Showing posts with label The Dirty DUI Judge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dirty DUI Judge. Show all posts
Officer Dexter
Pete BennettDecember 08, 2018CNET SCANDAL, Contra Costa District Attorney, Contra Costa Narcotics Taskforce (CNET), FBI Agent Frank Doyle Jr., FBI School Bomb School (West Coast), Frank Doyle Jr., The Dirty DUI Judge, Walnut Creek Bomb Squad, Walnut Creek Police Department
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Lieutenant Edwards
Pete BennettDecember 08, 2018CNET SCANDAL, Contra Costa District Attorney, Contra Costa Narcotics Taskforce (CNET), FBI Agent Frank Doyle Jr., FBI School Bomb School (West Coast), Frank Doyle Jr., The Dirty DUI Judge, Walnut Creek Bomb Squad, Walnut Creek Police Department
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Officer Steve Rohwer
Pete BennettDecember 08, 2018CNET SCANDAL, Contra Costa District Attorney, Contra Costa Narcotics Taskforce (CNET), FBI Agent Frank Doyle Jr., FBI School Bomb School (West Coast), Frank Doyle Jr., The Dirty DUI Judge, Walnut Creek Bomb Squad, Walnut Creek Police Department
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Sergeant David Rangel
Pete BennettDecember 08, 2018CNET SCANDAL, Contra Costa District Attorney, Contra Costa Narcotics Taskforce (CNET), FBI Agent Frank Doyle Jr., FBI School Bomb School (West Coast), Frank Doyle Jr., The Dirty DUI Judge, Walnut Creek Bomb Squad, Walnut Creek Police Department
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Lieutenant Steve Bertolozzi
Pete BennettDecember 08, 2018CNET SCANDAL, Contra Costa District Attorney, Contra Costa Narcotics Taskforce (CNET), FBI Agent Frank Doyle Jr., FBI School Bomb School (West Coast), Frank Doyle Jr., The Dirty DUI Judge, Walnut Creek Bomb Squad, Walnut Creek Police Department
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UPDATE: WCPD Officer Pleads No Contest to Beating Woman with Baseball Bat in Richmond
Pete BennettSeptember 08, 2014Contra Costa Superior Court, Judge Joel Golub, Officers Arrested, The Dirty DUI Judge, Walnut Creek Police Department
A Walnut Creek police officer pleaded no contest
A Walnut Creek police officer pleaded no contest in a Martinez courtroom this afternoon to charges that he donned a mask and beat a woman with a baseball bat in Richmond last month.
Gregory Thompson, a 54-year-old Martinez resident and 30-year Walnut Creek police veteran, entered the no contest pleas in Contra Costa County Superior Court to charges of felony assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury, felony vandalism and being armed in the commission of the crimes.
Dressed in a suit and tie, Thompson appeared out of custody next to his attorney in court today, weeks after bailing out of county jail in Richmond following his Aug. 16 arrest.
Thompson refused to answer questions from reporters outside the courtroom this morning and left in a waiting car.
Deputy District Attorney Barry Grove said prosecutors will ask for a one-year county jail sentence for Thompson but that he could face up to five years in state prison. His sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 10.
Grove said Thompson went to his father’s vacant home on Clinton Avenue in Richmond in the early morning hours of Aug. 16, knowing that the house had been burglarized recently, according to Grove.
When he saw an unknown woman walking near the home, he believed she was an intruder, donned a ski mask and “he took the law into his own hands and beat her with a baseball bat,” Grove said.
The woman’s car had run out of gas and she was walking in the area when Thompson attacked, prosecutors said.
Richmond police received several reports around 2 a.m. on Aug. 16 of a woman screaming and a man with a bat in the 4000 block of Clinton Avenue.
As officers arrived on the scene, witnesses pointed out Thompson, who was sitting nearby in his parked car. He wasn’t wearing his police uniform or in a patrol car at the time, police said.
Officers approached the suspect and noticed a mask lying on the car’s floorboard. A search of the car turned up a baseball bat, two guns and zip ties, police said.
The victim, who had been hiding in the bushes until police arrived, was taken to a hospital for injuries suffered in the beating and is expected to recover.
Police last month were attempting to locate a second woman who was apparently wounded when she stepped in to try to stop the attack. An off-duty firefighter also witnessed part of the attack, according to Grove.
Thompson, who identified himself as a police officer, was arrested, taken to county jail and released on bail the following day.
Walnut Creek police have said Thompson was put on paid administrative leave soon after his arrest and that the department is conducting its own investigation.
He was working most recently as a patrol officer, according to Walnut Creek police Capt. Mark Perlite.
Walnut Creek police officials were not immediately available this afternoon to comment on Thompson’s employment status.
Gregory Thompson, a 54-year-old Martinez resident and 30-year Walnut Creek police veteran, entered the no contest pleas in Contra Costa County Superior Court to charges of felony assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury, felony vandalism and being armed in the commission of the crimes.
