Police trample on procedure at scene; Errors may affect strength of case in Jude beating
- Originally published in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Wisconsin) April 11, 2005 Copyright 2005 Journal Sentinel Inc.
By JOHN DIEDRICH, Staff, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
For
at least an hour after Frank Jude Jr. was beaten, the off-duty
Milwaukee police officers later charged in the crime and others were
allowed to move freely in and out of the crime scene and talk to each
other, according to witnesses and police sources.
In contrast, three women who witnessed the beating were separated so
they couldn't talk to each other and were not allowed to leave the
crime scene.
The on-duty supervisor in
charge of the scene for that first hour on Oct. 24 - police Sgt.
Corstan Court, who had only nine months in that job - failed to follow
the basic police protocol to preserve a crime scene that is set by
state Department of Justice guidelines.
The scene changed once the department's internal investigators arrived
at S. Ellen St. in Milwaukee's Bay View neighborhood, according to
witnesses and police sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
The off-duty officers were separated and interviewed, the street where
Jude was kicked and punched was closed, and evidence in a pool of
Jude's blood was collected.
But even then
the scene was not handled as carefully as called for in police
procedures from the state. In combing the scene for evidence,
investigators missed Jude's diamond earring in the blood. The mother of
a witness found it and gave it to a detective.
Also, the president of the police union at the time, Bradley DeBraska,
was allowed to enter the crime scene and advised officers not to speak
to internal investigators or let them into an officer's home.
As the department conducts its internal investigation into the Jude
case - which could result in officers being disciplined or fired -
those crime scene mistakes may loom large for the on-duty officers and
supervisors. The mistakes may also affect the strength of the case
against the off-duty officers accused of beating Jude.
Investigators may never know what was lost when the scene was not
controlled. Statements from off-duty officers may have been
"contaminated" and evidence lost. As the state guide on police practice
says, "Once the scene is changed, you cannot change it back."
Police experts said the scene was handled poorly, which makes it look as though police officers were given special treatment.
"Someone had to realize, 'We have a problem here.' . . . You are at a
scene. You preserve it. It is basic police practice," said Steve
Rothlein, second-in-command of the Miami-Dade Police Department and an
instructor on internal police investigations for the International
Association of Chiefs of Police.
"It sounds like a complete lack of supervision over the scene," Rothlein said.
Milwaukee police procedures are spelled out in the department's rules
and regulations as well as in training memos and other documents. Those
documents dictate how officers perform basic tasks, such as making
traffic stops and handling prisoners and crime scenes.
The department failed to provide details of its procedures involving
off-duty officers at a crime scene under a March 3 open records request
made by the Journal Sentinel. It is one of 15 records requests
regarding the Jude case made by the newspaper dating back to Feb. 7
that remained unfilled. Police Chief Nannette Hegerty declined to
comment for this story.
A 5-year-old copy
of the department's rules in the city's Legislative Reference Bureau -
the most current copy of the rules publicly available - says only that
a person of higher rank must go to any incident involving an off-duty
officer.
Other state guidelines given to all departments, including Milwaukee, spell out crime scene procedures.
The first step is to detain and identify everyone on the scene,
according to the Wisconsin Law Enforcement Officers Criminal Handbook.
After the scene is secured, the handbook says, no "non-authorized
personnel" should be allowed in the scene.
The state's guide requires officers to separate witnesses and suspects,
"to prevent them from exchanging their versions of what happened." It
also calls for careful identification and collection of evidence.
According to several witnesses and police sources, those basic crime scene procedures were not followed after Jude was beaten.
Nearly a dozen involved
Early on Oct. 24, Jude, Lovell Harris, Kirsten Antonissen and Katie
Brown went to a party at a house owned by Officer Andrew Spengler in
the 2800 block of S. Ellen St.
Jude said he felt uncomfortable, though nothing was said. He asked Antonissen if the people at the party were
racist. Jude is biracial, and Harris is black. Antonissen, Brown and the people at the party are white.
The four left and got into Antonissen's pickup truck, which was
surrounded by a group of men who identified themselves as police
officers and accused Jude of taking Spengler's wallet and badge.
Jude said he was pulled from the truck, held down, searched and savagely beaten.
Antonissen counted a dozen men attacking Jude. Milwaukee County
District Attorney E. Michael McCann, who said at least 10 people were
at the scene, charged Spengler and two other off-duty officers, Jon
Bartlett and Daniel Masarik, with felonies Feb. 28.
Brown called 911 at 2:49 a.m. and said people claiming to be police
officers were searching their belongings, police records show. Four
minutes later, two officers, Joseph Schabel and Nicole Martinez, and
Court were dispatched from police District 2, records show.
Martinez has been an officer since 1993, and Schabel joined the force
in 2000, according to records. Court became an officer in 1997 and was
promoted to sergeant in November 2003. Three days before Jude's
beating, Court's one-year probation was extended, records show. Police
Lt. Tom Klusman, president of the supervisors union, said Court's
probation was extended because he was off for family leave for three
months during his first year as a sergeant.
