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At Two Bail Hearings, Two ADAs Laid Down And Future Killer Walked

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Two days before Christmas, in Courtroom 903 of the Criminal Justice Center, the Honorable Teresa Carr Deni was on the bench, overseeing a bail hearing for Davis L. Josephus.

Representing Josephus, a two-time convicted robber, was criminal defense lawyer James Lloyd. Representing the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania was Assistant District Attorney Martin McLemore.

On this day, Josephus was facing 11 charges for a new crime, an alleged armed carjacking. The new charges against Josephus included: robbery with intent to inflict serious bodily injury, robbery of a motor vehicle, kidnapping for ransom, conspiracy, false imprisonment, firearms not to be carried without a license, carrying firearms in public, theft, receiving stolen property, possession of an instrument of crime, and unauthorized use of motor vehicles. 

Bail had been set at $100,000, but Josephus's lawyer was arguing for a reduction.

"His bail is extraordinarily high," Lloyd told the judge. "His mother resides in the city . . . He can reside with her. I have good contact with his mother."

Lloyd mentioned that in another case, Josephus was accused of an alleged aggravated assault on a prison guard. And at a previous bail hearing, on Oct. 21, 2020, another judge had dropped Josephus's bail in the aggravated assault case from $200,000 down to $12,000. 

The bail reduction meant that in the aggravated assault case, Josephus, who was still in custody, would only have to pay 10%, or $1,200, to get out of jail. But Josephus wasn't going anywhere until Judge Deni set bail in the carjacking case.

"I would ask for something within the guidelines in this case as well," Lloyd said, adding that his client had been in jail since Feb. 20, 2020. "It will almost be a year when he gets to his preliminary" hearing, Lloyd told the judge, about a preliminary hearing in the kidnapping case scheduled for Feb. 2nd.

The only person standing between Josephus and the door to freedom was Assistant District Attorney McLemore. But McLemore was just a rookie, one of 60 new prosecutors hired by District Attorney Larry Krasner in 2019. 

When he stood to represent the Commonwealth, McLemore briefly reviewed Josephus's criminal record; a simple assault adjudication in 2015, when the defendant was 14 years old, the equivalent of a guilty plea. 

McLemore noted a 2019 robbery conviction, a second-degree felony, but he forgot to mention, or just didn't know that Josephus had a second robbery conviction. McLemore also brought up the open aggravated assault case. Lastly, he mentioned that in 2019, the defendant had failed to appear in court, which should have made Josephus a flight risk. 

But when it comes to cash bail, McLemore the rookie prosecutor was working for a boss who had campaigned on a promise to end cash bail. 

So, keeping Josephus in jail with the original allegedly high $100,000 bail imposed in the carjacking case was hardly a priority in the D.A.'s office headed by noted criminal justice reformer Larry Krasner. 

"At this time, I would object to a reduction," McLemore said.

Nine words, and that was all the defender of the Commonwealth would have to say for the rest of the hearing.

"OK, well he's practically serving the sentence," the judge said. "And the guidelines are what?"

"I believe three to 12,000," Lloyd said. "But, again, I will defer if the D.A. has different information. It looks like three to 12 on my paperwork."

With public safety at risk, however, Assistant District Attorney McLemore remained silent.

Hearing no further objections, the judge was ready to impose bail.

"Twenty thousand, 10%," the judge said. The bail reduction meant that instead of having to post a 10% deposit on $100,000 bail, or $10,000; on $20,000 bail, Josephus would only have to post $2,000 to get out of jail.

"Thank you very much, Your Honor," Lloyd said. "That concludes my business, if I may be excused. Have a good holiday."

"Have a great one yourself," the judge said.

Six days later, on Dec. 29, 2020, family members posted a total of $3,200 in bail. And Josephus walked.

Fifteen days later, shortly before 7 p.m. on Jan. 13th, Josephus and an accomplice allegedly held up Milan Loncar, who was out walking his dog, Roo,  a block from his house on Jefferson Street, near 31st Street in Brewerytown. 

During the robbery, Loncar tried to push Josephus's gun away. But Josephus pulled the trigger, and shot Loncar in the upper chest, a crime caught on surveillance video. Loncar collapsed on the sidewalk as Roo ran to his side. 

Thirty minutes later, the 25-year-old recent Temple University graduate who was planning to move in with his girlfriend next month was pronounced dead at Temple University Hospital.

Josephus was arrested about two hours after the murder. He was driving a Ford Focus that had been stolen the day before in another carjacking, police said. Josephus was also wearing the same clothes he wore in the surveillance video when he allegedly shot Loncar.

It took two bail hearings to let Josephus out of jail.

At the first bail hearing, on Oct. 21st, before Judge Charles Hayden, again in Courtroom 903, the D.A.'s office was represented by Assistant District Attorney Caroline Jamieson, another rookie hired by Krasner in 2019. Ryan Ivans was the counsel for Josephus in the case of the alleged aggravated assault of a prison guard by Josephus while he was still in custody.

When the judge asked if Ivans if any detainer had been filed, which would have kept Josephus in jail without bail, the defense lawyer replied, "He does not have any detainers, Your Honor."

A more experienced prosecutor might have stood up at that moment and said, hey judge, in this case we need a detainer. But Krasner sent a rookie to the bail hearing, and Jamieson said nothing.

When the judge asked Jamieson what was her position on lower bail for Josephus, she replied, "Due to the other open cases I would object to bail."

Way to stand up for public safety, Ms. Prosecutor. 

While Ivans contended that the alleged aggravated assault consisted of Josephus allegedly spraying orange juice on a prison guard, Jamieson said, "Well, according to our police report, they believe it was bodily fluids." She added, "I don't have information about it being juice." 

When the judge asked about the carjacking case, and whether Josephus was on bail in that case, Jamieson replied, "I believe so, Your Honor."

Hearing no strenuous objections, the judge then reduced the bail for Josephus in the aggravated assault case from $200,000 down to $12,000. And Josephus was on his way to freedom, and a more serious crime.

The murder of 25 year-old Milan Loncar has turned out to be a political problem for District Attorney Krasner, armed with a bulging war chest from billionaires such as George Soros, was previously cruising to reelection in the upcoming May 18th Democratic primary.

As D.A., Krasner has been a showboat, always interjecting himself into the limelight. 

For example, whenever a cop is shot, Krasner is notorious for showing up at hospitals, where he's not wanted, in search of TV cameras. When Corporal James O'Connor was fatally shot by an armed drug dealer that Krasner let out of prison, police famously locked arms and wouldn't let Krasner inside the hospital to visit the dying officer's family.

When six cops were shot and wounded by a would-be mass killer wielding an AR-15, Krasner showed up while bullets were still flying, and interjected himself into the hostage negotiations. The D.A. wound up making himself a witness in the case, by falsely promising a light sentence to the shooter.

During the George Floyd and Walter Wallace Jr. riots, whenever he could indict a cop, Krasner was in front of the TV cameras, offering up hasty judgments and faulty facts to condemn police officers, as in the recent case of former Staff Inspector Joseph Bologna, who just beat all of the false charges Krasner had filed against him.

But when it came to yesterday's press conference at the D.A.'s office to discuss the murder of the dog walker, Krasner took the coward's way out and sent a subordinate to face the TV cameras.

In Krasner's absence, Assistant District Attorney Joanne Pescatore told reporters that "The D.A. has been looking into it all weekend long and I'm sure that many balls were dropped in this case."

Ya think?

"His bail should have not been lowered," Pescatore said. "It was lowered to an extremely low level, to such a level that he [Josephus] could make that bail."

"We are looking into the fact of whether we filed an appeal," Pescatore said. "We did object at that time that bail was lowered in both of those cases."

The murder of the dog walker also poses a political problem for Krasner's main enablers, his fellow Progressives at The Philadelphia Inquirer.

The Inky, which has for the last few years has consistently turned a blind eye to the deadly corruption in Krasner's office, as well as a deaf ear to his critics, predictably wound up chasing Big Trial's coverage of the dog walker's murder. 

When Carlos Vega, a career homicide prosecutor who is Krasner's only opponent in the May 18th Democratic primary, blamed Krasner for the murder of the dog walker, the Inquirer censored Vega, and wouldn't print his critical remarks. Instead, they only printed what Krasner and Jane Roh, his official spokesperson, had to say.

But yesterday, while the heat was on Krasner, the newspaper reversed course, acknowledged Krasner's critics, and suddenly realized there was an ongoing primary campaign for D.A.

"The case has quickly become contentious and political, with many who have criticized District Attorney Larry Krasner as too lenient — including the police union, some police officials, and Krasner’s opponent in May’s primary election, Carlos Vega — blasting the DA for his handling of Josephus’ cases," the newspaper reported.

In an interview today, Vega went over the woeful history of Krasner's prosecution of Josephus, and all the various balls that were dropped during the process.

Josephus committed his first robbery on Jan. 9, 2019, Vega said. His bail was set at $20,000, meaning he had to put down a 10% deposit of $2,000 to get out of jail. But out on bail less than 30 days later, Josephus committed a second robbery. He would ultimately be convicted for both robberies. He was sentenced for six to 12 months in jail and two years probation for each robbery, with both sentences to be served concurrently, rather than consecutively.

In the first robbery, "The case is listed four times," Vega said. "Four times the victim comes to court," but four times the D.A. isn't ready to try the case. The case was finally tried on the fifth listing.

When it came time to set bail for the second robbery, court records show, on Oct. 2, 2019, bail was set at $25,000 monetary, meaning Josephus would have to pay a 10% deposit, or $2,500, to get out of jail. But on Oct. 8, 2019, a third Krasner hire, Assistant District Attorney Dana Bazelon, agreed to $25,000 unsecured bail, meaning Josephus wouldn't have to put down a cent to get out of jail.

Bazelon, hired by Krasner in 2018 as a top aide, is notorious for her arrest last May 12th for child endangerment, after she left her four-year-old daughter unattended in a locked car.

While Josephus was on bail for the first robbery, he not only committed a second robbery, Vega said, but he also committed the armed carjacking. All three crimes were committed before the pandemic.

As far as the two bail reductions given Josephus, Vega said, he reviewed the court records, and no appeal was ever taken by the D.A.'s office in either case. 

Someone should tell Assistant District Attorney Pescatore, who at yesterday's press conference, said the D.A.'s office was still investigating whether they filed an appeal in either of the two bail reductions awarded Josephus.

That's how incompetent the D.A.'s office is under Krasner, who once bragged to the New York Times about being "a public defender with power." The D.A.'s office under Krasner can't even check their own records to see if they filed an appeal in one of their own cases.

In addition, Vega said, the D.A.'s office should have pressed for a detainer when Josephus violated his parole by the alleged assault of the prison guard. A detainer would have kept Josephus in jail without bail. And, Vega said, Milan Loncar would still be alive.

When Krasner took office, his first official action was to fire 31 veteran prosecutors. He explained by saying, "The coach gets to pick the team."

So Krasner went out and personally recruited and hired 60 rookie prosecutors, including Assistant District Attorneys Bazelon, Jamieson, and McLemore.

"He picked a helluva team," Vega said. "All three of these individuals are Krasner hires. It shows severe incompetence, a lack of training, a lack of caring for keeping our community safe, in taking no appeal, or filing no detainer, and there are absolutely no consequences."

Josephus should have been held in custody, but his prosecution "went through the hands of three of his [Krasner's] ADAs and as a result a murder occurred," Vega said.
 
"It's like going to three different hospital and they don't diagnose that you've got a broken leg," Vega said about the D.A.'s version of Larry, Moe and Curly. "Three DAs couldn't figure out the answer."

