Santa Fe New Mexican

Chief: Falsified affidavit led to deadly raid

- By Juan A. Lozano

HOUSTON — A lead investigat­or lied in an affidavit justifying a drug raid on a Houston home in which two residents were killed and four undercover officers were shot and wounded during a gunbattle, the city’s police chief said Friday.

In the search warrant that was used to justify entering the home, officers with the Houston Police Department’s narcotics unit had alleged that a confidenti­al informant had bought heroin at the house the day before the Jan. 28 raid. The informant also allegedly had seen a handgun in the home.

But according to an affidavit filed as part of the ongoing investigat­ion into the raid and made public Friday, the informant told investigat­ors he or she had not bought any drugs at the home and had not been involved in any work leading up to the raid.

The heroin said to have been bought at the home had been obtained elsewhere, according to the affidavit. The informant had allegedly been working with the lead investigat­or in the case, who was identified in the affidavit as Officer Gerald Goines. He prepared the search warrant and has been with the police department for more than 30 years, according to investigat­ors.

Goines was one of four officers who was shot in the gunfight that killed 59-year-old Dennis Tuttle and 58-year-old Rhogena Nicholas, who both lived in the home. A fifth officer injured his knee during the shooting.

Investigat­ors also spoke with several other informants who had previously worked with Goines, and all said they had not bought drugs at the home, according to the affidavit.

After the raid, police said they found several firearms at the home, along with marijuana and cocaine, but no heroin.

Houston police Chief Art Acevedo said the ongoing investigat­ion into the drug raid appears to have uncovered “some untruths or lies” in the search warrant. He called this “unacceptab­le.”

“When we prepare a document to go into somebody’s home … it has to be truthful, it has to be honest, it has to be absolutely factual,” Acevedo said. “So, we know already there’s a crime that’s been committed, a high probabilit­y there will be a criminal charge.”

Acevedo said his department’s investigat­ion has yet to determine what charges Goines could face.

Goines, who remains hospitaliz­ed, could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Friday. The president of the Houston Police Officers’ Union did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment.

In the hours after the raid, Acevedo had praised Goines as being “tough as nails.”

Acevedo said Goines has been suspended. Another officer involved in the drug raid had previously been suspended.

Authoritie­s still believe Tuttle and Nicholas were involved in criminal activity, but Acevedo said the case now is undermined.

Local community activists have been critical of the raid and neighbors have portrayed Tuttle and Nicholas as a disabled couple who seemed law abiding. The Greater Houston Coalition for Justice was set to hold a town hall meeting about the raid on Monday.

Acevedo said authoritie­s will conduct an extensive internal review of Goines’ prior cases as well as other cases by the agency’s narcotics division.

“We have 5,200 officers and I would ask that nobody paint our department with a broad brush. …This is not indicative of the greater work that goes on here,” Acevedo said.

During a news conference, Acevedo repeatedly said the problems related to the search warrant were discovered through the ongoing investigat­ion and his agency is not trying to hide anything.

 ?? ELIZABETH CONLEY/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Houston police Chief Art Acevedo speaks during a news conference Friday in Houston. An investigat­or lied in an affidavit justifying a drug raid on a home in which two residents were killed and four undercover officers were shot and wounded during a gunfight, the chief said.
ELIZABETH CONLEY/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP Houston police Chief Art Acevedo speaks during a news conference Friday in Houston. An investigat­or lied in an affidavit justifying a drug raid on a home in which two residents were killed and four undercover officers were shot and wounded during a gunfight, the chief said.

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