Saturday, February 13, 2016

HOT TO TROT FOR COPS

The mistress of slain Harris County deputy Darren Goforth quickly took up with one of the deputies investigating the shooting of her lover, then with another deputy

An investigation into the cold blooded murder of Harris County sheriff’s deputy Darren Goforth in Houston last August revealed that the chief witness was – surprise, unpleasant surprise - his mistress who had been with him at the time of the shooting.

Apparently his mistress got over the grieving process rather quickly because she started screwing the lead investigator in the case. Then she screwed another deputy. Both deputies got fired for having sex with a witness.

And on Friday the sheriff’s department fired a third deputy, announcing he was fired for sending the woman 30 salacious text messages, not for ramrodding her.

It would not surprise me if a few more deputies also romped around with Goforth’s bereaved mistress. Nor would it surprise me if she had been ramrodded by officers in other Houston area law enforcement agencies. Some women are just hot to trot for cops.

I remember when years ago ther was a police department in the Los Angeles area where around 40 officers – yes you read right, 40 – all screwed the same chick.

The Houston Press seems to question whether Shannon Miles, the nutjob who emptied his pistol into Deputy Goforth’s back, was influenced by the Black Lives Matter rhetoric. There is no doubt in my mind that Miles, nutty or not, was influenced by the hateful harangue against cops that has been resounding around the country since the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Not a scintilla of doubt!

THE GOFORTH INVESTIGATION IS STARTING TO SOUND LIKE A TELENOVELA

By Michael Barajas

Houston Press
February 11, 2016

In the immediate aftermath of the murder of Harris County Sheriff's Deputy Darren Goforth last August, local law enforcement officials blamed more than just the mentally ill sometimes-homeless man charged with ambushing Goforth and firing 15 rounds into his back as the deputy gassed up his cruiser.

In an emotional press conference following the shooting, District Attorney Devon Anderson connected Goforth's killing to the growing national movement to hold police accountable for the shooting and killing of unarmed citizens, saying, “There are a few bad apples in every profession. That does not mean that there should be open warfare on law enforcement.” Sheriff Ron Hickman was more explicit, saying the increased scrutiny of law enforcement (“rhetoric,” as he put it) had led to the “calculated, cold-blooded assassination of police officers.” While Shannon Miles was the suspect accused of pulling the trigger, Hickman told CNN “it isn't a very far stretch to believe that that kind of rhetoric could influence someone” to commit such a crime.

It's still not clear what motivated the slaying – that is, other than the possibility of untreated mental illness (Miles, who has a history of state hospital commitment, was ordered into psychiatric treatment earlier this week by a judge who declared him incompetent to stand trial). But five months after law enforcement officials laid partial blame for Goforth's murder at the feet of Black Lives Matter protesters and the like, the actual developments in the case continue to cast a shadow onto the Harris County Sheriff's Office's investigation into the killing.

The first bizarre twist came weeks after the murder, when prosecutors disclosed (in a required, routine legal filing, it should be noted) that an eyewitness to Goforth's killing told investigators she'd been in a sexual relationship with the deputy. Miles's court-appointed attorney, Anthony Osso, seized on the opportunity, arguing that Goforth wasn't technically on duty at the time of the murder (even though he was in uniform) and was instead meeting up with his mistress — depending on how you look at it, either a defense attorney doing his job or a nauseating attempt to skirt the death penalty in the assassination of a police officer in a public place.

Then things got even weirder two months after the shooting when Sheriff Hickman fired a homicide investigator who admitted to having “consensual sexual contact” with the same woman. The investigator, Sgt. Craig Clopton, was one of many from the department's homicide unit who assisted with the initial investigation into Goforth's murder. While the sheriff's office has claimed with a straight face that Clopton's misconduct had nothing to do with it, HCSO recently implemented a new policy clarifying that deputies can't have sex with people in custody or witnesses involved in an ongoing investigation (because evidently such things need to be clarified at HCSO).

And then on Wednesday, in what Hickman has called “a never-ending cycle of conduct that's embarrassing to every professional peace officer,” the department fired deputy M. DeLeon over his relationship with the same witness. “The ongoing investigation by our Internal Affairs Division concluded that Deputy DeLeon was untruthful during the course of their investigation,” the department said in a prepared statement.

By late Wednesday, local stations were reporting that yet a third officer is being investigated for his relationship with the same witness. Hickman told KTRK that, like Clopton and DeLeon, that third officer (who's yet to be named) will likely be fired. It's unclear if any of this will help Miles's attorneys make their case once they return to court (Miles is expected to be transferred to a state hospital this week for competency restoration).

In August, Hickman and others pointed the finger at criminal justice reformers who contend that public confidence in law enforcement has eroded, saying they helped create the climate that led to Goforth's death. Yet since then, what we've learned may only erode confidence in the department tasked with investigating the tragic death of one of their own.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

These holster sniffing, back seat thrashing, badge bunnies hang around for a chance to diddle a cop. Usually they are nymphomaniacs. The cops are married and pass her around like a library book. All goes well until one of the cops gets a little fellacio that he doesn't get at home and falls in love. Then all hell breaks loose. Love triangles, jealousy and letters to wives. Once she has ruined a unit, she will go to another division and start over.

We had a college intern on the night shift and I had to put her in records on days because the cops were trying to f**k her to death and productivity dropped. Her husband wasn't real happy either.