At the bail hearing over the alleged assault, Vega said, the judge repeatedly asked ADA Jamieson for facts that she should have volunteered without the judge ever having to ask. Facts about the crime and the criminal history of the perpetrator, facts that might have resulted in the judge turning down any reduction in bail.

But instead, Jamieson came up lame, and so did McLemore. As a result, Josephus was back on the street, and two weeks later, he is charged with the brutal murder of an innocent man who was out walking his dog just a block from his home.

When an office screws up like this, Vega said, "You have to take ownership."

The coach of a losing football team always has to come out after the game is over, face the media and take the heat. 

Instead, Vega noted, Larry Krasner's "in hiding."

Asked what he would have told Judge Deni at the second bail hearing on the carjacking, Vega said, "This guy has a juvenile record. He failed to appear on his first robbery. While on bail he committed a second robbery. While on bail he committed a carjacking and kidnapping. And while in custody he attacked a prison guard!"

In view of that record, Vega said he would have told the judge, "We cannot agree to any bail reduction because he [Josephus] has shown time and time again that he is a danger to society. While on the street he continues to commit crimes. And not only that, but while in custody he continues to commit crimes."

"Judge, we can't let this person out. He's too dangerous; he can't help himself."

But instead of explaining the facts and answering any questions, Krasner's in hiding. And the only question remaining is, will the local media, led by the relentlessly progressive Inquirer, continue to let Krasner get away with it.

"He [Krasner] owes it to the public," Vega said. He needs to come out of hiding, explain "the negligence of his office, and how he's going to stop it from happening again."

Here's how to stop another senseless murder from happening again, because Larry Krasner just let another armed and dangerous criminal out of jail, to menace the public.

On May 18th, vote Carlos Vega for D.A. And send Larry Krasner back to being a public defender without power. 

Progressive Billionaires Funding Larry Krasner's 'Social Experiment'

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Progressive out-of-state billionaires are big fans of Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner.

According to the last annual campaign finance report filed last February, of the 64 total donations made to Krasner's reelection campaign for D.A. in 2019, 33 donations came from out-of-state contributors, including 16 from California alone. 

Of course, Krasner's biggest billionaire backer remains George Soros of New York City, with an estimated net worth of $8 billion, who used PACs in 2017 to funnel $1.7 million to Krasner's election campaign.

But in 2018 and 2019, Krasner's biggest donor was the Real Justice PAC of San Francisco, which according to its website was founded to "fix our broken criminal justice system" by electing "reform" D.A.s across the country like Larry Krasner. The PAC donated $25,000 to Krasner in 2018 and another $9,000 in 2019, for a total of $34,000.

A big backer of the Real Justice PAC is Cari Tuna of Palo Alto, CA, a former reporter at the Wall Street Journal who's married to Dustin Moskovitz. Moskovitz, Mark Zuckerberg's roommate at Harvard, was a co-founder of Facebook. In 2011, Forbes proclaimed Moskovitz, then 27, to be the youngest self-made billionaire in history; today he has a net worth estimated between $12 and $16 billion. 

According to data online posted by the Federal Election Commission, Moskovitz's wife, Cari Tuni, has poured $2.25 million into the Real Justice PAC, beginning on March 9, 2017 with a donation of $653,480.

Real Justice got so involved in the 2017 Krasner campaign that the PAC's extra contributions resulted in fines for both donor and recipient for violating the city's elections laws.

According to the city's Board of Ethics, the Real Justice PAC violated the law in 2017 by paying for three embedded staffers on the Krasner campaign. The expenses for the embedded staffers amounted to "in-kind contributions to the Krasner campaign totaling $34,820.08 in 2017, which was $11,020.08 in excess of the limits imposed by the city’s Campaign Finance Law." 

That's what the Board of Ethics stated in a settlement agreement signed by both Michael Reed of the Board Ethics, and Rebecca Bond, the treasurer of the Real Justice PAC, pictured above.

Bond, pictured above, is a co-founder of the Real Justice PAC, and served as the PAC's advisor to both Bernie Sanders's 2016 presidential campaign and the 2018 Beto for Texas Senate Campaign.

She's also a partner at The Social Practice, which defines itself as "an ideologically driven political consultancy." And she's the co author of the manifesto, "Rules for Revolutionaries: How Big Organizing Can Change Everything." 

In a May 22, 2017 press release, Bond bragged about the effect Real Justice's contributions and embedded staffers had on Krasner's victorious campaign:

In the world of criminal justice and the fight to end mass incarceration, Krasner’s win in the
Democratic primary over six former prosecutors in the Democratic primary to serve as
Philadelphia’s next district attorney was a massive earthquake. And RealJustice PAC was at
the epicenter . . .

Real Justice PAC made the greatest contribution of any organization directly to the Krasner
for District Attorney campaign. While there were many independent efforts, we placed three
seasoned organizers inside the campaign, a bigger commitment than any other organization.

In part as a result of their relentless efforts and experience with innovative technologies rarely used in a municipal race, they helped make it possible for volunteers to personally send over 160,000 text messages and make over 36,000 phone calls to the voters the campaign targeted as most needing to hear Larry’s message.

And while volunteers talking to voters was the soul of the campaign, every campaign needs funding, and Real Justice PAC also raised more than $36,000 directly into the Krasner campaign. This is a significant percentage of funds raised in a municipal race and it made a real difference because the money could be used directly by the candidate to cover the campaign’s most pressing needs.

So when you're fighting a revolution, and invading somebody else's turf, if you have to break a few of the local rules, what does it matter as long as you win, right?

Under terms of the settlement agreement with the Ethics Board, Krasner paid a $4,000 fine and gave the city $11,000 to compensate for the excess contributions that came from Real Justice PAC. According to the settlement, the PAC also agreed to pay an $8,000 fine to the city.

Real Justice may have even been willing to put up the money to pay the Krasner campaign's fines, but the Ethics Board closed that door. 

The settlement agreement, dated Feb. 27, 2019, stipulates that the Krasner campaign "shall not use funds received from Real Justice PAC, its officers, or affiliates to pay the penalties or disgorgement required by this Agreement."

According to Krasner's last campaign finance report, filed last year, his 2019 donations from out-of-state contributors included:

-- $3,000 from Pat Stryker of Fort Collins, CO, a billionaire, business woman and philanthropist, and daughter of Homer Stryker, founder of the Stryker Corp. a medical technology company; Pat Stryker has a net worth of $5.5 billion.  

-- $3,000 from Patricia Ann Quillin of Santa Cruz, CA, the philanthropist wife of Reed Hastings, the billionaire Netflix chairman and co-CEO who has an estimated net worth of $5.8 billion.

-- $3,000 from S. Donald Sussman of Fort Lauderdale, FL, a hedge fund billionaire who runs Paloma Partners Advisors LP. Sussman was Hillary Clinton's top donor when she ran for president, contributing $21.6 million to her failed campaign.

-- $3,000 from Elizabeth Simons of San Francisco, daughter of James Simons, the hedge fund billionaire who has a net worth of $23.5 billion.

--  $2,000 from Susan Pritzker of San Francisco, who's heir to the Pritzker and Hyatt fortunes; her husband, Nicholas Pritzker, with a personal net worth of $3.4 billion, runs Tao Capital Partners.

 -- $1,000 from Daniel Souweine of Oakland, CA, co founder and CEO of GetThru, a peer to peer political  text messaging platform; Souweine was national texting program director for Bernie Sander's political campaign. 

-- $1,000 from Michael Kieschnick of Palo Alto, CA., co founder and former CEO of CREDO mobile,  a mobile virtual network operator, and co founder of the Real Justice PAC.

-- $2,000 from M. Quinn Delaney of Oakland, CA., a lawyer whose husband, Wayne Jordan, is founder, president and CEO of Jordan Real Estate Investments; the couple bought a penthouse in New York City for $5.4 million in 2014. 

Delaney is the founder and board chair of Akonadi Foundation which supports development of social change movements to eliminate structural racism and create a racially just society. The foundation focuses on "ending the criminalization of people of color." 

-- $6,000 from the aforementioned Rebecca Bond of San Francisco.

-- $3,000 from Zachary Malitz West Lake Hills Texas, pictured above with Rebecca Bond; he's the co founder of Real Justice PAC, a partner at The Social Practice, and the former field director of the Beto for Senate campaign. 

As of Dec, 31, 2019, these donors helped Krasner raise $114,833. Krasner's campaign committee lists a previous balance of $25,597, with total funds available of $140,430.

Carlos Vega, Krasner's sole opponent in the May 18th Democratic primary for district attorney, was not impressed by Krasner's wealthy campaign donors.

"The thing is, Larry with his billionaire elite are conducting an experiment on the people of Philadelphia," Vega said. "And we're the guinea pigs."

"The rules do not apply to them," Vega said about Krasner's wealthy donors. "All they know about poverty and violence is what they've read in a book."

The way Vega sees it, Krasner's campaign finance report shows that Krasner "is subsidized by the elite" and Krasner is using them to pay for another four years in office, so the D.A. can "continue his social experiment."

An experiment that under Krasner's progressive policies has resulted in a skyrocketing murder rate, with 499 murders last year, the highest total in 30 years, and 36 murders so far over the first 24 days of this year.

"Every day since we started the new year, there's been a knock on some mother's door," Vega says. "And every day, a mother is told she's going to have to bury her child and live with a broken heart the rest of her life."

As a new candidate for D.A., Vega's been doing some fundraising of his own. But in contrast to Krasner, he doesn't have any millionaires or billionaires contributing to his campaign. 

It's a David and Goliath scenario Vega faces in his uphill battle against Krasner and his billionaire backers.

Vega says he's been taking in donations of $10 and $20 "from poor people who don't have much to give, but they believe in me," he said. "And they're giving because they want their neighborhoods to be safe again."

In the last two weeks of the year since he announced his campaign on Dec. 16th, Vega was able to raise more than $120,000.

Regarding Krasner's other contributors in 2019, he also received sizable donations from labor unions including:

-- $11,900 from the AFL-CIO in Washington D.C.,

-- $11,900 from the Laborers District Council of Philadelphia.

-- $11,900 from the UNITE HERE TIP Campaign Committee of NYC.

-- $11,900 from Northeast Regional Council of Carpenters, in 2018.

-- $5,000 from Plumbers Local 690 of Philadelphia.

-- $5,000 from Local Union 98 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers' Committee on Political Education. But since the local leader of IBEW 95, John "Johnny Doc" Dougherty, is under federal indictment for alleged corruption, Krasner decided to return that contribution.

Controller's Report Buys Big Lie About Outlaw & Use Of Tear Gas

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

The city controller's independent review of Philadelphia's complete mismanagement of the George Floyd protests properly faults the Kenney administration for a "failure of leadership at the highest levels."

But that same controller's report issued yesterday gives Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw a complete pass on a big lie: that Outlaw supposedly never gave the final order for the cops to fire tear gas at June 1st at protesters who were illegally blocking traffic during rush hour on the Vine Street Expressway.

At the June 25th press conference, then-Deputy Police Commissioner Dennis Wilson stepped up to the microphone as Kenney and Outlaw watched, and took sole responsibility for authorizing the use of tear gas. 

"I didn't call the commissioner, I gave the  approval," Wilson said. "And it was me and me alone."

As Big Trial has previously reported, however, what Wilson had to say was complete B.S.; a phony story concocted to get both Kenney and Outlaw off the hook. Because that morning, both of them were under fire from the left-wing New York Times, for teargassing those allegedly peaceful protesters who were illegally blocking traffic during rush hour on the Vine Street Expressway.

Kenney, as the controller's report notes, had reluctantly signed off on allowing Outlaw to use tear gas before the George Floyd protests ever got started. 

