Baltimore Sun

Former officer gets 15 years

Sgt. Thomas Allers oversaw corrupt gun task force, took part in thefts

- By Justin Fenton

A federal judge handed down a 15-year sentence Friday to a former Baltimore police sergeant who once ran the department’s corrupt Gun Trace Task Force, saying his participat­ion in robberies using the authority of the badge emboldened members of the squad.

Thomas Allers, 49, previously pleaded guilty to nine robberies carried out while on duty between 2014 and 2016. He was the first of eight officers convicted in the case to be sentenced.

“It strikes at the foundation of our entire criminal justice system when judges and juries cannot rely on the word of sworn law enforcemen­t officers, because they are covering up their own crimes,” U.S. District Court Judge Catherine C. Blake said.

Federal prosecutor­s asked for the maximum sentence of 20 years, saying that, as a supervisor, Allers was in a key position to stamp out misconduct as the squad was robbing people, falsifying paperwork and taking unearned overtime pay. Assistant U.S. Attorney Leo Wise said the damage caused by the officers’ conduct was “immeasurab­le.”

Allers shook his head througout Wise’s remarks. His supporters packed the courtroom and told Blake that he was a compassion­ate father and friend, and an honest police officer. Allers spoke briefly to the court, apologizin­g for his conduct.

“I will live with this until the day I die,” said Allers, wearing a grey prison Thomas Allers

jumpsuit and holding his hands clasped behind his back.

His wife, Angel, told The Baltimore Sun that her husband maintains his innocence but felt the deck was stacked against him and took a guilty plea, requiring him to take responsibi­lity.

“He did not feel like he was going to get a fair trial, and was being threatened with them stacking charges,” Angel Allers said.

She said she hoped Blake would show leniency after hearing about her husband’s character.

“She ignored the man and used him as a tool,” she said afterward.

Allers was not part of the original group of seven detectives charged in early 2017.

He had been reassigned in June 2016 to a Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion task force as the federal investigat­ion of the gun trace unit was ramping up, but officers on the task force who became government cooperator­s — Detectives Momodu Gondo and Jemell Rayam — told prosecutor­s they had stolen money with Allers on multiple occasions.

Prosecutor­s then worked to verify the accusation­s with the victims.

Gondo and Rayam have pleaded guilty to years of criminal activity, including actively aiding drug dealers and committing an off-duty home invasion robbery.

Wise, the federal prosecutor, told the judge that Allers’ complicity served as a green light for his officers’ bad conduct.

On one search warrant, Wise said, the officers encountere­d a drawer containing $400,000 in cash, and Allers said the money wouldn’t be missed.

“Then like locusts, Gondo and Rayam descend and take their cut,” Wise said. “That set in motion how Allers as a sergeant and his subordinat­es would move forward.”

One man who had money taken was later killed becaue he was unable to pay back a drug debt, Wise said.

Speaking more broadly about the Gun Trace Task Force case’s impact, Wise said the Police Department’s structure puts accountabi­lity almost entirely on sergeants.

“As the city and the Police Department struggle with the fallout … they’ll never be able to devise a structure that does not rely on leaders,” Wise said.

The sentencing hearing was moved to the federal courthouse’s ceremonial auditorium to accomodate Allers’ supporters, who took up nearly every seat.

They recalled how Allers overcame dyslexia to live out his dream of becoming a Baltimore police officer, which required persistenc­e: He carried a thesaurus and dictionary with him in his patrol car to help him write his police reports.

A former supervisor in the department’s Southern District, retired Lt. Steve Nalewajko, said he never received a complaint against Allers.

In dozens of letters to the court, supporters described Allers as always there when they needed him, going above and beyond to be a good relative, neighbor, friend and colleague.

“He’s a thoroughly decent person,” said Gary Proctor, Allers’ defense attorney.

Allers’ son struggled with substance abuse issues, and supporters said it made Allers more compassion­ate in his street work involving addicts.

The indictment against Allers said his son accompanie­d him during one of the robberies, an accusation that did not appear in his eventual plea agreement. His son was never charged.

Angel Allers said the government never tried to interview her stepson despite accusing him of a crime in the indictment, and called it one of many moves by prosecutor­s that she said raised questions about the investigat­ion.

Authoritie­s declined to respond to the claim.

“Anybody who knows us knows that’s the most ridiculous allegation. We never gave him cash, because he would buy drugs with it,” she said.

Angel Allers said the government’s case relied on accusation­s from corrupt and untrustwor­thy detectives in Gondo and Rayam.

Allers had sought to move the two from the unit on four occasions, according to a letter submitted to the court by Elizabeth Geiselman, a retired detective who worked with the unit as a contract specialist.

Wise noted that Allers did not come forward with informatio­n about the officers before the federal racketeeri­ng case or after his former detectives were charged, and did not cooperate after being charged.

Allers’ supporters also said that prosecutor­s had wrongly characteri­zed a note found in Allers’ home, after he was arrested, as a suicide note. They said the note contained lyrics to a song that Allers, a musician who performed in a band, had written.

However, Allers’ attorney Proctor also characteri­zed the letter as a suicide note, reading it to Blake in court Friday.

“I [messed] up, and I’m just tired of everything,” Proctor read. “I’m so sorry I let my best friend down. ... I’m the most stupid person in the world.”

“He did not feel like he was going to get a fair trial, and was being threatened with them stacking charges.”

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