Posts Tagged ‘district attorney’

Mon Valley Town Fires Policeman Accused Of Drug Dealing

September 13, 2009

Posted: 9:17 am EDT September 10, 2009Updated: 9:31 am EDT September 10, 2009

MONONGAHELA, Pa. — A western Pennsylvania town has fired a veteran police officer accused of drug trafficking and described by the district attorney as an “important figure” in the area’s cocaine trade. The Monongahela City Council voted Wednesday to fire 45-year-old George Langan, a 16-year veteran of the police department.

 Langan has been charged with a variety of drug-related charges and is accused of thwarting the efforts of the Washington County drug task force by tipping off dealers and selling cocaine himself.

 Washington County District Attorney Steven Toprani calls Langan “an important figure in Monongahela’s cocaine trade.”

 Langan remains in jail on bond. His attorney Chris Blackwell did not immediately return calls for comment.

Cop Accused Of Tipping Drug Dealers In Grand Jury Probe

September 6, 2009

Monongahela Police Veteran George Langan Arrested On Drug, Corruption Charges

WASHINGTON, Pa. — An 18-year veteran of the Monongahela Police Department was arrested while on duty Friday morning, following a grand jury investigation of drug and corruption allegations.

 Patrolman George Langan, 45, of Monongahela, declined comment to Team 4 investigator Jim Parsons as he arrived at the Washington County Courthouse, still wearing his uniform.

“The charges allege Langan protected drug dealers — first by alerting them to pending searches and arrests — and that he also revealed critical, highly confidential police information of counter-narcotics efforts in that area,” District Attorney Steven Toprani said

Langan is accused of accepting cash and cocaine for personal use and helping alleged dealers in exchange, said Toprani, who revealed that Langan came under investigation in June “after drug task force detectives from my county office suspected that several heroin and cocaine investigations were compromised by tip-offs that he allegedly made to targets of those investigations.”

Police Chief Brian Tempest — who worked alongside Langan as a patrolman until last year — wasn’t surprised by the arrest.

 “We had rumors for at least 10 years that George Langan was involved in illegal activity,” said Tempest.

 Langan was arraigned at District Judge Curtis Thompson’s office and taken to Washington County Correctional Facility on $500,000 bond. A hearing was scheduled for Sept. 16.

 WTAE Channel 4’s news exchange partners at the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reported that the charges include obstruction of justice, hindering apprehension, official oppression, possession and delivery of suspected cocaine, conspiracy and witness intimidation.

 Law enforcement sources told Team 4 that Langan tried to hide his payoffs by using them to buy real estate in the Bentleyville area.

 The FBI, state police and the state attorney general’s office assisted with the investigation.

Supreme Court lets Mumia Abu-Jamal’s conviction stand

April 6, 2009
By Bill Mears
CNN Supreme Court Producer

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The Supreme Court has let stand the conviction of former Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamal, who was sent to death row for gunning down a Philadelphia police officer 28 years ago.

Mimia Abu-Jamal was convicted of the 1981 murder of Philadelphia police Officer Daniel Faulkner.

Mimia Abu-Jamal was convicted of the 1981 murder of Philadelphia police Officer Daniel Faulkner.

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He contends blacks were unfairly excluded from the jury, and has been an outspoken activist from behind bars.

The justices made their announcement Monday.

A separate appeal over whether Abu-Jamal deserves a new sentencing hearing has not been taken up by the high court.

Prosecutors are appealing a federal appeals court ruling in Abu-Jamal’s favor last year on the sentencing issue. The case has attracted international attention amid charges of prosecutorial misconduct and the inmate’s outspoken personality.

Abu-Jamal, a former radio reporter and cab driver has been a divisive figure, with many prominent supporters arguing that racism pervaded his trial. Others countered Abu-Jamal is using his skin color to escape responsibility for his actions. They say he has divided the community for years with his provocative writing and activism.