Outlaw's cover story, swallowed by the entire gullible press corps, was that Wilson acted alone when he gave the final order to use tear gas. And that poor Danielle, who had just come to Philadelphia four months earlier from Portland, where, as police commissioner, she had previously authorized the teargassing of protesters, didn't know have a thing to do with what happened on the Vine Street Expressway. 

Even though according to the controller's report, she was standing right there at the scene, watching the crowd from an overpass, when the teargassing started.

Cops say it goes further than that. 

According to several police sources, is "She [Outlaw] knew ALL about it [the teargassing], and in typical fashion, she abdicated all responsibility, and blamed it on poor Dennis Wilson," one veteran commander told Big Trial. "The entire department knows this."

The real story is that Dennis Wilson, described by his fellow cops as the ultimate company man, both sought and received final approval from Outlaw before the tear gas canisters started flying. Even though as deputy commissioner, technically, Wilson didn't need Outlaw's permission to unleash the tear gas. 

As Big Trial has previously reported, there were witnesses with both Wilson and Outlaw at the time the teargassing went down, as well as numerous texts and emails exchanged between top cops that would tell the real story.

But the controller's office subcontracted out its independent investigation, and so that report never looked at whether the police commissioner's official alibi was B.S.

On June 4, 2020, City Controller Rebecca Rhynhart announced that her office would conduct “an independent review of the City of Philadelphia’s operational and resource deployment and tactics during the civil unrest that followed George Floyd’s murder.” 

To conduct that independent review, the Controller hired Ballard Spahr LLP, a politically connected law firm in Philadelphia, and AT-RISK International, LLC of Fairlawn, Ohio, a risk management consulting firm.

"The report itself details the accounts and facts discovered during the investigation by Ballard Spahr LLP. And of course, the information was provided to the investigation team by the city," said Genevieve Greene, a spokesperson for the controller's office.

"For us, the major takeaway is that the city needs better policies and clearer accountability when making decisions around the use of CS [tear] gas."

The controller's report, however, does call out the mayor, saying that as the city's highest ranking official, it should have been him who gave the final decision on whether to deploy tear gas.

Kenney, according to the controller's report, didn't even have the guts to talk to any of the controller's hired investigators.

"The Investigation Team requested to interview the Mayor, but he, through a representative, declined, offering instead to provide written responses to a pre-approved set of written questions," the controller's report says. 

"The Mayor did offer to sit for an interview if the questions were provided in advance and follow-up questions were submitted in writing. Under the constraints dictated, the Investigation Team did not proceed with an interview."

At the June 25th press conference, after he gave his mea culpa, former deputy police commissioner Wilson announced that for "violating the rules of engagement and the commissioner's trust, I'm going to take a voluntary demotion" to chief inspector. "Falling on the sword," was how Outlaw characterized the human sacrifice of Wilson.

But, as Big Trial has previously reported, before he decided to become the police department's official fall guy, Wilson had been threatened with arrest by cop-hating District Attorney Larry Krasner. 

The price for taking a voluntary demotion was an annual pay cut of about $30,000. But Wilson was worried about his pension; he was also enrolled in the DROP. Under the Deferred Retirement Option Plan, an employee's pension benefits are frozen the day he enrolls, and that employee is guaranteed to collect a six-figure cash bonus the day he walks out the door. 

In Wilson's case, regardless of the demotion and cut in pay, he would still get to retire in a couple of years with his full pension plus his DROP cash bonus of about $800,000. But if the D.A. indicted and convicted Wilson of a crime, Wilson risked losing his pension benefits.

The June 25th press conference was a grovel fest, featuring top city officials bowing before The New York Times, and pandering to the local Progressive press corps. 

At the press conference, Outlaw "humbly" apologized to the peaceful demonstrators and announced that she was "disgusted" and "sickened beyond description" by the horrors that she saw on a video posted by the Times.

"I'm as disturbed as the commissioner," Kenney agreed, before he silently watched the official scapegoating of Wilson for the teargassing. 

About the use of tear gas, the city controller's report says:

The Police Commissioner explained that although she did not believe that she needed authorization from the Mayor prior to approving use of CS gas, she nevertheless had consulted with the Mayor earlier that afternoon about its potential use. 

She chose to do so because when the Mayor interviewed her for the position, the Mayor indicated that he was aware that CS gas and other less-than-lethal munitions were used in Portland in response to protests.

He [Kenney] explained the Department historically did not utilize CS gas against large gatherings, and he personally opposed its use. Yet, when confronted with the potential use of CS gas in the unfolding unrest, the Mayor, while hesitant, ultimately supported its use if absolutely necessary. 

With this background, and observing the conditions on 52nd Street in real time, the Police Commissioner authorized the deployment of CS gas without further consulting the Mayor.

On the day of the Vine Street Expressway protests, according to the controller's report, Outlaw was right there at the scene:

Police Commissioner reported that as the crowd made its way onto the highway, she was parked on one of the overpasses above I-676. She stated that a Deputy Commissioner – the same Deputy Commissioner who sought and received from the Police Commissioner authorization to deploy CS gas the day earlier [on 52nd Street] – called her to discuss the situation on the highway. 

According to her, the two discussed the potential use of CS gas, however, she said that she directed him to call her before deploying it. Shortly thereafter, and although she had not given explicit approval, she recalled hearing that it had been deployed on the highway . . . 

The Police Commissioner reported directing a Deputy Commissioner to call her for authorization before deploying CS gas that afternoon. However, she too learned that the CS gas had been deployed in real time over police radio. According to the Police Commissioner, she did not authorize its use. 

The controller's report does call Outlaw out on one discrepancy over the use of tear gas, when Outlaw met with members of the police department's SWAT team:

Despite SWAT’s historical lack of involvement in the Department’s response to civil unrest and protests, it was staged in a location near the Convention Center in Center City on May 30th. 

Two City officials noted that the Police Commissioner made a request to the UCG [the city's Unified Command Group] that afternoon to use CS gas in response to the unrest that began in front of the MSB and devolved into mass looting in Center City. Both of these officials reported that the UCG quickly dismissed this request. 

The Commissioner does not recall making such a request, but does not deny that it occurred, noting that approval was not given, as CS gas was not used on the 30th. 

The city's Unified Command Group included top Kenney administration officials such as Outlaw, former city managing director Brian Abernathy, the fire commissioner, the mayor's chief of staff, and city solicitor, among others. 

The controller's report also details that top city officials waited until the day before the George Floyd protesters invaded Philadelphia to start planning on how to control the protests and riots that ensued.

Then Managing Director Brian Abernathy "did not believe that there was a way to plan for the type of unrest that the city experienced, despite a blueprint existing from past practices of the city," the controller's report states.

Abernathy, according to the controller, claimed that there was no way the "city could have prepared for the type of unrest" that the George Floyd protests/riots brought to town. "He [Abernathy] insisted that there was no way" to prepare and that the city "did its best while things were unfolding."

According to the controller's report, Outlaw was similarly clueless. 

"The Police Commissioner initially shared this view, testifying on October 20, 2020 before City Council that there was 'no playbook' or 'reference'" for the George Floyd riots. But during her interview with the controller, Outlaw "acknowledged that the City could have better planned for the events that occurred on May 30th."

The police commissioner also told the City Council that “was no specific intelligence, specific to Philadelphia,” the report says, that predicted "the unrest would be as violent and destructive as it was." But, the city controller's report says, the media had carried multiple reports about violence in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Chicago and Memphis.

And Philadelphia did have intelligence that the George Floyd protests would have a "significant impact upon Philadelphia," the city controller's report states.

The city controller's report quotes one supervisor as saying, "There was enough intelligence throughout open source media on what was happening throughout the country regarding riots. The approach taken to planning for this detail completely underestimated what was going to happen and left us woefully underprepared. Had we been better prepared, we would not have lost the city the way we did."

"Another officer agreed with this assessment, noting under the 'planning' section of his after action report: 'Was there any? Department appeared completely unprepared, despite violent protests and rioting in Minneapolis, St. Paul, Portland, Seattle and Atlanta, prior to scheduled protest,'” the controller's report states.

And contrary to what Outlaw told the City Council, the city controller's report noted, the city did have a playbook for how to handle large gatherings. And that playbook was successfully deployed during Pope Francis's visit to the city in 2015, the Eagles Super Bowl victory parade in 2018. 

In addition, the police department had handled previous demonstrations that spread to Philadelphia over the 2014 death of Michael Brown in police custody in Ferguson, and the 2015 death of Freddie Gray in police custody in Baltimore.

The problem was Mayor Kenney had previously purged the police department of its former leadership that implemented the playbook, including former Police Commissioner Richard Ross, and Deputy Police Commissioner Joseph Sullivan. 

And Kenney replaced that leadership with Outlaw.

The city controller's report prompted the editorial board of The Philadelphia Inquirer today to demand that Mayor Kenney call on Outlaw to resign.

To which the First Street Journal humorously replied, "The Editors of The Philadelphia Inquirer blame the puppet, not the puppet master!"

Outlaw should resign. In a city that had 499 murders last year, and 47 murders over the first 28 days of this year, she is as clueless about how to stop the killing as she was about how to stop the riots, looting and arson fires that accompanied those peaceful protests.

As a low-profile and introverted West Coast native who is usually out of sight behind her desk, Outlaw has the completely wrong personality to deal with an in-your-face town like Philly. She also has completely mismanaged the police department from day one.

But her hire was a cynical political ploy that was all about the optics, and a woke mayor playing to the  holy trinity of Progressive Democratic cult values -- race, sex and diversity.

The failure of leadership involving the George Floyd riots can be directly blamed on Kenney's gutting of the Police Department's previous competent leadership, and the hiring of Outlaw.

It's all Kenney's fault. He's the one who should resign. But in a city that's been under one-party Democratic rule for the past 69 years, neither Kenney nor Outlaw is going any where.

At a press conference today, Outlaw told reporters that she had just got through conferring with the mayor and other top city officials, and that they had expressed their support for her to stay on as police commissioner.

"I have not been asked to resign nor will I resign due to the report's findings," she said.

She stated that although she appreciated the "thoroughness" of the controller's report, she insisted there was no "blue print" in the Philadelphia Police Department for how to handle protests on the magnitude of the George Floyd protests.

She also complained that it was "repugnant" for the controller to draw parallels to the 1985 MOVE bombing, which was the last time city police deployed tear gas on its own citizens.

We're all learning from our mistakes, Outlaw said. "We will weather this storm together and we will continue to work through this."

Then, she opened up the press conference to take questions from reporters, saying that she had plenty of time for it. 

But when Jeff Cole of Fox 29 asked whether Outlaw considered herself competent to continue to preside over the police department, she abruptly left the podium.

D.A. Sat On Arrest Warrant For Abusive Man Who Killed Ex-Wife

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net


On Jan. 14th, police sought an arrest warrant for Adriano Coriano, for violating a protection order by repeatedly stalking, harassing and assaulting his ex-wife.

But for six straight days, the charging unit of the District Attorney's office sat on that request, and did nothing.

Finally, at 8:40 p.m. on Jan. 20th, an assistant district attorney from the charging unit sent an email to the cops stating that the D.A.'s office was declining to issue the arrest warrant, because they needed more information,

Specifically, the D.A.'s office wanted to know the husband's email address, cell phone number, and date-of-birth. The D.A.'s office also wanted to change some language in the arrest warrant. Such as in the arrest warrant, police had referred to Coriano's "former wife of seven years;" the D.A. wanted to change that to the "former wife of defendant."

There was only one problem -- two hours earlier that day, Adrian Coriano drove over to his ex-wife's house and shot Gladys Coriano eight times. An hour after the D.A. notified the police that they were declining to approve the arrest warrant for her husband, Gladys Coriano, 52 was pronounced dead at Jefferson Hospital.

