Lodi News-Sentinel

22 Baltimore police officers discredite­d; prosecutor­s must wipe out 790 conviction­s

- By Tim Prudente

BALTIMORE — Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby has begun asking the courts to throw out nearly 800 criminal cases handled by 22 city police officers, saying she found reason to distrust 14 cops in addition to those convicted in the Gun Trace Task Force scandal.

These additional officers had not previously been disclosed by her office. Three of them remain with the Baltimore Police, a police spokesman said. The three are Robert Hankard, a detective in central Baltimore; Kenneth Ivery, a sergeant in Southwest Baltimore; and Jason Giordano, a sergeant in the citywide robbery unit. Hankard has been suspended. They did not respond to a message to the department.

Ten others have resigned; one retired and one was fired. One other officer, Det. Sean Suiter, was shot to death nearly two years ago in West Baltimore. Most of these men have not been charged with a crime, but nearly all were named in testimony during the federal Gun Trace Task Force trial. Mosby says her office has no choice; the integrity of their cases is compromise­d.

Mosby’s office said it draws no distinctio­n between the eight convicted officers and the rest.

“When you have sworn police officers involved in egregious and long-standing criminal activity such as planting guns and drugs, stealing drugs and money, selling drugs, making illegal arrests, and bringing false charges, our legal and ethical obligation in the pursuit of justice leaves us no other recourse but to ‘right the wrongs’ of unjust conviction­s associated with corrupt police officers,” Mosby wrote in an email.

Prosecutor­s began asking the courts this week to undo nearly 800 conviction­s that hinged on investigat­ions by or testimony from these 22 officers. Mosby provided the names of 17 of them to The Baltimore Sun. She declined to identify any others, saying they may remain under federal investigat­ion. She directed questions to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Baltimore. A spokeswoma­n there declined to comment.

Eight of the 22 are former members of the gun squad, those who were convicted of racketeeri­ng crimes and sentenced to federal prison for terms ranging from seven to 25 years. Six of those task force members accepted plea deals; two were convicted at trial. During the trial, the officers testified about their crimes and implicated other cops who have not been charged. They admitted to stealing money from citizens, lying on paperwork and bilking the city for unearned overtime pay — some even claimed overtime for hours they spent on vacation.

The scandal continues to reverberat­e across the city. Mosby’s office launched an exhaustive effort to review thousands of arrests made by the rogue squad and those implicated at trial. Prosecutor­s began filing papers this week asking the courts to throw out the tainted cases. She says her office found 790 cases to be compromise­d. Lawyers plan to file papers in 200 cases a week.

A judge will consider their request to erase the bad conviction­s after 30 days. These hearings will be held each afternoon.

“It is still very early in the process, and we are hopeful for the swift vacatur of all of the many tainted conviction­s,” said Melissa Rothstein, spokeswoma­n for the Office of the Public Defender in Baltimore.

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