Officer, you've got the wrong person 02/15/2010
![]() Three police cars pulled into Christina FourHorn's front yard one afternoon just before she was supposed to pick up her daughter at school. The officers had a warrant for her arrest.
"What do you mean robbery?" FourHorn remembers asking the officers. Her only brushes with the law had been a few speeding tickets. She was locked up in a Colorado jail. They took her clothes and other belongings and handed her an oversize black-and-white striped uniform. She protested for five days, telling jailers the arrest was a mistake. Finally, her husband borrowed enough money to bail her out. "They wouldn't tell me the details," she said. Later, it became clear that FourHorn was right, that Denver police had arrested the wrong woman. Police were searching for Christin Fourhorn, who lived in Oklahoma. Their names were similar, and Christina FourHorn, a mother with no criminal record living in Sterling, Colorado, had been caught in the mix-up. FourHorn went public about her case more than two years ago, filing a lawsuit that alleged the arrest violated her constitutional rights. The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from arrest without probable cause. The problem of mistaken arrests continues, said attorneys with the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado. The group, which represented FourHorn, calls Denver's police work "recklessly sloppy." An ACLU mistaken identity lawsuit on behalf of four other people is pending against Colorado police agencies. A mistaken identity arrest occurs almost every day, said policing experts and officials at the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. But most people taken into custody are released shortly after the mistake is realized. Since the FourHorn case, the ACLU found at least 237 cases in Colorado in which police may have arrested the wrong person. The figure is likely a small sample since police often release those wrongfully arrested before the first court appearance, the ACLU said. "We are trying to demonstrate that this is a widespread practice," said Mark Silverstein, an ACLU attorney who filed FourHorn's suit in 2008. FourHorn's case was settled, and the terms remain confidential. This is not some fluke in a rational system. --Mark Silverstein, American Civil Liberties Union lawyer "This is not some fluke in a rational system," Silverstein said. "It's something that happens regularly, predictably, and therefore the city should be doing more to ameliorate the problem." Silverstein said his search of Colorado court records showed repeated examples of police arresting the wrong person: "Defendant states this is not him and he has never driven a car!!!!" said one. "Dismissed, wrong defendant. Sister used her ID," another said. In 2009, Denver's Department of Safety found 51 cases in which a person claimed the warrant naming them was incorrect -- a number that's a small fraction of the 46,864 people arrested that year. A Denver police spokesman declined to comment on the mistaken identity arrests. "While no one should be misidentified and incorrectly held in jail, we realize it can happen," said Mary Dulacki, records coordinator for Denver's manager of safety. Experts at the Legal & Liability Risk Management Institute said name similarities such as in the FourHorn case are a common reason for errors. The group, based in Indianapolis, Indiana, trains police departments across the country on how to avoid mistaken arrests Add Comment CLEVELAND (AP) — A homeless veteran attacked and killed the director of a homeless shelter before he was fatally shot by police, officials said. The man had been staying at the shelter at the Volunteers of America Veterans Resource Center but was recently told he had to move out because he had been there for a year, the maximum amount of time residents can stay there, said Dennis Kresak, president of the Volunteers of America of Greater Ohio. The man walked into the director's office Wednesday morning and started attacking the director, Kresak said. The man and the director are dead, he said. The man held an ax and a knife over the woman, police said. The officers ordered the man to drop the items and when he did, he charged at them, police spokesman Sammy Morris said. The man had been uncooperative about leaving in recent weeks and would not meet with veterans representatives, Kresak said. The shelter on the city's east side in a downtrodden neighborhood is meant to be a place where homeless veterans can stay while they try to get their lives in order. The center also helps veterans find housing and jobs and offers counseling. Police were called to the center around 9:30 a.m. on a report that a man was assaulting a female worker. When the man charged at them, the officers used a stun gun, the man continued to charge and officers shot him at least once, Morris said Post Title. 02/05/2010
![]() A wealthy Manhattan mom killed her 8-year-old son in a botched murder-suicide at a luxury Midtown hotel, police said Friday. Gigi Jordan, 49, was "babbling incoherently" when police found her on the floor of Room 1603 inside the Peninsula hotel on Fifth Ave. shortly before noon, the sources said. Her son - who was dead about a day - was face-up on the bed near his mom, with hundreds of prescription pills scattered around the pricey room, the sources said. The dead child was "foaming at the mouth" from an apparent overdose, a police source said. There were also several rambling suicide notes left inside the room, the sources said. "She lawyers up right away," one police source said. "She won't answer any questions." Jordan, who lives in the Trump International Hotel & Towers on Columbus Circle, checked into the five-star hotel with her son, Jude, on Wednesday night, sources said Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/02/05/2010-02-05_8yearold_boy_slain_in_failed_murdersuicide_at_manhattans_tony_peninsula_hotel.html#ixzz0eiXggHZ1 |




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