Before he became a homicide prosecutor in the Philadelphia District Attorney's office, Carlos Vega worked in the D.A.'s charging unit.

"Having been in that office in the past, it is inconceivable to me that any arrest warrant could sit in the district attorney's office for more than 24 hours," said Vega, who is running in the May 18th primary for the Democratic nomination for district attorney, against incumbent D.A. Larry Krasner.

When he worked in the charging unit, Vega said, "we had 12 hour shifts. Nothing stayed there for days. Someone can die."

"This is  a tragedy where she [Gladys Coriano] trusted the system to protect her and she followed all the rules to protect her life and be safe," Vega said. "And now she's dead. And all I can think about is that warrant sat there for six days."

As is his usual practice for the past 18 months, District Attorney Larry Krasner did not respond to a request for comment. Neither did Jane Roh, his alleged spokesperson. 

Our D.A. views himself as above questioning.

At 6:44 p.m. on Jan. 20th, police responded to a report of a person with a gun and found found Gladys Coriano "suffering from multiple gunshot wounds." She was lying on the street, bleeding from the head, according to a police report.

The cops took Gladys Coriano to Jefferson Hospital where she was pronounced dead less than three hours later, at 9:42 p.m. They subsequently arrested Adriano Coriano, 55, who told the cops, "I'm not going to admit what I did. I'm sorry. I feel bad about it."

Police said that when Coriano followed his ex-wife, he believed she was in a car with a boyfriend, which turned out to be not true.

The couple got divorced last February. Adriano Coriano moved out of their house in March, but he wouldn't leave his ex-wife alone.

Since last November, a total of three arrest warrants were issued for the ex-husband, for repeatedly assaulting his wife, and for repeatedly violating a protection order she had taken out against him.

But on one of those arrest warrants, for aggravated assault, a detective who was working the case came down with COVID, and the Police Department apparently dropped the ball when it came to protecting Gladys Coriano. The warrant was approved by the D.A.'s office but it was never served by the cops. Police have launched an internal investigation to find out why.

On Nov. 1st, Adriano Coriano was arrested  and charged with contempt for violation of an order or agreement, namely a protection order.  Bail was set on Nov. 2 at $25,000, meaning Coriano had to post 10%, or $2,500, which he did later that same day and got out of jail.

The felony warrant against Coriano accused him of allegedly attempting to force his way into his ex-wife's home on Halloween, pinning her to the floor, threatening her with a knife, and trying to pull down her pants.

A trial date was set for Nov. 17th, but was postponed until Jan. 12th, after Stanley Ellenberg, the lawyer for the defendant requested a continuance. 

The next scheduled court date, Jan. 12th, was two days before police sought a third and final arrest warrant against Adriano Coriano. In court on Jan. 12th, Coriano entered a negotiated guilty plea and was sentenced to six months probation.

If the D.A. or the cops had known about the existence of a previous warrant, they could have locked up Coriano the minute he walked into court.

Court records note that Coriano's probation was to supervised by the Domestic Violence Unit, but the supervision was limited to "telephone reporting due to COVID."

On Jan. 14th, Gladys Coriano brought a booklet of evidence she had accumulated against her ex-husband to police, who issued a third warrant for violating a protection order.

But the D.A.'s office sat on that warrant for six days.

On Jan. 20th, a neighbor who had just talked to Gladys Coriano said he heard a gunshot, looked outside and saw a man holding a gun outside the window of a white Nissan Altima. The neighbor told the cops he saw the man shoot the victim four more times.

When the cops showed up at the door of the ex-husband's house, at 5201 N. Howard Street, they were greeted by Francisca Rosa. She told the cops she was Soriano's new wife, and that the two just gotten married the previous Sunday. 

When the cops asked about the whereabouts of Soriano's car, Rosa explained that her husband's 2016 Nissan Altima was parked at her mother's house at 2863 N. Howard Street.

One of Gladys Coriano's two sons told police that his mother had installed security cameras because of her ex-husband's repeated attacks. Gladys Coriano was so fearful of her ex-husband that she was staying at her son's house. 

But on Jan. 20th, Gladys Coriano drove home to retrieve some clothing, when she noticed her ex-husband was following her. And he was packing a gun.

Gladys Coriano's death was one of 50 homicides last month, a 32% increase over last year, and a new all-time record for January. The previous record for January murders was set back in 1990, with 45.

Adriano Coriano had a rap sheet that featured 14 arrests. 

On July 26, 2006, Coriano pleaded guilty to harassment, retaliation against a witness or victim, criminal mischief, and possession of an instrument of crime. That same day, he also pleaded guilty in a separate case to stalking and making terroristic threats. He was sentenced to 2 to 4 years in jail, plus probation for a minimum of three years. 

On March 2, 2004, Soriano pleaded guilty to criminal mischief and criminal trespass, and making terroristic threats.  He was sentenced to 11 to 23 months in jail.

On May 12, 2000, Soriano pleaded guilty to manufacture, delivery or possession with intent to manufacture or deliver a controlled substance and received a sentence of one year to 23 months in jail.

Gladys Coriano has been portrayed as a victim of domestic violence, but family members described her as a strong woman of faith. They declined to comment further, however, because they are preparing for a funeral service, to be held tomorrow. 

As Murders Spike, Kenney, Krasner & Outlaw Keep Pandering

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Philadelphia has serious problems; if only it had serious leaders.

Despite the ongoing pandemic, the city's biggest public health crisis remains its out-of-control murder rate. The city racked up 499 murders last year; the highest total in 30 years. By comparison, New York City, with 4 1/2 times the population, had only 462 murders. 

And things here are only getting worse. In January, Philadelphia recorded 50 murders, an all-time record for that month. And so far over the first eight days in February, the city recorded a dozen more murders, a 55% increase over last year's record pace.

Yesterday, in Philadelphia, there were 11 shootings and seven murders, including a couple of double homicides, as well as a 15 year-old boy executed by a trio of gunmen brandishing semiautomatics. And on such a deadly day, what were Philadelphia's top officials concerned about? 

Mayor Jim Kenney was busy signing an executive order that deep-sixed Columbus Day as a city holiday, in favor of "Indigenous Peoples Day."

Police Commissioner Outlaw was encouraging all officers to share on social media "what you, or your district, is doing to observe Black History Month."

And District Attorney Larry Krasner was tweeting about "confronting racism within the justice system."

At a time when people are being shot and murdered at record rates, the city's top officials were busy pandering, to cover up the glaring reality that they don't have a clue about how to stop the bloodshed.

Yesterday at around 7 p.m., a trio of suspects opened fire on a 15-year-old boy near the intersection of 29th and Morris Streets. Chief Inspector Scott Small told 6ABC that at least 16 shots were fired from three semiautomatic weapons. The victim was pronounced dead.

Earlier in the day, two men were found shot to death inside a home on the 2900 block of Rosehill Street.

Around 2 p.m., a 25 year-old woman and a 29 year-old man were both shot inside a vehicle parked on the 200 block of Rubicam Street. The female died; the man was expected to recover. Chief Inspector Small told 6ABC that a female infant in the back seat miraculously survived the attack, and was not struck by gunfire.

Also yesterday, a 24 year-old man and a 21 year-old woman were shot and killed in the 500 block of West Hill Creek Drive. And finally, a 54 year-old woman was shot to death at a drug rehab facility on the 4200 block of Ridge Avenue.

As all those bullets were flying, what were the city's top officials up to?

Yesterday at City Hall, Mayor Kenney courageously signed Executive Order 2-21 that not only dumped Columbus Day in favor of Indigenous Peoples Day, but also recognized Juneteeth as an official city holiday to celebrate the emancipation of slaves in America. 

“While changes to city holidays may seem largely symbolic, we recognize that symbols carry power,” wrote Kenney, who has been noticeably silent about the gun violence and murders plaguing the city.

Instead, Kenney, whom Philadelphia Weekly has called upon to resign, would rather deal with symbols. After all, it's been working for him for a while now, especially when he's attacking Italian-American symbols. 

He's already gotten rid of the bronze Frank Rizzo statue, and put the marble statue of Christopher Columbus in a plywood box.

Columbus Day was a natural next target for Kenney, who continues to pit one race against another.

"We hope that for our employees and residents of color, this change is viewed as an acknowledgment of the centuries of institutional racism and marginalization that have been forced upon Black Americans, Indigenous people, and other communities of color," Kenney wrote. "At the same time, we are clear-eyed about the fact that there is still an urgent need for further substantive systemic change in all areas of local government.” 
 
Perhaps Kenney was trying to distract residents from the blatant incompetence of his administration, as most recently demonstrated with the botched rollout of a COVID vaccine, which the city entrusted to a start-up fronted by a 22-year-old Drexel student with no health care experience.

Or perhaps Kenney was trying to hide the fact that neither he nor his personally recruited police commissioner has the courage to call out D.A. Krasner over his progressive policies that turn far too many armed and dangerous criminals loose on the streets, so they can continue to shoot and kill more victims.

As for Commissioner Outlaw, she was busy telling fellow officers that the Philadelphia Police Department is "committed to highlighting and expanding our inclusive environment where we invite and encourage diverse perspectives, ideas and peoples."

"This month, I encourage you to share what you, or your district, is doing to observe Black History Month," Outlaw wrote. "Please join us on social media and utilize your official PPD accounts so we can highlight how you are celebrating."

In her public interviews, Outlaw has successfully played the race card and the gender card to dodge questions about her competence to lead the nation's fourth largest police department.

"I didn't feel like an outsider when I got here," Outlaw told NBC's Erin Coleman. "Yeah, I was treated like an outsider and yeah, I'm still treated like an outsider."

"When we talking about being a first, being a first, along with that comes you don't get the benefit of the doubt," Outlaw told Coleman. "I have to walk in the door, even before I get here, having to prove and prove some more." 

Over at the The Philadelphia Inquirer, the city's paper of record, two columnists of color continue to buy that act.

"The old double standard is alive and well as ever," wrote Jenice Armstrong in the Inquirer, as she defended Outlaw against calls for her resignation, one of which came from the Inquirer's own editorial board.

"It is really hard to come in as an outsider, much less as a Black female, and run a predominantly white male-dominated police force," Armstrong wrote. "And like the many males who preceded her as the city’s top cop, Outlaw deserves a chance to continue growing in the role. After all, she took on the position during one of our worst years in modern history."

"We have to be twice as good to get half as much," agreed Solomon Jones.

Whatever happened to holding public officials accountable for their failures? 

In Philadelphia, that's out of style as the press and public continue to subsist on a steady diet of pandering, all of the P.C. variety.

While people are dying every day out in the streets. 

Krasner's Head Of Homicide Has A History Of Courtroom Blunders

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

If you're looking for a good measure of how far the District Attorney's Office has fallen under Larry Krasner, look no further than the homicide unit.

On Nov. 17, District Attorney Larry Krasner appointed Assistant District Attorney Chesley Lightsey as interim supervisor of the D.A.'s Homicide and Non-Fatal Shooting Unit, replacing Assistant District Attorney Anthony Voci. As Lightsey's top assistant, Krasner appointed Assistant District Attorney Sherrell Dandy. 

Once, the homicide unit was the province of legendary prosecutors such as Charles "Joey" Grant, who tried and won hundreds of cases, many of them at high profile murder trials against defendants that included mob boss Nicky Scarfo. 

Carlos Vega, who's running against Krasner in the May 18th primary for the Democratic nomination for D.A., prosecuted more than 450 murder cases during a 30 year career in the D.A.'s homicide unit. Vega recalled that before he got promoted to homicide, he prosecuted 40 jury trials over a five-year apprenticeship before his bosses would trust him to try a murder case.  

