Sloppy Police Work in Colorado OR How your life can be ruined

Wildcard

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Why Are Hundreds Of Coloradans Wrongly Arrested?
Some Say It's Sloppy Police Work

POSTED: 1:29 pm MST February 20, 2006
UPDATED: 3:21 pm MST February 20, 2006
DENVER -- A 7NEWS investigation revealed there are hundreds of Coloradans whose records erroneously reflect that they are criminals.

Valerie Rodriguez is one of those who was arrested and thrown in jail for a crime she didn't commit.

Rodriguez works for a national financial firm and has no criminal record outside some traffic citations. Yet when she applied for part-time holiday work at the post office, she was turned down because she was told there was a warrant out for her arrest.

That began a professional and personal nightmare that has not yet ended for her.

"I started crying when I first turned myself in because I was scared," said Rodriguez. "I remember just sitting in jail thinking, 'Oh my God! I can't believe this is happening to me. I've never been arrested before, I've never been in trouble.'"

Rodriguez is working hard to become a licensed securities broker, sometimes even working two jobs. But when she applied for a holiday job, she was stunned with the result of the background check.

"I had a warrant issued for my arrest for disturbing the peace and assault," Rodriguez said.

The police report charges that Rodriguez beat another woman outside a Conoco gas station at 35th and Downing Street and then ran away. The victim gave police Rodriguez's name. A 16-year-old student witnessed the attack.

"I didn't know what happened. I don't know how my name got involved in this. I was basically looking for answers," Rodriguez said. But when she went to Denver police to ask, she was arrested.

"After they put me in handcuffs, they walked me down for booking. From there they fingerprinted me, they took my photo and they placed me in the cell," Rodriguez said.

After posting bond, she spent the next few weeks trying to prepare for a court date when she would face her accuser and the Denver police officer who swore out the general warrant against her.

But when she got to court, "There was nobody involved in this case against me there," Rodriguez said.

The police officer in the case, the person she allegedly assaulted and the witness never showed up.

"They just dismissed the case," Rodriguez said.

But that left her with an arrest on her record and few answers.

According to the Denver police report, Darren Young witnessed the attack for which Rodriguez was arrested.

He said the perpetrator was skinny, about 120 pounds and didn't look anything like Rodriguez. Young said he's never even seen Rodriguez before.

"Never seen her ... never. Positive, she wasn't there," Young said. "The lady I saw she looked like she lived on the streets and everything. She looked like she was just on drugs and everything. That woman looked nothing like this lady right here."

Young was never called by police to identify Rodriguez nor was he ever subpoenaed to court to testify.

7NEWS' investigation has found Rodriguez's false arrest and ongoing effort to clear her name is hardly unique in Colorado. According the records held by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, more than 750 people have been cleared as "misidentified victims" through a fingerprint check in the past four years.

They had been arrested, or the subject of bad warrants, or their record simply reflected a crime they didn't commit. And those are just the people who knew to protest and clear their record.

Last year 7NEWS did a story on a similar victim, Jerome Powell. He was the subject of sloppy police work in Aurora. Despite his spotless record, he was falsely arrested after a traffic stop on a warrant for a felony he didn't commit.

"I've lost a couple of thousand of dollars just trying to stay out of jail," Powell said. "I think people should know that people are being falsely arrested. I think the public should know because then they know that there are bad cops out there or they're bad jurisdictions."

7NEWS also did a story on Mercedes Archuleta, whose nursing baby was taken from her as she was arrested and put in jail after her name was mistakenly entered into a felony warrant in Lakewood. Again, it was a result of sloppy police work.

The American Civil Liberties Union is representing her in a lawsuit.

"I feel that they're just trying to cover up their mistakes," Archuleta said. "If the police are making these mistakes, then they need to be held accountable for them."

"For me, it's just been really hard. Having to deal with this, take time off work from this, having different court dates I had to appear at. It just basically turned my world upside down," Rodriguez said.

Holding them accountable includes finding out which police or sheriff's departments are making the most false arrests in the state or entering the wrong arrest data in the records of innocent people in Colorado.

To find out, 7NEWS asked the CBI for records that would give us that information. So far, the state officials have refused. But the attorney general is now reconsidering 7NEWS' request.

As for Rodriguez, Denver police officials admit the case was probably mishandled by the officer. 7NEWS' investigation has caused her case to be turned over to the department's internal affairs for investigation.

But that is little consolation to Rodriguez, who has now spent hundreds of dollars trying to clear her name.

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/7263019/detail.html?rss=den&psp=news
 
Impossible.

A police officer, any police officer, simply can't perform his job in anything less than a conscientious, professional, ethical, legal manner.

Or so we've been told so many times...
 
thats F'ed up! How are warrents being issued for crimes never commited? More importantly, how are hundreds of people being falsely charged? These aren't random names, they're people that exist. Sounds like a massive database error, however citizen and criminal databases are being confused is beyond me. If it's not an electronic error then that is some seriously sloppy work and someone should be suspended and more importantly get the innocents' records expunged and compensate them.
 