He was convicted for the December 9, 1981, murder of Officer Daniel Faulkner, 25, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Faulkner had pulled over Abu-Jamal’s brother in a late-night traffic stop. Witnesses said Abu-Jamal, who was nearby, ran over and shot the policeman in the back and in the head.

Abu-Jamal, once known as Wesley Cook, was also wounded in the encounter and later confessed to the killing, according to other witnesses testimony.

Abu-Jamal is black and the police officer was white.

Incarcerated for nearly three decades, Abu-Jamal has been an active critic of the criminal justice system.

On a Web site created by friends to promote the release this month of his new book, the prisoner-turned-author writes about his fight. “This is the story of law learned, not in the ivory towers of multi-billion dollar endowed universities but in the bowels of the slave-ship, in the hidden, dank dungeons of America.”

His chief defense attorney, Robert Bryan, had urged the justices to grant a new criminal trial, but the high court offered no explanation for its refusal to intervene.

“The central issue in this case is racism in jury selection,” Bryan wrote to supporters last month. Ten whites and two blacks made up the original jury panel that sentenced Abu-Jamal to death.

A three-judge panel of the 3rd Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals a year ago kept the murder conviction in place, but ordered a new capital sentencing hearing. That court ultimately concluded the jury was improperly instructed on how to weigh “mitigating factors” offered by the defense that might have kept Abu-Jamal off death row.

Pennsylvania law at the time said jurors did not have to unanimously agree on a mitigating circumstance, such as the fact that Abu-Jamal had no prior criminal record.

Months before that ruling, oral arguments on the issue were contentious. Faulkner’s widow and Abu-Jamal’s brother attended, and demonstrations on both sides were held outside the courtroom in downtown Philadelphia.

Many prominent groups and individuals, including singer Harry Belafonte, the NAACP and the European Parliament, are cited on his Web site as supporters. Prosecutors have insisted Abu-Jamal pay the price for his crimes, and have aggressively resisted efforts to take him of death row for Faulkner’s murder.

“This assassination has been made a circus by those people in the world and this city who believe falsely that Mumia Abu-Jamal is some kind of a folk hero,” said Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham last year, when the federal appeals court upheld the conviction. “He is nothing short of an assassin.”

Louisiana Citizen Shoots, Kills Man Attacking Officer

December 17, 2008

From “The New American” magazine page 41, April 3, 2006 by Kurt Williamson

 A Baton Rouge, Louisiana citizen wearing a neck brace and using a cane shot & killed a man who was attacking a police officer who had pulled the man over for a traffic violation.

 Perry Stephens, no age listed, said he heard Officer Brian Harrison yelling for help followed by gunshots. Upon responding to the officer’s calls for help Stephens found the officer on the ground with another man on top of him punching the officer.

 Stephens told the man attacking the officer to “get off” the officer and when the man refused, Stephens shot the man 4 times in the chest, but the man continued attacking the officer causing Stephens to shoot the man in the head killing him.

 The attacker, George Temple, had also been shot in the abdomen by the officer prior to Stephens coming to the officers aide.

 A witness at the scene told WAFB Channel 9 that Stephens “probably saved the officer’s life”, but also said he didn’t hear Stephens tell Temple to get off the officer prompting the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Temple was a negro, while Stephens is white, to claim racial bias in Stephens decision to shoot Temple.

 Temple was not armed, but he was a large, athletic man who competitively boxed, and he was definitely the aggressor in the incident.

 The District Attorney’s office is investigating to determine whether a reasonable person would think it was necessary to shoot someone a fifth time, in the head, after shooting the person 4 times in the chest.

 According to the article, Louisiana law allows the use of deadly force in defense of others to “prevent a violent or forcible felony involving danger to life or great bodily harm.”

 It seems to me that Stephens acted properly if not heroically and should be given an award for his actions. Had George Temple not chosen to feloniously  attack a police officer he may just be alive today.

 For additional information visit these web sites:

www.thenewamerican.com and www.2theadvocate.com