Contacted through their attorneys or union representatives, Court, Schabel and Martinez did not comment for this report.
Story changes
Ten minutes after the first call, Schabel and Martinez arrived on S.
Ellen St., followed two minutes later by Court, records show.
Antonissen and Brown said they saw Schabel and Martinez park down the
block and "casually" walk up to where Jude was being beaten.
In a police report, Schabel wrote that Jude was resisting him and the
off-duty officers, attempting to strike them. Schabel said he gave "two
focused strikes" to Jude's shoulder to get his arm out from under him
to handcuff him.
Jude was arrested on suspicion of theft and resisting officers, but no criminal charges were ever filed against Jude or Harris.
New details surfaced from the criminal complaint and Schabel's testimony against the three officers in court in March.
Schabel said that as he restrained Jude, Masarik kicked Jude in the head.
After Jude was handcuffed, Bartlett kicked him in the head and Spengler
punched him in the head, Schabel said. Bartlett also grabbed Schabel's
pen, but Schabel said he didn't see what Bartlett did with it. Jude
said something was jammed into both of his ears. Schabel said he
ordered the off-duty officers to back off, which they did.
Martinez, a former emergency medical technician, gave a similar account in the criminal complaint.
A police wagon arrived at 3:09 a.m. and took Jude to St. Francis Hospital, where he stayed for 2 1/2 days.
At some point, the department's internal investigators arrived. Their
dispatch typically does not show up on a log and didn't in this case.
Witnesses said it was at least an hour before detectives from the
internal division arrived.
Scene 'boggled' mind
Antonissen, Brown and Tina Schultz, who also was at the party, all said
they were separated by on-duty officers and not allowed to talk.
Meanwhile, the off-duty officers and others at the party walked freely
around the scene, left the scene, talked to each other and went in and
out of Spengler's house.
Antonissen's
mother, Linda Chapman, who arrived on the scene with her husband,
Charles Hackney, about 30 minutes after Jude was beaten, saw one
officer alone go in and out of Spengler's house six times.
"It just boggled my mind," Hackney said. "They separate these three
girls and you have all these cops going in and out of the house and
talking. I was thinking, 'If this is a crime scene, secure the damn
thing.' "
Linda Chapman said none of the
officers focused on the area that was soaked with Jude's blood, where
she said "it looked like someone had hit a deer."
Instead, the uniformed officers searched the ground with flashlights
for the missing badge. At one point, Chapman and Hackney said, they
joined the search.
Cars continued to
drive on S. Ellen St., the witnesses said. Linda Chapman also saw
Jude's car, which was heavily vandalized, and it was not guarded.
Sometime after 4 a.m., detectives from the Professional Performance
Division, which does internal investigations, arrived. Changes quickly
occurred, witnesses said. The street was shut down, the off-duty
officers were separated and interviews began, and the focus turned to
the scene where Jude was beaten. Evidence was collected using rubber
gloves, but the investigators missed his earring.
Police Capt. Mary Hoerig, head of the division, came to the scene,
according to witnesses and police sources. Several of the internal
investigators apologized, Chapman said.
At some point, DeBraska, then the union president, entered the scene
and yelled to the suspected officers not to talk to internal
investigators, witnesses and police sources said. DeBraska has
acknowledged he was on the scene to advise members. DeBraska, who
retired from the department March 31, did not comment for this report.
After interviewing several of the off-duty officers, internal
investigators tried to get into Spengler's house but were turned back.
They don't know what the off-duty officers were doing in the house
before their arrival, police sources said.
From chaos to crime scene
Police practice experts said the situation on S. Ellen St. sounded
chaotic: On-duty officers arrived to find fellow off-duty officers
subduing a man they say committed a crime and resisted. Given trust
among officers, it would be understandable that on-duty officers would
help Spengler and the others, the experts said. But the situation
turned when Schabel and Martinez witnessed the crime: Jude being struck
while handcuffed.
"Once he was handcuffed
and he was kicked, beat or whatever, all bets are off at that point,"
said Rothlein, of the Miami-Dade Police Department. "Any officer on or
off duty has a responsibility to step in and stop that."
Stan Stojkovic, dean of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's Helen
Bader School of Social Welfare, said the responsibility for handling
the scene properly lands squarely on Court. Quick, decisive action was
needed because the situation was so chaotic and involved police
officers, he said.
"The dynamic for
pollution of a crime scene is very high when cops are involved,"
Stojkovic said. "The sergeant should have made that assessment,
separated the actors and taken control of the scene.
"It sounded like what happened on that scene was really a nightmare."
IMPROPER PROTOCOL
These were among the errors made at the Frank Jude Jr. crime scene:
* Officers who ultimately were charged with crimes were allowed to roam freely and talk to each other.
* Investigators missed Jude's diamond earring at the spot of the beating. The mother of a witness found it.
* The president of the police union was allowed to enter the crime scene.
Source: Police and witnesses