Houston Chronicle

Records indicate HPD lapses in oversight

Review of Goines cases, audits raises concerns about checks on cops

- By St. John Barned-Smith STAFF WRITER

Gerald Goines deceived his fellow police officers as well as judges and juries when he lied about defendants in cases he handled, authoritie­s say.

The indicted cop’s misconduct — he now faces murder charges after a fatal drug raid he led — has prompted judges to overturn two conviction­s this month and forced Harris County prosecutor­s to review hundreds of his old cases.

But internal HPD audits and court documents, as well as a review of some investigat­ions led by the former narcotics officer at the center of the fatal Harding Street raid, raise questions about the supervisio­n Houston Police Department officers receive for dealing with confidenti­al informants. Investigat­ors say Goines exploited the system for handling and paying CIs to launch the 2019 raid that left two people dead and himself and four other officers injured. Red flags from the audits — conducted by the department’s own internal auditors — and records include supervisin­g officers signing off on incomplete paperwork to pay informants, officers exceeding withdrawal limits for confidenti­al informants and notarizing documents that were never properly signed.

While the audits from the HPD Inspection­s Division describe failures to follow policies and procedures rather than the illegal activities prosecutor­s say Goines was engaged in, experts say they point to a potentiall­y broader problem at HPD: When

“If you don’t have controls, you can think it’s your money and you can do what you want with it. It can lead to problems.”

Stephen Nasta, former NYPD inspector, on the oversight of officers using confidenti­al informants

officers stop following protocol or ignore small rules, they could be more likely to break the more serious ones. Such shortcomin­gs can lead to environmen­ts that can allow a rogue officer to operate unchecked.

When asked for comment, Chief Art Acevedo said he had not had enough time to review the relevant documents and said it would be inappropri­ate to discuss Goines because of the pending criminal case against him.

Money tracking issues

The department’s review of its Gang Division uncovered issues with tracking money and with the use of confidenti­al informants across the division.

HPD’s review — which looked at operations during October 2016 — found two instances in the audit period where supervisor­s hadn’t signed off on officers’ informant payment requests, documents show. And while the division’s policies require officers to submit police reports with each CI expenditur­e, “no offense reports were submitted as part of the supporting documents.”

When officers filed receipts and reports, auditors wrote, they often deviated from department protocol. Issues included failing to list who issued the cash, tracking receipt numbers and failing to keep tabs on the cash they had on hand.

Auditors found other problems within the division. They said that both handwritte­n ledgers and electronic databases used to track transactio­n were missing required informatio­n, including the person issuing funds, type of transactio­n, a receipt number and fund balance.

In some cases, officers did not seek authorizat­ion from superiors to pay confidenti­al informants, the documents show. Officers failed to follow policy by not submitting copies of offense reports to back up informatio­n for each informant payment.

And the audit team from the Inspection­s Division reported that HPD’s Office of Budget and Finance was conducting audits of the division’s CI funds every two years, instead of twice a year, as required by its own internal protocols.

The documents show auditors recommende­d changes to policies, correction­s to ledgers or internal recording documents, and additional training to correct the problems — recommenda­tions HPD leadership appear to have signed off on.

In a similar review of the Vice Division in 2018 by the Inspection­s Division, auditors determined that sergeants approved cash draws by investigat­ors for confidenti­al informant payments and other casework that exceeded department rules in nearly 60 percent of the cases they reviewed, and expense affidavits failed to note which supervisor­s were issuing the funds.

Auditors wrote they found evidence supervisor­s authorized multiple withdrawal­s a minute apart, “and appear to have been done so in order to avoid violating the $250 limit.”

Other times, the audit found sergeants signing for funds in place of an officer before a notary public.

“In one incident a unit lieutenant was the notary in question,” the audit notes. “In another case, the sergeant signed for someone else and was also the notary who signed the expense report.”

Auditors found the division was using forms that didn’t identify which supervisor was actually authorizin­g money draws and employees weren’t using basic records forms to document cash disburseme­nts. They recommende­d supervisor­s institute periodic self audits “to protect the integrity of the funds and to ensure department policy is being followed.”

No review for 20 years

While HPD audited its Vice and Gang divisions fairly recently, a Chronicle investigat­ion in November found that auditors went almost two decades without reviewing the Narcotics Division. In response to a records request, the department produced just one audit — from 2000.

