Sloppy Detective Work Implicates Wrong Woman

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Nursing Mother Handcuffed, Hauled Away During Traffic Stop
Sloppy Detective Work Implicates Wrong Woman

POSTED: 4:33 pm MDT August 25, 2005
UPDATED: 9:44 am MDT August 26, 2005

A nursing mother was separated from her baby, handcuffed, and abruptly taken to jail and now, the state patrol and the Lakewood Police Department are investigating.

The mother told 7NEWS' John Ferrugia that she was terrified and humiliated by police mistakes.

It all began when the woman and her husband were pulled over during a routine traffic stop.

"I doubled up kids in the back seat in belts. So they were restrained, but not properly. But ... it was my fault for not having them in there properly," said father Ricky Archuleta.

Ricky expected a ticket but was surprised when the trooper told him he couldn't even drive.

"He ran my license. He came back and said it had been rescinded for an unpaid traffic ticket. I knew I had paid the ticket," Ricky said.

The fact is, he had and the computer got it wrong. Then, the officer said Ricky's wife, Mercedes, had to drive. While the trooper checked her license, she nursed her baby in the front seat. Suddenly, the officer was at Ricky's door.

"He said, 'Take the baby from your wife.' I said, 'Why?' He goes, 'Take the baby from your wife, now,'" Ricky said.

The officer didn't explain why he wanted Mercedes out of the car, the couple said.

"I took the baby off and started to cover up a little bit. When I started to step out of the car, he just told me put my right arm in back of me," said Mercedes. "He grabbed my left arm, put it in back of me, cuffed me and then I was thrown against the car. And my kids were crying."

"She got out of the car. He just kind of shoved her against there, and her blouse is undone. And all my kids see her just up against (the car). Immediately, they're like, 'What are they doing? What are they doing to Mom?'" Ricky said.

"I turned to him and said, 'Excuse me, why am I being arrested?' And he goes, 'You need to be silent,'" Mercedes said.

"I'm in shock. The baby's screaming. The kids start crying and screaming and I don't know what to do. I actually don't know what I said. I said something and he just yelled in the car and said, 'You need to be silent,'" Ricky said.

"He said, 'There's a warrant for your arrest.' I said, 'No, there's a mistake.' I said, 'There's no warrant for my arrest ... I've never been in trouble for anything in my life,'" Mercedes said.

"He was rude. I think he was overzealous," Ricky said.

"I thought I was going to get sick. I felt like I was going to faint. I was humiliated because I was there with this stranger and here I am with my blouse undone and he didn't give me a chance to tie it up, and I was just so worried for my baby," Mercedes said.

At the Jefferson County Jail, Mercedes was strip-searched and said it became clear to officers that she didn't match the description of a suspect who had tattoos and scars. She had neither.

"(The female officer) says, 'I know this isn't you.' And I said, 'Can you call someone? Can they release me?' She said, 'Nope, I can't do that,'" Mercedes said.

Mercedes and her husband were unaware of what got her there -- sloppy work by the Lakewood Police Department. A detective had substituted the innocent woman's information for a suspect with a lengthy police record.

Lakewood Division Chief Clarene Shelley said the detective made a big mistake. She said the Lakewood detective was trying to identify a woman involved in a domestic violence issue and when the detective pulled the name, Mercedes Archuleta, on the Colorado Bureau of Investigation's crime computer, the name came up as an alias for Phyllis Rivera.

But instead of investigating whether Rivera was involved in the domestic violence dispute, the detective issued a warrant for the phony name Rivera had been using -- Mercedes Archuleta.

Shelley said the detectives never called Mercedes to ask her, 'Are you this person?' and she never checked Mercedes' address to see if it matched the address of the suspect.

What's more, the detective never pulled a photo of either person to verify identity.

"She just pulled my name up because I was the only one she could find about my age," Mercedes said.

While the police department has admitted its mistake and offered to meet with the family to apologize personally, Mercedes has declined. She said she is embarrassed and humiliated.

"If (the detective) had to spend a day in jail like I did and be scared, not knowing what's going to happen, and have her family crying and worried about her, then I think she would understand where I'm coming from," Mercedes said.

The Lakewood officer involved has been reprimanded, but not suspended.

The Colorado State Patrol has begun an internal investigation of the conduct and procedures of the trooper who made the arrest.

Meanwhile, Lakewood police and the city attorney have initiated steps to remove the arrest and any mention of the innocent woman from public records.

But clearly that has not yet been successful. Mercedes' arrest is still listed on the CBI database.

Have a comment on this story or a news tip? E-mail 7NEWS Investigators.