But under Krasner, the homicide unit is now led by Lightsey and Dandy, a couple of lightweights who, according to knowledgeable sources, have tried a total of approximately 18 homicide jury trials between them. 

In addition, the two ADAs who head the homicide unit have an embarrassing history of courtroom blunders behind them that are well-known in Philadelphia's tight-knit legal community. Blunders that include mixing up key evidence like the murder weapon at trial, calling the wrong witnesses, and misidentifying robbery and kidnapping suspects. Those gaffes resulted in dangerous defendants walking, defendants who subsequently went on to commit more crimes. 

As far as the current homicide unit in the D.A.'s office under Larry Krasner, it's strictly amateur hour. But because Krasner's a cop-hating, prosecutor-hating former criminal defense lawyer, the demise of the homicide unit under Krasner may be happening by design. Like the coach of a tanking sports team, you have to wonder if Krasner wants to deliberately lose every game.

The rise of Lightsey to interim head of homicide coincides with the demotion of Voci. He's an experienced prosecutor who served a total of 10 years in the D.A.'s office in the 1990s under former D.A.s Ron Castille and Lynne Abraham, including a three-year stint in the homicide unit.

In 2018, after Krasner got elected, Voci returned to the D.A.'s office. For three years, at one press conference after another, it was Voci and Krasner side-by-side before the TV cameras talking about high-profile cases. During those press conferences, Krasner routinely referred to Voci as his head of homicide, rather than as an interim supervisor.

When Michael White went on trial for stabbing Sean Schellenger to death in Rittenhouse Square, Voci was the lead prosecutor, with rookie homicide prosecutor Dandy by his side.

It was the highest profile case to date during Krasner's tenure as D.A., a slam-dunk murder case caught on a cell-phone video. But Krasner sabotaged the prosecution by twice reducing the criminal charges against White, and the defendant walked. 

Voci's demotion stems from an Sept. 16th incident when he was riding his Harley back from a crime scene and he got involved in an altercation on Kelly Drive with a young black female motorist, an altercation that The Philadelphia Inquirer promptly turned into a racial controversy. 

A month after Voci made headlines in the Inquirer, Krasner, in an email to all personnel in the D.A.'s office, announced that Voci had been transferred to the Insurance Fraud Unit. 

In researching this story, I reached out as I typically do to District Attorney Krasner, and Jane Roh, Krasner's official spokesperson, for comment. And, as they have done for the past 19 months, neither Krasner nor Roh responded.

But for the first time in 19 months, I did get a response from somebody in the D.A.'s office. Actually, two somebodies. Assistant District Attorneys Lightsey and Dandy both offered what appeared to be a coordinated defense.

In separate emails, both Lightsey and Dandy stated that the details of the courtroom gaffes that I describe below were "incorrect" as were the figures concerning their relative "inexperience" as homicide prosecutors.

Lightsey suggested that I order the notes of testimony for the cases that I reference in this story, "so you can understand the nuance of testimony that undoubtedly is considered in any jury verdict."

"Out of respect for the victims and their families, who continue to suffer, I will not comment publicly on  individual cases," she said.

When I asked if she could supply those transcripts, along with notes on all those legal "nuances" that might have gone over the head of a non-lawyer like myself, Lightsey didn't respond.

I pressed Lightsey specifically on her inexperience as a homicide prosecutor. According to knowledgeable sources, she has tried approximately 15 murder cases.

In a second email, Lightsey responded, "It is not accurate that I have only prosecuted 15 or fewer homicide jury trials." But she declined to state a specific number of murder cases that she did try.

"I will not be commenting further," she wrote, ending the discussion.

When she was elevated to head of homicide, Lightsey had 12 years of experience as a prosecutor in the D.A.'s office.

In a press release, Krasner explained that he appoints all D.A. unit supervisors "on an interim basis to provide greater flexibility in the training of newer prosecutors and staff and to ensure senior prosecutors remain close to the work and lives of the attorneys they supervise." 

He also stated that he plans to "cycle highly capable and experienced attorneys in and out of supervisory positions."

“Assistant District Attorney Chesley Lightsey is not only an excellent and capable trial prosecutor, she comes to this job with thoughtful compassion for the communities we serve,” District Attorney Krasner said. 

“She and this office are after individual justice in each case, which benefits all of society," Krasner expounded. "Doing individual justice in each case requires a lot of work and experience, a moral compass, breadth of vision, and sound judgement. ADA Lightsey will do a great job as the Interim Supervisor of the Homicide and Non-Fatal Shooting Unit.”

But contrary to Krasner's lofty, overblown rhetoric, two lawyers familiar with Lightsey's work habits as a prosecutor said she wasn't exactly known for being a hardworking, well-prepared superstar in the courtroom.

One of those lawyers used a sports analogy, comparing Lightsey to Eagles back-up quarterback Nate Sudfeld, who took over the huddle only when the team decided to tank the last game of the season.

"She's good enough to be on the roster, but has no business being on the field," the lawyer said.

Vega, a former homicide prosecutor himself, said that when it comes to trying a murder case, courtroom experience is invaluable.

"Homicide victims and their families deserve the most experienced and capable lawyers," Vega said.

And because Krasner's homicide unit is led by a couple of relatively inexperienced homicide prosecutors, Vega said, you have to question the D.A.'s "actual commitment to prosecuting violent crime." 

And you also have to question, Vega said, whether "capable prosecutors want to work" in Larry Krasner's District Attorney's office.

LIGHTSEY BLUNDER NO. 1

Victor Scott was a juvenile lifer. In 1983, at age 18, he was arrested and charged with the first-degree murder of Michael Rhoads, 29, a casualty in a West Philly gang war. Three years later, Scott was found guilty and sentenced to 33 years to life.

In 2018, after serving 35 years in prison, Scott was paroled, thanks to a U.S. Supreme Court decision that banned life without parole sentences for juveniles.

Out of the first 111 juvenile lifers who were paroled in Pennsylvania, only one was arrested and charged with a new crime. On April 6, 2018, Victor Scott, at age 53, was charged with possession of a gun.

The morning of Scott's arrest, a group of parole agents arrived at Scott's house and called him on the phone. It took at least five minutes for Scott to answer the door. Prosecutors charged that Scott was busy inside stashing a .45 caliber semiautomatic pistol behind paint cans and a toolbox, in a hidden spot on a staircase.

Scott claimed he had not been aware that the gun was in the house. But as reported by Samantha Melamed of The Philadelphia Inquirer, Judge Marissa Brumbach said, "I've heard no testimony that the house was cleared" by parole agents and free of weapons before Scott arrived.

The judge then dismissed the case for lack of evidence.

In court, Lightsey had called as a witness the detective who found the gun inside Scott's house. But Lightsey did not call as a witness the parole agent who had searched the house previously, and found no gun.

After the judge dismissed the case, the parole agent was overheard screaming at Lightsey in the hallway outside the courtroom, for not calling him as a witness. And she was overheard apologizing, and saying, "I'm sorry."

As reported by Melamed, unnamed "prosecutors" told the Inquirer that they intended to immediately refile the charges against Scott. If convicted, Scott would have returned to jail for the rest of his life. But the D.A.'s office never got around to refiling the charges, and Scott went free.

In a subsequent interview with Melamed, Scott contended that he had not been aware that the gun was stashed in the Southwest Philly home, a family property where he was renting a room. Scott claimed that other family members had access to the house, and that before he moved in, it was a hangout for his nephew and the nephew's friends.

"Everything was perfect," Scott told Melamed, the newspaper's official social justice reporter who never met a criminal she didn't find to be sympathetic. "Why would I have a gun? That'd be like throwing rocks at the penitentiary," Malamed quoted Scott as saying.

But Scott subsequently acquired another gun. According to an affidavit of probable cause, on July 27, 2020, Scott allegedly attacked an Inquirer truck driver armed with a baseball bat and a handgun, an incident captured on surveillance video. According to the affidavit, Scott repeatedly pointed the gun at the victim, and repeatedly struck him with the baseball bat.

Scott was arrested and charged with three violations of the Uniform Firearms Act, for being a former convict possessing an unlicensed gun in Philadelphia. He was also charged with aggravated assault, simple assault, terroristic threats, reckless endangerment, and possession of an instrument of crime for attacking the Inquirer driver, a crime that went unreported in the Inquirer.

On Oct. 2, 2020, Scott's bail was set at $300,000. His next three court appearances, in October, November and December, were continued because the courthouse was closed during the pandemic. 

LIGHTSEY BLUNDER NO. 2

On June 9, 2017, Aka Jones was on trial charged with two counts of murder, two counts of conspiracy, and two gun charges. Lightsey was the prosecutor. The charges stemmed from a 2012 murder when two masked gunmen shot and killed 23-year-old Nafis Armstead and wounded another man in East Mount Airy.

Jones was charged after prosecutors told a judge that Jones's DNA had been found on a .357 revolver recovered near a minivan used by the masked robbers. Prosecutors contended that a shot fired from that gun struck Armstead in the head. Police also found a second gun at the crime scene, a .40 caliber semiautomatic pistol stuck between the front seats of the minivan.

In her closing statement, however, according to knowledgeable sources, prosecutor Lightsey mixed up the two guns. She made the mistake of identifying as the murder weapon the gun that didn't have the defendant's DNA on it, rather than the gun that did have the defendant's DNA on it.

As a result, the jury was confused and Jones beat the rap. The jury acquitted Jones on the two counts of murder, two counts of conspiracy, as well as the two gun charges.

What did Jones do with his newfound freedom? He committed more crimes.

On April 7, 2019, Jones was arrested again and charged with manufacture, delivery or possession with intent to manufacture or deliver, possession of a controlled substance, and possession of marijuana.

On July 24, 2019, Jones was arrested and charged with manufacture, delivery or possession with intent to manufacture or deliver, possession of marijuana, and corruption of minors. According to his rap sheet, it was his 18th arrest.

There's one more oddity about the Aka Jones case. Krasner on the campaign trail had criticized the use of civil asset forfeiture actions aimed at accused criminals who hadn't had their day in court yet. 

“I think we should not be in the business of taking cash off poor people unless there’s absolute proof and guilt and a conviction,” Krasner said in 2017.

But that's just what happened twice to accused drug dealer Aka Jones, who to date has not been convicted in either drug case.

On Sept. 26, 2019, Judge Benjamin Lerner granted a motion of for order of forfeiture by default for the amount of $542.

On Nov. 19, 2019, Judge Crystal Bryant-Powell granted a motion of forefieture by default  in the amount of $1,375.

LIGHTSEY BLUNDER NO. 3

On June 12, 2019 in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court, Assistant District Attorney Lightsey was explaining the murder of 2 1/2-month-old Orion Tyreek Lemon to Judge Lilian Harris Ransom.

But while Lightsey was helping a baby killer get a sweetheart plea bargain, she didn't get the charges right, so in court, she had to be corrected on the law by a clerk, according to a transcript of the hearing.

"Your Honor, we are here today because on June 26th of 2016, 12th District police officers" responding to a call found an "unresponsive" infant," Lightsey told the judge.

"The child was taken to the Children's Hospital at Philadelphia and pronounced dead at 9:10 a.m.," the prosecutor said. "Your Honor, in this case the death was originally classified as SIDS," or Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.

But police subsequently reopened an investigation into the infant's death because they had received new information.

"On Sept. 20, 2018, police learned from the two minor daughters of this defendant, Tyreek Lemon, that this defendant would always get mad when the baby would cry," the prosecutor told the judge.

"The daughters described how the defendant would shove the baby's head into the mattress and cover it with blankets and pillows to make the child stop crying," Lightsey told the judge. "When the child would be uncovered, he would be sweating and gasping for air."