Dressed in a suit and tie, Thompson appeared out of custody next to his attorney in court today, weeks after bailing out of county jail in Richmond following his Aug. 16 arrest.
Thompson refused to answer questions from reporters outside the courtroom this morning and left in a waiting car.
Deputy District Attorney Barry Grove said prosecutors will ask for a one-year county jail sentence for Thompson but that he could face up to five years in state prison. His sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 10.
Grove said Thompson went to his father’s vacant home on Clinton Avenue in Richmond in the early morning hours of Aug. 16, knowing that the house had been burglarized recently, according to Grove.
When he saw an unknown woman walking near the home, he believed she was an intruder, donned a ski mask and “he took the law into his own hands and beat her with a baseball bat,” Grove said.
The woman’s car had run out of gas and she was walking in the area when Thompson attacked, prosecutors said.
Richmond police received several reports around 2 a.m. on Aug. 16 of a woman screaming and a man with a bat in the 4000 block of Clinton Avenue.
As officers arrived on the scene, witnesses pointed out Thompson, who was sitting nearby in his parked car. He wasn’t wearing his police uniform or in a patrol car at the time, police said.
Officers approached the suspect and noticed a mask lying on the car’s floorboard. A search of the car turned up a baseball bat, two guns and zip ties, police said.
The victim, who had been hiding in the bushes until police arrived, was taken to a hospital for injuries suffered in the beating and is expected to recover.
Police last month were attempting to locate a second woman who was apparently wounded when she stepped in to try to stop the attack. An off-duty firefighter also witnessed part of the attack, according to Grove.
Thompson, who identified himself as a police officer, was arrested, taken to county jail and released on bail the following day.
Walnut Creek police have said Thompson was put on paid administrative leave soon after his arrest and that the department is conducting its own investigation.
He was working most recently as a patrol officer, according to Walnut Creek police Capt. Mark Perlite.
Walnut Creek police officials were not immediately available this afternoon to comment on Thompson’s employment status.
Ex-deputy indicted in 'dirty DUI' scheme
petercbennett123November 12, 2013CNET, Contra Costa Narcotics Enforcement Taskforce, County of Contra Costa, Gary Vinson Collins, Mark Peterson, Michael Peterson, Peterson Family Trust, The Dirty DUI Judge, Town of Danville, US Grand Jury
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Ex-deputy indicted in 'dirty DUI' scheme
Justin Berton, Chronicle Staff Writer
Published 4:00 am, Saturday, December 17, 2011
Defendant Stephen Tanabe sits in the courtroom waiting to be arraigned in the law enforcement abuse of power case, at the Contra Costa Superior Courthouse, Thursday June 23, 2011, in Walnut Creek, Calif. Photo: Lacy Atkins, The Chronicle
A former Contra Costa County sheriff's deputy who allegedly helped a private investigator with "dirty DUI" arrests has been indicted by a federal grand jury.
Stephen Tanabe, 48, of Alamo, was indicted Thursday on four felony counts of conspiracy to extort under color of official right and aiding and abetting, in connection with the drunken-driving arrests. He is expected to surrender to authorities before a scheduled court appearance Monday in Oakland, attorneys said.
Tanabe is the fourth former law enforcement officer with ties to former private eye Christopher Butler, 50, to face federal charges. Butler pleaded not guilty to federal drug and conspiracy charges earlier this year.
In July, two former Richmond police officers who had hired Butler to carry out a retaliatory sting against two young men who once worked for them were indicted on gun charges.
In August, Butler and Norman Wielsch, 50, a former state Justice Department agent who commanded an antidrug task force in Contra Costa County, were indicted on charges connected to the alleged theft and sale of drugs.
Authorities said Wielsch had pilfered the drugs from evidence lockers.
Tanabe pleaded not guilty this year in state court to bribery and conspiracy charges connected to two drunken-driving arrests he made in Danville in January.
Prosecutors said Butler had paid Tanabe to pull over and arrest men the detective was hired to go after. Butler was working for women in divorce cases who wanted to saddle their ex-husbands with criminal records to help them win custody battles, authorities said.
In an affidavit, a cadet-in-training who was riding with Tanabe in January said the officer used the term "dirty DUI" before he stopped a man Butler had hired him to arrest.
In a confession written by Butler and obtained by The Chronicle, the former investigator said he had supplied $200 worth of cocaine to Tanabe as payment for his involvement in one DUI stop.
Tanabe's attorney in the federal case did not respond to a phone call.
Dan Russo, the attorney who is representing Tanabe in state court, said, "It's obvious the feds are buying into Butler's perjurious lies."
Russo says Tanabe didn't know Butler was setting up the men he was arresting for drunken driving, and denies the former deputy ever took a bribe.