service and the rest served on electronic home monitoring.
“Staci was a good, hard worker,” he said, adding she has no prior criminal history, appeared for all court hearings and complied with all the court’s directions. He said she has medical problems and listed nearly a dozen medications she takes for them.
“This is not a person who would benefit from prison,” he said.
Marlow said Allison was convicted of a major economic offense and because of that an exceptional sentence is warranted.
“She violated that (trust), jeopardized all the cases, stole money from envelopes and spent it on herself,” he said.
He requested a 36-month sentence and $51,905.33 in restitution.
After Williams ordered the 36-month sentence, to decide on restitution later, Anderson made a motion to stay Allison’s sentence pending her appeal.
In the alternative, he asked she be given a week to prepare to go to prison.
Marlow objected, stating he doesn’t believe it was appropriate and it could undermine the public’s view of the justice system.
“When people are sentenced, they go to prison,” he said.
Williams said he was not convinced there were valid reasons to stay Allison’s sentence but told Anderson he could file a written motion.
Allison was taken into custody by the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office to be turned over to the Department of Corrections.
Anderson said he intends to file a written motion requesting Allison not be imprisoned pending her appeal.
Reach Amanda Winters at awinters@sequimgazette.com.
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International Association for Property and Evidence
“Law Enforcement Serving the Needs of Law Enforcement”
www.IAPE.org
More rape kits than thought remain untested at HPD
December 17, 2011Houston Chronicle, chron.com
BYLINE: ZAIN SHAUK, HOUSTON CHRONICLE
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Houston, TX
Backlog estimate doubles to at least 6,000, department confirms
The Houston Police Department’s backlog of untested rape kits totals between 6,000 and 7,000 — 50 percent more than what officials previously acknowledged, according to a memo from Chief Charles McClelland.
HPD for years has insisted that the backlog of untested rape kits was around 4,000. The details from the chief’s memo confirm a Houston Chronicle report that the backlog likely was far greater.
The backlog also is likely to continue to grow. According to McClelland’s memo, HPD receives some 930 new rape kits each year. HPD officials previously have said the department is able to test only 30 to 40 a month.
A backlog that could include as many as 7,000 untested rape kits should be a cause for major concern, said Johnny Mata, an activist for the Greater Houston Coalition for Justice.
“There’s people in jail that may be innocent,” Mata said. “There’s women that may be fearing for their lives. It’s unacceptable.”
McClelland’s five-page memo was produced in response to a series of questions from Councilwoman Jolanda Jones, who lectured department and city officials during a City Council meeting Wednesday for being unresponsive. Jones said HPD and city officials had been vague in response to her lengthy inquiry about progress in researching and examining a backlog of sexual assault kits.
Funding awarded
The discussion was prompted by a council vote to accept a National Institute of Justice grant totaling $821,814 to study and test Houston’s backlog of untested kits. The funding is part of a two-phase, $1.14 million award from the NIJ. The bulk of the money will go toward determining the reasons rape kits go untested and how to reduce the backlog more quickly.
Jones was the only council member to vote against accepting the second-phase money, saying she could not gauge whether previous grant dollars were being used effectively, based on the information from HPD.
Mayor Annise Parker said that the city could not provide an exact figure for the amount of untested rape kits but offered a range of 6,000 to 7,000.
“We do not have an exact number of rape kits in each category because part of these dollars were to do an audit of exactly that and we have endeavored to explain that process to you,” Parker said to Jones.
McClelland’s memo explained that the department was working to finalize an audit relative to the number, “however, the initial inventory counting is complete.”
Responding to Jones’ questions about the number of kits tested, McClelland’s memo stated that the two-phase NIJ grant “allows for approximately 320 cases to be outsourced for testing. That outsourcing process is ongoing.” The grant has also supported the screening of 1,000 kits, so far. The screening is used to determine whether there is enough biological evidence for a sexual assault kit to be used for DNA testing.
Past problems
The department conducted an audit that determined that between 16,000 and 17,000 rape kits dating back to the 1980s are stored in HPD’s property division, the memo said. Of those, roughly a third, or between 6,000 and 7,000, have not been examined.
DNA testing at HPD’s crime lab was temporarily suspended in 2002, after an independent audit revealed shoddy forensic work, including unqualified personnel, lax protocols and facilities that included a roof that leaked rainwater onto evidence.
Since the lab resumed operations five years ago, the roof and other interior problems have been fixed. The lab also has reduced or eliminated backlogs in areas such as narcotics and ballistics.
Cutting down the rape kit backlog has been a challenge because of a lack of resources and personnel, HPD officials have said.
HPD spokesman John Cannon said the first phase of the grant, totaling $178,000, was to “help us determine the reasons for the backlog and to prevent that from happening again in the future.”
Councilman Oliver Pennington called for regular reports on progress to work through the backlog.
Former chief’s support
Councilman C.O. Bradford, the former police chief, agreed with the nature of Jones’ inquiry, which he called “quite voluminous,” but said HPD had provided enough information to warrant support for the grant.
“I’m convinced that Chief McClelland is doing everything that he possibly can and that he takes it very, very seriously and understands the impact that the analysis of these kits that are being stored can have on our criminal justice process today,” Bradford said. “But it comes down to resource and this is an example of resources being garnered to help move forward in the process.”
zain.shauk@chron.com, twitter.com/zainshauk
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International Association for Property and Evidence
“Law Enforcement Serving the Needs of Law Enforcement”
www.IAPE.org