When police interviewed Kingia Phillips -- Orion's mother, and Tyreek Lemon's fiancé -- "police learned that on the night Orion Lemon was killed, the baby was crying in his parents' bed," the prosecutor told the judge.

"Kingia Phillips covered the baby with a winter coat," the prosecutor said. "The defendant put a pillow over the baby. Kingia Phillips then fell asleep. When Ms. Phillips awoke, Orion was unresponsive and police were called."

During the court proceedings, when Lightsey was reading the charges in the plea bargain to the judge, she made the mistake of saying that the charge of involuntary manslaughter was a second-degree felony. 

According to a court transcript, it was left to the court clerk to correct Krasner's assistant district attorney on the law.

"Your Honor, I'm sorry to interrupt," Lightsey told the judge, but "as always Cathy [the clerk] is right," Lightsey said. "This is a felony of the third degree, as it was charged on the bill. Thank you for pointing that out."

Lemon, a former Democratic committeman in the 60th Ward, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter, endangering the welfare of a child, and possession of an instrument of crime. His sweetheart deal with the D.A.'s office included house arrest after he pleaded guilty, so he could continue to go to church and hunt for a job.

Regarding a prison sentence, Lemon was looking at 20 to 40 years in jail. But thanks to the generous plea bargain arranged by the D.A.'s office, with Lighstey prosecuting the case, Lemon received a sentence of only three and a half to seven years in prison for murdering his newborn son.

ADA LIGHTSEY: PROSECUTING KILLERS IS JUST SO COMPLICATED

On Oct. 10, 1994, four gang members who got into a shoot-out killed Petra Yamira Vargas, who was only 15 years old.

The murder victim's sister, Krystal Vargas, was a witness in the case. Two of the four killers were arrested and convicted and given life sentences in a trial prosecuted by former Assistant District Attorney Carlos Vega.

In 2019, a couple of detectives knocked on the door of Krystal Vargas and her family. The detectives were carrying a letter from the district attorney's office. The letter informed Vargas that one of the men who killed her sister was being granted a release from prison by D.A. Larry Krasner because he was a juvenile lifer.

Vargas, who said her family was traumatized all over again by the news, turned to Vega for help. Vega, who by then had left the D.A.'s office, advised Vargas to argue that as a stipulation for release, the D.A. should require the former juvenile lifer getting out of jail to give up the names of the other two gang members involved in the killing of Vargas's sister. 

The D.A.'s office got those two names, Vargas said, but then did nothing. A distraught Vargas contacted Assistant District Attorney Chesley Lightsey.

"Chesley did confirm that both men were still alive and both had criminal records so they were able to locate them," Vargas said about the other two suspects in her sister's murder.


But when Vargas asked Lighstey why the D.A.'s office wasn't doing anything to prosecute the other two murder suspects, Vargas said Lightsey told her, "Oh the case is complicated," and that there was "a lot of digging to do."

 

According to Vargas, Lightsey also told her that if Carlos Vega was still in the D.A.'s office he would have done the necessary research, but it's "so complicated," Vargas said she was told again.


"She didn’t do her job," Vargas said about Lightsey. "Our case was like a number to her. I never felt empathy from her . . .  We just 100 percent knew that she just didn’t fight for our family."


I emailed Vargas's comments to Lightsey, but she said she was declining to discuss specific cases "out of respect for the victims and their families, who continue to suffer."

 

During a second visit to the D.A.'s office, Vargas demanded to meet with D.A. Larry Krasner. 


"He was not familiar with my sister case and had to scramble through paperwork in front of him," Vargas said.  


Vargas said she and her family argued that "my sister deserved justice," but "Krasner had zero and I mean zero empathy . . . He was like a robot sitting there."


Krasner also spoke to the Vargas family in Spanish, which they thought was condescending, so they asked the D.A to please use English.


"It's 100% clear that he is biased for these criminals," Vargas said about Krasner. "There is no sympathy" for victims. We were standing on opposite sides. We're on opposite teams."


I emailed Vargas's comments to Krasner and Roh, and both declined to respond.

 

A DANDY GAFFE

After an earlier stint in the D.A.'s office, Sherrell Dandy returned to the office in 2018, when Krasner was elected. According to knowledgable sources, in one of her old cases during her previous tenure in the D.A,'s office, Dandy made a big mistake.

On March 26, 2013, while giving her closing argument in a case involving two men accused of robbery and kidnapping, Assistant District Attorney Dandy mixed up defendants Malik Watson and Raheem Turner. She pointed at Watson and called him Turner. And she pointed at Turner and called him Watson.

The jury was understandably confused about the facts of the case. As a result, Watson and Turner were subsequently found not guilty of aggravated assault, robbery, conspiracy, robbery of a motor vehicle, kidnapping for ransom, carrying unlicensed firearms, possession of an instrument of crime, and simple assault. 

After they were released, both Watson and Turner were arrested and charged with committing more crimes.

Watson, 27, was arrested in Aug. 16, 2016 for a savage murder and arson attack on a family in Las Vegas. According to the Las Vegas Sun, on Nov. 16, 2015, a dispute over a shipment of illegal drugs led to Watson and other assailants assaulting  four members of a Las Vegas family. According to the newspaper, the four family members were bound, stabbed and beaten by assailants, who doused them with gasoline and set fire to their house.

Mario Jimenez, 45, died the day of the fire. His daughter, Angelica Jimenez, 27, who was critically burned, subsequently died from her injuries. In addition, a 71-year old man survived with serious stab wounds and burns. Another woman was treated for severe burns. 

During the fire, a neighbor rescued a 10-month old girl who police said was placed outside by the assailants, with the family dogs, before they set the house on fire. 

On Aug. 14, 2019, a SWAT team in Virginia arrested Turner, 31, for a shooting that occurred in Philadelphia. He was hit with seven charges that included attempted murder, aggravated assault, conspiracy, carrying unlicensed firearms, and reckless endangerment.

In an email, Dandy said the "statements about my experience and the number of homicide cases I tried is inaccurate." 

According to knowledgable sources, the approximate number of homicide cases tried by Dandy is three. But when she was asked to supply an accurate number, Dandy didn't respond.

In her email, Dandy also stated that the details of her courtroom gaffe were inaccurate.

"I encourage you to review the trial transcript to get a more accurate idea of the factual complexities that existed when that case was tried eight years ago," she wrote.

But when asked if she could supply the trial transcript, Dandy did not respond.

As a homicide prosecutor, Dandy lost the Michael White case, although her boss had plenty to do with that defeat. But in a murder case that was as high profile as it gets, you have to wonder if that's the proper setting for a rookie homicide prosecutor to try and lose one of her first murder cases.

So it goes in the D.A.'s office, where most experienced prosecutors were either fired on Krasner's first day in office, or deserted the ship before Krasner got there. The old pros were replaced by 61 rookie prosecutors personally recruited straight out of law school by Krasner, 21 of whom promptly flunked the bar exam. 

And when those 21 rookie prosecutors took the bar exam again, seven of those assistant district attorneys flunked again.

As Krasner famously said when he fired 31 veteran prosecutors, "The coach gets to pick the team." 

Sadly, it looks like Coach Krasner picked a team full of losers.

It's not only the prosecutors in the homicide unit who are inexperienced and/or incompetent. According to one of the most prominent criminal defense lawyers in town, it's the entire team at the D.A.'s office under Krasner.

Veteran criminal defense lawyer Charles "Chuck" Peruto Jr. announced yesterday that he's seeking the May 18th Republican nomination for D.A.

In an interview, Peruto described Krasner as a "public defender disguised as a district attorney." And he said it's just too easy these days for an experienced lawyer like himself to beat Krasner's prosecutors.

"I haven't lost a jury trial since Larry Krasner took office," Peruto declared. He said he's tried a dozen cases since January 2018, when Krasner took office, including two murder trials, and he's won them all. 

"I've done this for 40 years and something's got to be done, this is a joke," Peruto said about the level of competence in Krasner's D.A.'s office.

"You don't even get the thrill of victory that you used to get if you win, because if you don't win, you stink," Peruto said. 

Peruto says his usual strategy with Krasner's prosecutors is to bump them off their game. He typically does that during his closing argument by listing five facts that the D.A. didn't discuss when they put on their case.

It's a diversionary tactic, Peruto admitted. The kind you can only pull on inexperienced lawyers.

"You take their eye off the ball," Peruto laughed.

In closing arguments, prosecutors are the last to speak to the jury. So during his jury trials against Krasner's prosecutors, Peruto said, he's watched with amusement as they subsequently wasted their closing arguments by chasing the red herrings that Peruto just dropped.

When the smartest thing they could do, Peruto admitted with a laugh, was to just ignore him.

So there you have it folks. The Eagles and the Sixers aren't the only teams in town known for tanking. 

At the D.A.'s office under Larry Krasner, his prosecutors, willingly or unwillingly, are tanking every day in court because most of them don't know what they're doing.

In sports, a team that tanks is typically rewarded with higher draft choices. But when the D.A.'s office tanks, everybody in town loses.

That's because every time an inexperienced and/or incompetent Krasner prosecutor blows a case, another armed and dangerous criminal gets out of jail. So he is free to rob, shoot and kill more victims.

Krasner Strikes Again: Man In U Haul With Human Torso Was Registered Sex Offender, Accused Burglar Let Out Of Jail On No Bail

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

The man riding around town yesterday in a U-Haul with a dismembered human torso in back is a registered sex offender with a long rap sheet featuring more than a dozen arrests. 

Taray Herring, 47, of Northeast Philadelphia, who confessed to police that he hacked up the victim's body but claimed he didn't kill anybody, was most recently let out of jail last June on a burglary rap, after a judge decided Herring didn't have to post any bail.

On May 9, 2020, Herring's bail for the burglary case had been set at $10,000 monetary, meaning he would have to post $1,000 to get out of jail. But on June 9, 2020, after the public defender filed a motion on Herring's behalf to modify his bail, Judge James DeLeon decided that instead of $10,000 monetary bail, he would set Herring's bail at $10,000 unsecured.

That meant that Herring didn't have to post a cent to get out of jail. And where was the D.A's office on that request? Standing up to protect the public? Nope. "By agreement of the Commonwealth," court records say, with a pandemic on, the D.A.'s office went along with the public defender's motion to spring Herring, so he wouldn't come down with COVID.

District Attorney Larry Krasner and Jane Roh, his spokesperson, did not respond to a request for comment. 

Krasner and Roh also declined to explain why, a year before the burglary arrest, in 2019, the D.A.'s office gave Herring lenient treatment. They let him plead guilty to a misdemeanor and granted him probation in a plea bargain for stealing a car, when the D.A. could have put prosecuted Herring on felony charges, and kept him in jail. 

In both 2019 and 2020, Herring was accused of violating his parole, with both the stolen car arrest and the burglary arrest. But both times the D.A.'s office gave Herring a pass and let him back out on the street. 

Last June, the D.A.'s office did one more favor for Herring: they asked a judge to waive a detainer filed by the county Probation Department against Herring that would have kept him in jail without bail until a hearing on the probation violation would have been held. 

That's why criminals call our D.A. "Uncle Larry," because he's their best friend.

At 9 .m. yesterday, police got a call about a burglary in progress involving a U-Haul truck parked outside a house at 1011 Sanibel Street in the Somerton section of the city. When the cops arrived at the scene, they observed a U-Haul truck with Arizona license plates traveling south of Kelvin Avenue.

"The vehicle pulled over, and as soon as the officers got out of the car the driver of the U-Haul just came right out the door and said, 'I don't want anything to do with this,' and 'There's a body in the back,'" Sgt. Eric Gripp told 6ABC.

