Despite his being wanted for a shooting in North Carolina, the man accused of killing a police officer in Brooklyn was twice released from jail in New York this fall because the authorities in North Carolina declined to have him extradited, Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said recently.Rico says he'd call this a fuckup...
New York City police had arrested the man, Lamont Pride, twice since September, first for possession of a knife and a second time for possession of crack cocaine and for endangering the welfare of a child. Each time, Kelly said, the police noticed that Pride was wanted for a shooting in North Carolina, but that the arrest warrant could be served only in that state. A New York police officer called the authorities in Greensboro, North Carolina after the second arrest, in November, Kelly said, because of “a concern about a violent felon going back on the streets of New York City,” though a spokeswoman for the Greensboro police disputed Kelly’s chronology.
In any case, by the time the Greensboro police requested extradition, Pride had already been freed, Kelly said. “He should not have been out on the streets,” Kelly said at a news conference. “He should ideally have been extradited to North Carolina. But that did not happen.”
Pride, 27, was ordered held without bail on charges of first- and second-degree murder, aggravated murder of a police officer, and criminal possession of a weapon. “He made a choice to end the officer’s life,” a prosecutor, Kenneth M. Taub, said in a courtroom packed with about a hundred standing police officers, officials, and relatives of Officer Peter J. Figoski, who was killed on Monday.
The police said that they had also arrested Kevin Santos, 30, who they said was Pride’s accomplice in the break-in that led to Officer Figoski’s death, and three other men called accomplices: Ariel Tejada, 22, Nelson Moralez, 27, and Michael Velez, 21. All four face charges of second-degree murder, and each also faces weapons charges, with the exception of Moralez, according to the police.
Tejada and Moralez were found near the scene and were initially “treated as witnesses” but, when their stories began to unravel, they were placed under arrest, the police said. Velez, the authorities said, was supposed to act as a getaway driver. All four were ordered held without bail, and as they were led out of the courtroom to jail, the crowd of officers erupted in cheers.
Police officers responded to a call of a robbery in progress early Monday, and the first officers who arrived at the basement apartment in Cypress Hills in Brooklyn, found a tenant bloodied from a beating, the police said. They had no idea that the robbers were still there, hiding in a dark room behind them. When the robbers tried to slip out, they were met by two more police officers. Pride raised a pistol and fired, striking Officer Figoski, a 22-year veteran, in the face, police said. Officer Figoski died five hours later, at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center.
Pride, who was quickly arrested by Officer Figoski’s partner, has a lengthy arrest record in North Carolina dating back to 2007, when he was arrested for drug possession, according to the authorities there. In 2009, he served prison time for robbery, and he later served jail sentences for assaulting a woman and for misdemeanor assault. Then, in August of this year, he was involved in the nonfatal shooting of a Greensboro man, the police there said.
Pride went to New York City, his birthplace, and was arrested near Coney Island on 22 September, for public possession of a blade longer than four inches, a misdemeanor charge. Pride pleaded guilty to a violation and was released from jail the next day.
Kelly said that the police had run a background check and found the North Carolina warrant, but that the warrant could be executed only inside North Carolina.
Pride was arrested again on 3 November, in an apartment near Coney Island where the police executed a search warrant. Two children, eleven and sixteen, were in the home. Prosecutors later described the condition in the apartment as “deplorable, with cockroaches and filth everywhere.”
The police said they found six bags of crack cocaine on a desk and four bags of marijuana on another defendant; they arrested Pride and two others. Pride did not live there, but the arrest happened inside the building where he had been arrested for carrying a knife earlier in the fall.
Kelly said that, after the November arrest, the police again checked on the outstanding warrant against Pride and found that it could be executed only in North Carolina. Kelly said a police commander called the authorities in North Carolina after the November arrest. “I assume that what he tried to do is have it cleared up over the phone,” Kelly said. Kelly speculated that the Greensboro police did not initially pursue extradition because of “resources”. It would have been up to the Greensboro authorities to pay for detectives to travel to New York City and to transport Pride to North Carolina.
Susan Danielsen, a spokeswoman for the Greensboro Police Department, said in a statement that the district attorney there determines the type of warrant to issue. “In-state extradition is appropriate and reasonable when officials have no reason to believe that the suspect is a flight risk,” she said. “This was the case with Pride.” However, Howard Newman of the district attorney’s office in Guilford County, where Greensboro is located, said that the police did not request extradition until 8 November.
Danielson disputed Kelly’s chronology as to when the police commander called the Greensboro police, saying that it was on 8 November, four days after Pride had been freed. Paul J. Browne, the spokesman for the New York Police Department, said its records showed that “there was a contact made on 3 November”, the day before he was released.
According to a transcript of Pride’s 4 November court hearing, Judge Evelyn Laporte of Brooklyn Criminal Court was told that there was an active warrant for his arrest in connection with a shooting in North Carolina. The prosecutor on the case, Evan Degrees, requested $2,500 bail.
“Anything recovered from Pride, Lamont?” she asked the prosecutor, referring to drugs.
“Nothing,” he responded. “There is no indication anything was recovered from him.”
She decided to release him without bail. He did not show up for his next court appearance, in November.
Browne, a NYPD spokesman, said, “The person responsible for Officer Figoski’s death is the one who pulled the trigger, not the authorities in North Carolina.”
At his news conference, Kelly did not criticize the Brooklyn judge for the decision, but he did note the prosecutor’s $2,500 bail request, implying that it was relatively low. Judge Laporte did not respond to a message seeking comment. A spokesman for the Brooklyn district attorney did not respond to messages, but earlier said that $2,500 was relatively high for the charge Pride was facing.
16 December 2011
Oops is, once again, a police term
Mosi Secret (now there's a name to conjure with) has an article in The New York Times about police (to be charitable) error:
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