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/new...00484&qs=1;bp=t
 
I vote for the detective being the ladies house slave for a month....

sounds fair.

My wife went to renew her drivers liscense and found out there was a warrant for her arrest :eek:

turned out some clerk had typed in the ID number one digit off :mad:
 
Lakewood CO ? When I went to gunsmithing school there in the 70s the ex-cops at the school said that was the worst PD they had ever seen !!! There were lots of stories about their incompetance. The mayor was wacko liberal who passed a law baning guns EVERY year and the state kept saying NO you can't do that !! :rolleyes:
 
Lakewood eh? Google for Pierce Brooks, ex-LAPD. Amazon might still have his Officer Down, Code 3 book. The street patrols used to wear suits. Really. Strange place.
 
Someone is going to get a good chunk of change. Actualy I would sue to have all those involved fired and not be allowed to be re-hired. But if she couldn't get that, then sue their pants off.
 
Isn't Colorado a suburb of California?

LOL. Now THAT'S funny.

Colorado is a "shall issue" and "open carry" OK state. Our CCW law has none of the BS restrictions against carrying in Church, bars, etc. No AWB. Concealed carry in a car without a permit is legal. We also have pre-emption, though it is somewhat overridden at the moment by the City of Denver. We also have a "make my day" law that gives a person in their own home almost unlimited authority to use lethal force against an illegal intruder AND then be protected from any civil suits involved in using lethal force (and we have had this since the 80's).

Colorado is MORE gun friendly than most states, including Texas.

Denver and Boulder would both love to be part of California, but they are the exceptions.

In terms of the lakewood police ... I have friends who are leo's in other departments. They have a dim view of the lakewood police department of old. Denver cops talk about lakewood cops pulling over Denver patrol cars to give them tickets 20 or so years ago (can you imagine -- one LEO giving another in full uniform a ticket -- the way Denver is situated, Denver cops often wander across city lines while patrolling and most burbs appreciate that). And lakewood has always been somewhat uppity in that they require all their officers to have college degrees.

That said and a few whacko politics at the top set aside ... the people of lakewood (and I did used to live there) pretty much like their police. From the point of view of the average guy, the lakewood police tend to be polite and professional. This is unlike the Denver cops, who patrol some godawful areas of the city and some of whom think their badge makes them a little tin god unaffected by the laws/rights of the little people (this is the opinion of many, and from the cops I've known there are definitely some like this).

Even my friend who is a Denver cop but not really a serious gun lover used to brag that if he found a firearm ANYWHERE in a person's vehicle, regardless of condition, he had full power to arrest them for carrying a concealed weapon. And the Denver law really was that restrictive, which is why we pre-empted them at the state level with our new gun laws a couple of years ago.

I don't know how to explain the huge SNAFU that happened with the breastfeeding woman. All I can say is, I hope she gets a WHOLE lot of money for it. Haven't lived in Lakewood for some years, and things may have gone sharply downhill.

I actually feel for the husband, too. I can't imagine how I'd feel while the cops are manhandling my wife and I've just got to stand back and look after my kids while it's happening.
 
Denver and Boulder would both love to be part of California, but they are the exceptions.

Correction on my part! :o

Aren't Denver and Boulder suburbs of California? ;)

From the stories I hear from my Brother, who lives in Lyons and works in Longmont, it sounds like California out there.
 
This story will need to be watched and updated. It is the perfect example of how LE can mess up someones life in a minute. If that detective is guilty of what the article stated, he needs to be fired, and held liable for any and all damages. But we all know, that probably wont happen.
 
my Brother, who lives in Lyons and works in Longmont, it sounds like California out there.

Lyons and Longmont are where a lot of people who work in Boulder live, but I've actually thought they were both pretty nice communities. They're not like rural colorado really, though, because they are both where a lot of "city" people go to live.

There are anti gun people here, of course. And there are political groups that don't like our gun laws because they're not very strict. But overall I'd call it a gun friendly state.

When I travel to states with CCW I see a lot of "no weapons" signs up on businesses and etc. Almost NEVER see those in colorado, even in Denver.
 
Since I have been carrying with a chl here in Texas I have not come across a single business with a sign barring licensed carry guns.

I have come across a lot of signs that point out that it is a crime to enter with an unlicensed gun, but no 30.06 signs yet.

I noticed on the news that the NFL is now patting down customers, from the waist up. How bright is that? They tell everyone that they need to be there 3 hours early and that they will be checked from the waist up. So anyone that wants to smuggle something in just needs to put it in their pants pocket?
 
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