The trooper was charged at the end of July and elected to immediately have his lawyer begin plea negotiations. The AG’s office did not agree to dismiss either of the two counts pursuant to a guilty plea, but likely did not push too hard for an active jail sentence. After accepting his guilty plea, the judge sentenced the soon to be former trooper to a suspended jail sentence and supervised probation. As a condition of his probation the trooper will have to perform 300 hours of community service and pay a $6,000 fine, which is no slap on the wrist. On the other hand, avoiding jail time and a felony conviction under these circumstances is certainly a victory for the defense. Had the trooper received some sort of financial gain for his misconduct the result may have been different, but his intentions were not so devious as they were just strange. The trooper tried to cover his tracks to some extent; all of his fake drunk driving suspects refused their breathalyzer tests, which meant he did not have to include fake breath alcohol test results in the reports. On the other hand, breathalyzer tests are conducted by a certified breath tech so fabricating these reports would have required an accomplice. A breath tech being in on this crime would have been one of the few things to make this story more bizarre.
Perjury, which is a misdemeanor with a 10-year maximum penalty, is not a particularly common criminal charge in Maryland because it is difficult to prove a person was lying under oath. This officer was in a different position due to his sworn police reports and citations being easily proven as fictitious. We have posted numerous stories about charges involving misconduct in office, and unfortunately there is no shortage of government authority figures breaking the law these days. It seems like state lawmakers, mayors, city administrators and police officers are routinely appearing as defendants in criminal court, and the media is always there to report on their cases. The Blog will continue to follow public corruption cases so stay tuned. Benjamin Herbst is a Maryland criminal defense lawyer who is also licensed to practice in all state and federal courts including Baltimore County, Montgomery County and Anne Arundel County. Benjamin is also an experienced Florida criminal defense lawyer who specializes in perjury, misconduct in office, drug offenses, gun crimes, theft and fraud. Call Benjamin anytime for a free consultation at 410-207-2598.
Resources
Md. trooper wrote DWI tickets to fictitious drivers, pleads guilty to perjury, washingtonpost.com.