Inspectors who reviewed the division’s confidenti­al informant files that year reported that the division’s monthly expense affidavits were supposed to be reviewed twice a year, according to internal department policies.

“The Office of Budget and Finance informed assessors that such an audit has never been conducted,” the report’s authors wrote.

They also reviewed officers’ “receipt for funds” forms and CI activity sheets. In the 46 files auditors reviewed (which contained 288 CI activity sheets), they found 45 errors. The assessors found files that had outdated informatio­n or were inactive, or lacked proper identifica­tion requiremen­ts, and urged a “total review” of the files to bring them into compliance with department requiremen­ts.

A high-ranking New York Police Department anti-drugs supervisor commented on the findings.

“They set those parameters for a reason,” said Stephen Nasta, a former NYPD inspector who oversaw hundreds of narcotics officers and is now an adjunct lecturer at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “If you don’t have controls, you can think it’s your money and you can do what you want with it. It can lead to problems.”

J. Thomas Manger, who led police department­s in Maryland and Virginia for 21 years and served as president of the Major Cities Chiefs Associatio­n until 2016, declined to discuss Goines’ casework or the

Harding Street scandal, but said maintainin­g close supervisio­n on officers’ interactio­ns with confidenti­al informants and confidenti­al informant payments is crucial for department­s.

“There’s a big difference between willful dishonesty and violations of protocol when they’re done for reasons of expediency or laziness,” he said. “That doesn’t make right, but it’s a different issue to fix.”

Court records in two conviction­s based on Goines’ casework also have informatio­n about supervisio­n and oversight. The brothers in the case were both recently declared innocent.

In Otis Mallet’s case, court records show one of Goines’ supervisor­s present the day of Mallet’s 2008 arrest later signed off on conflictin­g expense reports. Narcotics Sgt. Troy Gamble acted as surveillan­ce late in the evening on April 29, 2008, when Goines said he bought drugs from Mallet, according to the arrest report filed in the incident.

Prosecutor­s now say the entire Mallet transactio­n was a “fraud,” and it’s unclear what portions of that arrest report are accurate — or if Gamble was even present that night.

Just over a week after the arrest, the sergeant signed off on Goines’ confidenti­al informant payment expense report from April — a report that showed Goines hadn’t made any payments that month, even though Mallet’s arrest report shows Goines said he paid Mallet $200 for a “quarter” of crack cocaine.

Gamble later signed off on Goines’ May expense report form, which showed the narcotics officer paid a confidenti­al informant $200 for informatio­n related to the case — even though Goines never mentioned using an informant in any other case documents.

The discrepanc­ies in Goines’ case documents ultimately helped persuade a judge to declare Mallet “actually innocent.” His brother Steven Mallet, saw his case overturned two weeks later.

Jonathan Landers, who represente­d Otis Mallet, said their cases revealed a lack of meaningful oversight of line officers by supervisor­s.

“Someone could have looked at that April expense report, compared it to the underlying offense report and seen something was off,” he said. “And then that informatio­n should have been turned over to the DA’s office.” Prosecutor­s agreed. “The May expense report directly contradict­s (Goines’) trial testimony and the offense report in question, so it should have raised red flags,” said Joshua Reiss, post-conviction chief at the Harris County DA’s Office. “It raises a lot of questions as to ‘Were these expense reports being closely watched or not?’ ”

Reached by phone, Gamble said he didn’t remember Mallet’s arrest, but said he reviewed any expenses on any case he was involved with — and a situation where expense reports didn’t line up with details in an arrest report would concern him.

“All the expenditur­es should add up,” he said. “If you spend money — any money spent should be documented.”

Landers, meanwhile, said Mallet’s casework and the audits underscore­d a more fundamenta­l problem.

“The policies are there for a reason, so police are held accountabl­e,” he said. “They’re enforcing the law. They ought to be following their own rules. You have to think why they have those rules — to prevent situations like what happened in Otis Mallet’s case.”

 ?? Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er ?? HPD Chief Art Acevedo says he needs more time to review the documents raising concerns about the department’s oversight of officers using confidenti­al informants.
Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er HPD Chief Art Acevedo says he needs more time to review the documents raising concerns about the department’s oversight of officers using confidenti­al informants.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States