Officers searched the back of the van and found a trash bag with a dismembered human torso inside.

Herring, along with the driver, David Kirby, 43, didn't attempt to escape and both were taken into custody, Sgt. Gripp told 6ABC. A police source said that neither man has been charged, but that Herring confessed to having dismembered the victim's body.

Last night, police found a human leg and a hand in a dumpster behind a nearby Wawa at Kelvin Street and Bustleton Avenue, 6ABC reported. Police said the body parts could have belonged to the same victim.

Sgt. Gripp told 6ABC that police had been summoned by a neighbor to check up on Peter Gerold, 70, a licensed massage therapist who operated out of his house on Sanibel Street. Neighbors told cops that Gerold was missing, and so were his cars.

Herring, after he was Mirandized, gave a voluntary statement where he claimed that he didn't kill the victim, but he did dismember him. According to police, Herring told the cops that after he hacked up the victim with an electric saw and a hacksaw, he deep fried various body parts, wrapped them in plastic, and disposed of them in various dumpsters in the 10800 block of Proctor Road.

Kirby told the cops he was helping Herring dispose of trash from the house and claimed he was initially unaware that a human torso was in one of the trash bags. Police recovered other human remains from various dumpsters and transported them to the Medical Examiner's office. 

Police recovered blood swabs, a knife, and burnt clothing from the burglarized home. In the U-Haul, in addition to the human torso, the cops found numerous bloody saws, a pair of gloves and kitchen utensils.

Herring, according to the cops, is a registered sex offender who lived in an apartment at 600 Red Lion Road. He's described as a 5-foot-7, 160 pound black male who's bald and has a tattoo on his chest. 

On May 8, 2020, Herring was arrested and charged with burglary, criminal trespass that resulted in bodily injury, theft, receiving stolen property, and criminal mischief. A month later, he got out of jail without having to post bail. 

Since Herring got out of jail, the preliminary hearing in his case was canceled twice, and continued twice. The most recent continuance was on Jan. 6th, after a request was made by Herring's lawyer. 

Herring has a busy rap sheet which in recent years shows some favorable treatment from the D.A.'s office under Larry Krasner.

One of Herring's early arrests was in 1993, when he was found guilty of defiant trespass, aggravated assault and possessing instruments of crime. He was sentenced to 18 to 36 months in jail, and a minimum of three years probation.

In 2000, Herring pleaded guilty to aggravated assault, indecent assault and possession of instruments of crime, and was sentenced to 5 to 10 years in jail.

In 2012, he pleaded guilty to harassment and simple assault, and got one to two years in jail and up to two years probation in allegations that involved four different victims. A charge of indecent assault was withdrawn.

A knowledgable source said that Herring was accused of riding down Broad Street on a bicycle and grabbing several women's butts. 

In 2013, he was found guilty of harassment, and indecent assault, and was sentenced to a minimum of 9 to 18 months in jail on the indecent assault charge. 

On Jan. 10, 2019, while he was still on probation, Herring was arrested for stealing a car. He was charged with theft, and receiving stolen property,  two third-degree felonies, and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, a second-degree misdemeanor.

But in a plea bargain arranged by the generous D.A.'s office, the two felony charges were dropped, and Herring pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor, unauthorized use of a  motor vehicle.

He was put on probation for a maximum of 18 months. He also got no further penalty for violating his probation.

Herring was still on probation for the stolen car on May 8, 2020, when he was arrested for burglary. But once again, the D.A. went easy on Herring, by not prosecuting him for violating parole. 

A month later, Herring was let out of jail without having to post any bail. Herring also got a couple of more breaks from the D.A.'s office.

On June 10, 2020, the county Probation Department filed an arrest warrant for Herring alleging that the burglary arrest had violated Herring's parole.

On June 15, 2020, the Probation Department also filed a detainer against Herring alleging a parole violation because of Herring's burglary arrest. The detainer would have kept Herring in jail without bail until a hearing on the probation violation was held.

But the D.A.'s office told the judge to lift the detainer and Herring was free to continue his criminal career.

Carlos Vega, who's running in the May 18th Democratic primary for District Attorney against Krasner, was shaking his head when he heard about Herring's release from jail on no bail.

"It's another tragedy that could have been avoided," Vega said. He compared this latest outrage with two recent cases when a dog walker was killed and an ex-wife was murdered by her ex-husband.

In both cases, the D.A.'s office was responsible for not keeping armed and dangerous criminals in jail.

"If the D.A had done its job," Vega said, another murder victim might still be alive.

But once again, the D.A.'s office failed to do it's job.

"And I don't know," Vega said, "whether it's due to incompetence or laziness or they just plain don't care."

UPDATE: On Saturday Feb. 13th, Herring was arrested and charged with burglary, criminal trespass, theft, receiving stolen property, abuse of a corpse, and tampering with physical evidence. He is being held without bail.

Inquirer Gives D.A. Krasner A Pass On Release Of U-Haul Hacker

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

On Valentine's Day, The Philadelphia Inquirer just planted a big sloppy wet kiss on a guy they've been sweet on for a long time.

In a story about the arrest of Taray Herring, the U-Haul Hacker, the Inquirer blatantly suppressed court records that show District Attorney Larry Krasner's prominent role in allowing Herring, a registered sex offender with more than a dozen arrests on his rap sheet, to be released last June from jail without having to post any bail.

On June 9, 2020, after the public defender filed a motion on Herring's behalf to modify his bail, Judge James DeLeon ruled that instead of $10,000 monetary bail, where Herring would have had to post a 10% deposit, or $1,000, he would set Herring's bail at $10,000 unsecured, meaning that Herring didn't have to post a cent to get out of jail. 

According to court records, the D.A.'s office went along with the public defender's request. "By agreement of the Commonwealth,"court records say, with a pandemic on, the D.A.'s office agreed with the public defender's motion to let Herring get out of jail free, so he wouldn't be in danger of catching the virus behind bars.

Last week, Herring told police that he didn't kill Peter Gerold, a 70-year-old licensed massage therapist, but he did dismember his body. According to police, Herring told the cops that after he hacked up the victim with an electric saw and a hacksaw, he deep fried various body parts, wrapped them in plastic, and disposed of them in various dumpsters.

On Saturday, Herring was arrested and charged with a half-dozen crimes, including burglary, abuse of a corpse, and tampering with physical evidence; he's being held without bail.

Herring told police that another man murdered Gerold, but homicide detectives aren't buying it. According to knowledgable police sources, Herring, even though he hasn't been charged with murder yet, remains the prime suspect.

In the Inquirer's story today about the arrest of Herring, the newspaper not only doesn't mention that the D.A.'s office agreed to Herring's release, but they also don't mention the repeated breaks Krasner's office gave Herring in the past two years, as detailed in online court records.

As Big Trial has previously reported, in 2019, the D.A.'s office in a plea bargain allowed Herring to plead guilty to a misdemeanor and granted him probation in a plea bargain for stealing a car, when the D.A. could have prosecuted Herring on two felony charges that he was arrested for, and kept him in jail. 

In both 2019 and 2020, Herring, with a lengthy rap sheet, was accused of violating parole, with both the 2019 arrest for stealing a car, and an arrest for burglary last year. But both times the D.A.'s office gave Herring a pass and let him back out on the street without having to suffer any penalties.

Last June, as Big Trial has previously reported, the D.A.'s office did one more favor for Herring: they asked a judge to waive a detainer filed by the county Probation Department against Herring that would have kept him in jail without bail until a hearing on the probation violation would have been held. The detainer was lodged after Herring violated probation by getting arrested for burglary.

All of these above facts are mentioned in court records and known by knowledgeable official sources, but not one of these facts is mentioned in the Inquirer story written by three reporters. In fact, in the entire story you won't find one mention of the district attorney's office, or District Attorney Larry Krasner, even though there's a reelection campaign going on right now, and a big campaign issue is Krasner's culpability for surging crime and murder rates.

Gabriel Escobar, editor of the Inquirer, did not respond to a request for comment. In Escobar's defense, he was probably busy holding another newsroom self-flagellation session to cleanse his newspaper of systemic racism

Last year, the city recorded 499 murders, the highest total in 30 years. In January, the city recorded 50 murders, the highest total in history. This month, we've had 14 murders over the first 13 days, a 42% increase over last year's near-record total. 

People are getting shot and murdered at record rates; the D.A.'s progressive polices are a major reason why, and the city's paper of record continues to cover for Larry Krasner. In the Inquirer's Progressive version of reality, the U-Haul Hacker mysteriously reappeared on the street, thanks to a judge's decision to lower bail, and Uncle Larry and the D.A.'s office, which is supposed to protect the public, didn't have a thing to do with it.

As it turns out, Krasner was more worried about the U-Haul Hacker catching a virus in jail than he was worried about what harm a registered sex offender with more than a dozen arrests could do if Krasner used the pandemic as an excuse to allow the hacker to resume his criminal career.

Krasner, of course, has declined comment to Big Trial on his role in the release of Herring. And thanks to the work of the Inquirer, he won't have to answer questions from anyone else. 

On May 18th, Krasner is up for reelection in the Democratic nomination for D.A. He's opposed by Democrat Carlos Vega, a former homicide prosecutor in the D.A.'s office who's made Krasner's lenient prosecutions of violent criminals a main campaign issue.

By not printing the facts about Krasner's role in the release of Herring, the only daily newspaper in town is not only suppressing the news, they're also censoring Krasner's political opponents. So they can get Krasner reelected, by not telling readers about the blood on Krasner's hands.

Because every time the Inky's "journalists" write about Krasner, they wash the blood off his hands.

If Krasner wins the May 18th Democratic primary, he'll face Chuck Peruto Jr., a career criminal defense lawyer and Republican, in the November general election. 

 When he announced he was seeking the Republican nomination for D.A., Peruto told this reporter that Krasner's office is so incompetent it's a joke. He said that since Krasner got elected, he's won every one of a dozen cases he's tried against Krasner's inexperienced and/or incompetent prosecutors, including two murder trials.

"You don't even get the thrill of victory that you used to get if you win, because if you don't win, you stink," Peruto told Big Trial.

The Inquirer has a long history of protecting Krasner, a fellow progressive who's allegedly out to reform the criminal justice system, except he has a bad habit of letting violent criminals out of jail, like Herring, so they can commit more crimes.

Here's another recent example of the Inquirer's blatant pro-Krasner bias.

Last month, Adriano Coriano shot and killed his ex-wife, Gladys. When the Inquirer wrote about that story, they never got around to mentioning the fact that on Jan. 14th, police sought an arrest warrant for Adriano Coriano, for violating a protection order by repeatedly stalking, harassing and assaulting his ex-wife.

But, as Big Trial previously reported, for six straight days, the charging unit of the District Attorney's office sat on that request for a warrant to arrest Coriano, and did nothing.

Finally, at 8:40 p.m. on Jan. 20th, an assistant district attorney from the charging unit sent an email to the cops stating that the D.A.'s office was declining to issue the arrest warrant, because they needed more information.

Specifically, the D.A.'s office wanted to know the husband's email address, cell phone number, and date-of-birth. The D.A.'s office also wanted to change some language in the arrest warrant. Such as in the arrest warrant, police had referred to Coriano's "former wife of seven years;" the D.A. wanted to change that to the "former wife of defendant."

There was only one problem -- two hours earlier that day, Adrian Coriano drove over to his ex-wife's house and shot Gladys Coriano multiple times. An hour after the D.A. notified the police that they were declining to approve the arrest warrant for her husband, Gladys Coriano, 52 was pronounced dead at Jefferson Hospital.

