Cops behaving badly!
Police department arrests, jails, and investigates 10 officers in 4 months.
INDIANAPOLIS,
Indiana - August 25, 2008 - One police department appears to be
suffering from a serious case of officers behaving badly.
After one officer was charged with
raping a woman while on duty last week, the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police
Department is having trouble with two more of its officers - bringing the
number of arrested, jailed or investigated cops to 10 in the past four months.
According to the Indianapolis
Star, Officer Christopher Poindexter, 34, allegedly allowed his fiance to
drive his department-issued patrol car. When she sideswiped another vehicle,
Poindexter filed a false report and said the car was involved in a hit-and-run
accident, police said.
Police Chief Michael Spears said he
will fire another suspended 10-year veteran named James Ingalls. The officer
allegedly had sexual intercourse with a prostitute while on duty.
The two recent cases come after
Monday's suspension of Officer Anthony Smith. He has been charged with seven
felonies including rape, criminal deviate conduct, sexual misconduct and
official misconduct and two misdemeanor counts of intimidation after he
allegedly pulled a 19-year-old over and threatened arrest if she didn't get
into his car and have sex with him.
The three police officers have each
been suspended without pay, and Spears has recommended that they be fired.
"I hope by taking extremely
quick action that we're sending a message to our officers and to the citizens
of our city that this conduct will not tolerated," he said.
Indianapolis Metropolitan police
officers have faced charges such as organizing a prostitution ring, selling
firearms to felons, drunken driving and drug trafficking.
In April, former Officer Noble Duke
pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to alerting a drug dealer before a 2007
police raid, according to the Star.
Only two months later, on June 16,
the U.S. attorney's office busted narcotics Detectives Robert B. Long and Jason
P. Edwards and officer James D. Davis for stealing money and drugs from
criminal dealers.
Eleven days later, Detective Jason
S. Barber was accused of selling a gun to a convicted felon.
Patrolman Jeremy Lee faced charges
of aiding in promoting prostitution one week afterward.
According to the Star, robbery Detective George
Leon Benjamin retired last week after he was charged with felony drunk driving
and five misdemeanors stemming from two crashes in department vehicles.