Gulf News

Baltimore cops guilty in corruption case

Two detectives convicted of racketeeri­ng and robbery

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Two US police officers, described by the prosecutio­n as “both cops and robbers”, were convicted Monday in one of the country’s most explosive recent cases of law enforcemen­t corruption.

A jury convicted Baltimore detectives Daniel Hersl and Marcus Taylor of racketeeri­ng and racketeeri­ng conspiracy. They will be sentenced later and could face life in prison if convicted.

The trial revealed widespread illegal practices among officers immersed in a slum environmen­t overrun by criminal gangs.

At the heart of the case was the Gun Trace Task Force, a supposedly elite plaincloth­es unit responsibl­e for tracking down and seizing illegal weapons in the crime-ridden port city with a population of around 600,000, nearly 60 per cent of whom are African American. All of their victims were black men, many of them drug dealers who the corrupt police officers knew could not go to the authoritie­s to complain.

Six officers pleaded guilty to various charges and four of them delivered gripping testimony at the trial of Hersl and Marcus.

Several avowed drug dealers received immunity to allow them to testify about their encounters with the tainted unit.

Testimony shed a harsh light on racketeeri­ng, burglary, false statements and armed robbery by the officers. Their job was to take illegal guns off the street in a city rife with murders. Instead, the Task Force added to the problem by reselling weapons they stole. The corrupt detectives also trafficked in drugs, planted false evidence on suspects and lied about their overtime hours.

On Monday evening, acting US Attorney Stephen Schenning said he was hopeful that the police corruption case “will begin a long difficult process of examining how” the Baltimore force polices its own. “We hope that police officers live up to the honour and privilege of the badge,” Schenning said on the courthouse steps. Acting Police Commission­er Darryl DeSousa said in a statement immediatel­y after the verdict that the department will move to fire Hersl and Taylor, who have been suspended without pay since being indicted and arrested in March.

“We recognise that this indictment and subsequent trial uncovered some of the most egregious and despicable acts ever perpetrate­d in law enforcemen­t,” DeSousa said.

William Purpura, Hersl’s lead attorney, said the family was disappoint­ed in the verdict but noted that the jury “did acquit him of one of the more serious crimes.” He said a decision about a possible appeal would be made later. Both men were cleared of possessing a firearm in pursuance of a violent crime.

Taylor’s defence team and his relatives did not immediatel­y speak to reporters after the Monday evening verdict.

Much of the testimony during the trial focused on Gun Trace Task Force members who pleaded guilty, including the out-of-control unit’s one-time supervisor, Sgt Wayne Jenkins. He was portrayed as a wildly corrupt officer leading his unit on a tireless quest to shake down civilians and find “monsters” — big time drug dealers with lots of loot to steal.

We recognise that this indictment and subsequent trial uncovered some of the most egregious and despicable acts ever perpetrate­d in law enforcemen­t.” Darryl DeSousa | Acting Police Commission­er

 ?? AP ?? From left: Daniel Hersl, Evodio Hendrix, Jemell Rayam, Marcus Taylor, Maurice Ward, Momodu Gando and Wayne Jenkins — the seven police officers who are facing charges of robbery, extortion and overtime fraud, and are accused of stealing money and drugs...
AP From left: Daniel Hersl, Evodio Hendrix, Jemell Rayam, Marcus Taylor, Maurice Ward, Momodu Gando and Wayne Jenkins — the seven police officers who are facing charges of robbery, extortion and overtime fraud, and are accused of stealing money and drugs...

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