I'd be curious to compare the SSNs and license numbers of the mistaken and the proper subject, sounds like an order error to me, a bad sorting operation...
 
I bliv it! Stuff lik this maks my blood boil. Id su th district for all thyr worth if thy trid somthing lik that on m.

Deleted suggestive unlawful act.

Antipitas
 
yeah, we know. All of this is a result of all cops being power hungry, abusive pieces of slime. What a surprise, a cop-bashing thread.:rolleyes:
 
The simple fact is that mistakes made by LEO of this magnitude cannot be acceptable, especially when your talking about ruining so many lives.
 
dont laugh or be sarcastic about it....:mad:

My wife went to renew her drivers liscense at the county seat. She was informed that she had a warrant out for her arrest when she tried to renew her drivers liscence at the DPS Station there. Luckily her family has lived in this county for a long time, the folks at the county seat helped her out. Seems some enterprising dyslexic clerk had typed in the numbers wrong.

So its not something to be sarcastic or laugh at.

There is some of this that does go on in the real world.

another story

Here in Texas before some expectent mothers can get aid they must file an affidavit staing who the father is. This expectant mother listed a guy I knew. He took the DNA test and it proved not to be his. The mother simply listed his name to get the aid started. His wife didnt think it was a laughing matter. It almost cost him his marraige till it got sorted out. Even after the DNA test he still had to show up for the hearing.

I have another friend who had a son who was stationed at Ft. Hood. Somehow he hooked up with this chick with 2 kids. The kids were hers by a previous marriage. In the meantime she opened up accounts using his name. She took the furniture and items she purchased and had them delivered to her mothers house. When it hits the fan and he finds out she reports him to the Attorney General's office for failure to pay support. He gets arrested, he calls dad to bail him out. Needless to say the AG's rep ended up very red face for arresting a soldier for child support and the kids were not even his.

so yep this crap happens.....and it aint funny :mad:

Seems Government lately has gotten lazy and forgotten about the innocent until proven guilty.
 
Eghad,

Did you ever get any details as to how this mixup happened with your wife? I'm trying to figure out how warrants get mixed up as in the original news article.
 
a clerk typing in wrong identification numbers......one number off and just happend to match my wife's.

It happened a week before my wife went to renew her DL. She was pretty upset. However, The good folks at the county seat got it figured out and notified the proper agency to get it corrected.
 
What a surprise, a cop-bashing thread

Lets see. There is a serious problem in Colorado Law enforcement for this many warrants issued on the WRONG people. Yea, cop bashing. :rolleyes:

I guess some LEO's are always right, even when they are wrong.
 
Well, Wildcard. Let's see, since you are always whining your poor little ass off about everyone making you feel bad about yourself, I guess the story of " The BoY Who Cried Wolf" comes to mind.
Yeah, that about says it all about you and your constant "cop bashing" threads.
 
Well, Wildcard. Let's see, since you are always whining your poor little ass off about everyone making you feel bad about yourself

Dont feel bad at all. YOU must be projecting your own self worth into your statement, Breacher. ;)

If you dont like what I post, I suggest you use the ignore feature.

I guess the story of " The BoY Who Cried Wolf" comes to mind.

What kind of crack are you on?
 
BreacherUp!,

If you dont see a some problems with some in LE today, then I submit that you are part of said problems.
 
No. That's where you go wrong with your whiny threads. You think that b/c you read one news article a day about some knucklehead cop that acts like a criminal, ALL cops are criminals. That is why I have disdain for you, or anyone that judges an entire profession based on a few bad apples.
 
yeah, we know. All of this is a result of all cops being power hungry, abusive pieces of slime. What a surprise, a cop-bashing thread
Well how about a little story about the topic where the cops were the good guys?

About 20 years ago I opened the mailbox and had a registered letter from the prosecutors office in Cincinnati Ohio informing me that I owed $26,000.00 in back child support,,,to a woman I never met,,along with a notice that a warrant would be issued for my arrest if i didn't respond.

My first name was spelled correctly, my middle name was not, and my last name was spelled correctly(IIRC - maybe not though - it's been a long time) The SSN on the document was not mine, neither was the last known address. In short, it was clear that they had me mixed up with someone else,,,,but because the names were close enough,, I got the mail.

I laughed it off and went to work. At work I was telling some people about it, and a cop that was shopping ( he was in uniform,,,not sure if he was on or off duty) overheard me and came over. He marched me over to a phone and said "Call them right now while I'm here". He explained to me that if it was a case of mistaken ID, I'd be SOL in any attempt to sue for false arrest. Seems the prosecutor is exempt or something from being sued, and the warrant was drawn by the prosecutor. True or not I never bothered to check up on it.
I just made the call. he (the cop) got on the phone for a few seconds, ID'ed himself as an Akron police officer, and vouched for my ID and how it had a different SS number.

d b <-- two thumbs up for a cop being there and being a decent Joe.
 
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