The suspect who was run over by the officer’s car was arrested that night and charged with numerous drug crimes in addition to discharging a BB gun, which we now know was completely fabricated. The suspect was held in custody for several days, and prosecutors eventually dismissed all charges about 10 months later. The officer who ran the suspect over was indicted with several other Baltimore Police officers who were members of the notorious Gun Trace Task Force or GTTF. The incident regarding the planted BB gun came up in one of the federal GTTF investigations, and the former detective was subpoenaed to provide his testimony on what happened. The former detective told the grand jury that his sergeant requested that he call his partner to inquire about the BB gun, but the partner said he did not have one. The detective then insinuated that while at the scene of the accident the sergeant went to the trunk of his vehicle to retrieve an unknown object.
Many of the former GTTF officers provided substantial assistance to the government in consideration for lighter sentences, and information on what actually transpired the night of the accident appears to have come from one of those proffer sessions. Federal law enforcement learned that the detective and his sergeant arranged a secret meeting by communicating on their wives’ cell phones. They actually met in a swimming pool to assure that neither was wearing a wire, a scene right out of the movie Traffic. At the secret meeting both officers discussed their concerns over the GTTF indictments, and then the sergeant apparently told the former detective to lie about why they went back to the scene of the accident. The sergeant told the detective to tell federal authorities that the sergeant retrieved the BB gun himself and that the former detective had played no part in obtaining it. Unfortunately for the detective, federal authorities were able to prove that these statements were made with the intent to deceive the grand jury, and a stiff sentence followed from this poor decision.
The Blog will continue to follow police corruption cases throughout Maryland, with particular focus on the Baltimore Police department. As readers can see the fallout from the GTTF indictments didn’t end with the arrest of the task force officers. When faced with decades long prison sentences the tight knit group turned not only on each other, but also on other fellow officers from outside of the group. As with all substantial assistance cases one is left wondering how much corruption the government would have been able to prove without cooperation.
Benjamin Herbst is a Maryland criminal defense lawyer who specializes in gun charges in state and federal court. He has successfully represented numerous defendants on charges of felony possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, unlawful sale and transfer of a firearm, and wear, transport or carry of a firearm. Contact Benjamin anytime for a free consultation about your case today at 410-207-2598.
Resources
Former Baltimore Police Detective Sentenced to 18 Months in Federal Prison for Lying to a Federal Grand Jury, justice.gov.