Some honest reporting would have turned up the heat on Krasner. But once again, instead of reporting the news, the Inquirer was covering for Larry Krasner. 

The newspaper where I used to work is quite simply a disgrace to journalism.

Police Commissioner Outlaw To Tour Barber Shops & Nail Salons

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Here's a rundown on the early highlights from this week's police blotter.

On Monday, a man who claimed to be the victim of an armed carjacking in Center City whipped out a registered gun and shot an alleged perp twice in the head. 

Up in the Somerton section of the city, neighbors were still reeling from the murder of Pete Gerold, whom they described as a gentle soul. His body was hacked to pieces last week by a crazed felon who was yet another recent recipient of a get-out-of-jail-free card from our district attorney.

And as of yesterday, the city's body count over the first 47 days of the New Year was up to 71 murders. That's a whopping 48% increase over last year's murder rate of 499, the highest body count in 30 years. At this rate, we'll  set an all-time record this year with 738 murders!

And meanwhile, over at police headquarters, what was Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw up to? Why in her latest crimefighting effort, the P.C. was ready to embark on a meet and greet tour of the city's beauty salons, barber shops, and nail salons. 

Seriously. It's a goodwill effort that has some of her troops laughing and snickering in disbelief.

The P.C.'s goodwill tour was announced on Tuesday, when Police Officer Waleska Garcia of the Community Relations Unit sent an email to community relations officers in all 21 police districts on behalf of her boss, Captain Maria Ortiz-Rodriguez.

"In the future, the Police Commissioner is looking to visit Beauty Salons, Barber Shops, and Nail Salons in your district," Garcia wrote. "Please survey your districts and create a list of the Salons and Shops in your area. Can you please provide a list by Feb. 24, 2021."

"Thank you and be safe."

The proposed goodwill tour seemed to baffle FOP President John McNesby.

"This is the first I have seen or heard this," he wrote in an email. "Not sure if this is real or not. If real, I can't see why."

"She is going to be laughed out of most of these places," one cop predicted. "What a fucking joke! How naive can one person be?"

"Just another smoke and mirrors attempt to not look at the pink elephant in the room," said another cop, referring to the city's soaring murder rate. "You can only pull the wool over peoples' eyes for so long before the mayor makes you the next Dennis Wilson," he said, referring to the former deputy police commissioner who was scapegoated by Kenney and Outlaw. 

Memo to FOP President McNesby: it's for real. It took me three tries over two days, but I finally got an official police spokesperson to confirm that the barber shop tour was on.

"The Commissioner is looking to interact with business owners and the community in a less formal forum," explained  ​Corporal Jasmine Reilly of the Philadelphia Police Department Office of Media Relations/Public Affairs."

"Commissioner Outlaw is hoping that engaging with community members in this way will encourage people to feel comfortable voicing their concerns. It's also a great opportunity for the community to get to know Commissioner Outlaw on a more personal level," Corporal Reilly said.

"In the past, we have had other Police Commissioners engage with the public in this way and the results are always positive."

In 2018, eight police officers from the Greater Philadelphia Chapter of the National Black Police Association launched "Blades, Fades & Engage," a tour of city barber shops done in conjunction with the Southwest Police Division's Community Relations Office.

“Young men and women of color ages 15 to 30 come in contact most frequently with law enforcement," G. Lamar Stewart, vice president of the local NBPA chapter, told The Philadelphia Tribune. "This program is designed to create intentional dialogue between police and that particular demographic; addressing key problems and developing solutions to build bridges and better serve the city's young adult population." 

After all, Stewart told the newspaper, the barbershop "has historically been a place where men can go to get a haircut, but also have honest, judgement-free dialogue about religion, politics, home life, the justice system and more.”

Stewart's emphasis was on men. Three years later, it was a natural for Outlaw to expand the barber shop tour to be more inclusive, by adding beauty salons and nail salons.

Who can forget Commissioner Outlaw's first policy directive, issued the morning after her first official day on the job?

The new policy directive stated that a previous directive that "only clear nail polish is acceptable while in uniform" was "hereby deleted."

That new policy directive cleared the way for Outlaw's signature black nail polish. 

At least she's consistent, right? 

So if anybody bumps into Mayor Kenney, who's been hiding under his desk during the current murder rampage, feel free to thank him for making such a brilliant hire. 

This is just what we need to fight crime in Philadelphia, a PR tour that will pacify the city one barber shop and nail salon at a time. 

Real Justice PAC Poured More Than $100,000 Into DA.'s Campaign

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

District Attorney Larry Krasner has a cozy relationship with a West Coast political action committee that's become his biggest campaign donor.

The Real Justice PAC of San Francisco has been pouring cash, in-kind services and even rent money into Krasner's reelection campaign, to the tune of more than $100,000.

The only problem: the city of Philadelphia's annual limit on contributions from PACs is just $12,600. That's why the city's Board of Ethics is monitoring the "Lawrence Krasner For District Attorney" campaign committee, and the contributions they've been raking in from the Real Justice PAC.

Because both the D.A.'s campaign committee and his favorite PAC are known offenders. Two years ago, the Board of Ethics finalized an agreement that called for the Real Justice PAC and Krasner's campaign committee to fork over a total of $23,000 in fines and "disgorgements" [or forfeits] for breaking city election laws back in 2017 with donations over and above the city's legal limits. 

And now with Krasner running for reelection in the May 18th Democratic primary, both the Real Justice PAC and the D.A.'s campaign committee are at it again. According to Real Justice's filings last year with the Federal Election Commission, the PAC lists as campaign contributions to Krasner a $25,000 donation made on April 15, 2020, and a $50,000 donation made on July 30, 2020. 

But in financial reports that Real Justice PAC filed with the city, and in a financial report filed by the Krasner committee with the state, to date, both entities have only disclosed the $25,000 contribution. So the question becomes on which forms was Real Justice telling the truth? Was it with the city or was it with the feds?

Real Justice isn't talking; neither is Krasner nor his campaign committee. But J. Shane Creamer Jr., executive director of the city's Board of Ethics, is watching.

"I'm aware of all their public filings and I have no comment," Creamer said. 

There's a loophole that would enable Krasner to get around that $12,600 limit on annual contributions from a PAC. Since Krasner didn't formally announce he was running for reelection until this month, Real Justice's contributions to the Krasner campaign last year fall under the classification of pre-candidacy donations.

That means any contribution Krasner receives over and above the $12,600 limit for a single year is supposed to be set aside in a special account, to be used for non-campaign expenses. That's opposed to any contribution over the legal limit that Krasner received while he was an official candidate. In that case, Krasner would have been required to return the excess contributions.

According to its website, the Real Justice PAC was founded to "fix our broken criminal justice system" by electing "reform" D.A.s across the country. 

In 2018 and 2019, Real Justice was Krasner's biggest campaign donor, donating $25,000 to Krasner in 2018 and another $9,000 in 2019, for a total of $34,000. In addition, two Real Justice PAC leaders made personal contributions to Krasner's campaign of another $9,000.

Where did Real Justice get its money? A major donor is Cari Tuna of Palo Alto, CA, a former Wall Street Journal reporter who's married to Dustin Moskovitz. Moskovitz, Mark Zuckerberg's roommate at Harvard, was a co-founder of Facebook who has a net worth estimated between $12 and $16 billion. 

According to data online posted by the Federal Election Commission, Cari Tuni has poured $2.25 million into the Real Justice PAC.

In 2020, the Lawrence Krasner for District Attorney collected a total of $161,984, most of it coming from out-of-state donors that included Friends at Work LLC of New York City, with $12,600; Susan Pritzker of San Francisco; Patty Quillin of Santa Cruz, CA., with $3,000; and John Legend Music of New York City, with $3,000.

In contrast, Carlos Vega, a former homicide prosecutor who is Krasner's only opponent in the May 18th Democratic primary, took in $131,412 in just one month, December of last year, mostly from local donors. 

The biggest campaign contributors to the "Vega For DA" committee include Vega himself, who donated a total of $20,000 to his own campaign; FOP Lodge No. 5 of Philadelphia, with $12,600; the FOP PAC, with $5,000; the Philadelphia Fire Fighters and Paramedic Union, with $5,000; and the Sprinkler Fitters Local Union No. 692 PAC Fund, with $3,000. 

In 2020, according to their filings with the FEC, the Real Justice PAC not only contributed a total of $75,000 to Krasner's campaign, but the PAC also paid a total of $29,450 in rent to Tiger Building LP. 

According to Krasner's statement of financial interest filed with the city, the D.A. has a 40% stake in Tiger Building LP,  which owns the former Princeton Club located at 1221-23 Locust Street. On a phone list posted outside the building, the Real Justice PAC is listed as a tenant. 

The historic landmark building has an assessed value of $3,798,300. The building also comes with a current tax bill of  $53,168.60 that isn't due until March 31st.

In Krasner's annual statements of financial interest filed with the city, he didn't mention any rental income, or any other income from his real estate holdings in either 2018 or 2019. 

But Krasner doesn't necessarily have to declare rental payments as income. For example, the partners at Tiger Building LP could decide to say, set aside the rent money to pay off taxes. The rental income would only count as income if Krasner and his partner decide to take it as income. If they don't, they don't have to report it.

The Real Justice PAC is closely intertwined with the Krasner campaign. This year, Brandon Evans, the political director of the Real Justice PAC, is reprising his role as Krasner's campaign manager, which was a successful gig in 2017, when Krasner was first elected D.A. 

According to Krasner's campaign finance statement, on top of cash, Real Justice also donated $10,375 in "in kind contributions" to Krasner for "staff time."

On a state financial disclosure form, the Real Justice PAC lists Brandon Evans as the person they paid for "in kind staff time." However, on the PAC's filings with the FEC, Brandon Evans is not listed anywhere under expenses.

That begs the question: How could Real Justice pay Evans for in-kind staff time, when according to their own FEC filing he's not listed on their payroll?

As I mentioned previously, nobody at Real Justice is talking. PAC officials did not respond to a request for comment.

Real Justice and Krasner's campaign are so intertwined that they share a common vendor.

Real Justice paid Wren Collective, an Austin, TX communications consultant used by Krasner, $12,000 for services. Krasner's campaign committee also disclosed that they paid Wren a total of $36,000. The owner of Wren, Jessica Brand, is also a campaign contributor; she gave a $3,000 donation to Krasner's campaign.

Real Justice got so involved in the 2017 Krasner campaign that the PAC's extra contributions resulted in fines for both donor and recipient for violating the city's elections laws.

According to the city's Board of Ethics, the Real Justice PAC violated the law in 2017 by paying for three embedded staffers on the Krasner campaign. The expenses for the embedded staffers amounted to "in-kind contributions to the Krasner campaign totaling $34,820.08 in 2017, which was $11,020.08 in excess of the limits imposed by the city’s Campaign Finance Law."

That's according a settlement agreement with the ethics board that was signed by both Michael Reed of the Board of Ethics, and Rebecca Bond, the treasurer of the Real Justice PAC.

Bond, a co-founder of the Real Justice PAC, served as the PAC's advisor to both Bernie Sanders's 2016 presidential campaign and the 2018 Beto for Texas Senate Campaign.

She's also a partner at The Social Practice, which defines itself as "an ideologically driven political consultancy." And she's the co author of the manifesto, "Rules for Revolutionaries: How Big Organizing Can Change Everything." 

In a May 22, 2017 press release, Bond bragged about the effect Real Justice's contributions and embedded staffers had on Krasner's victorious campaign. In the "fight to end mass incarceration," she wrote, Krasner's victory was " a massive earthquake."

"And RealJustice PAC was at the epicenter," she wrote.  "Real Justice PAC made the greatest contribution of any organization directly to the Krasner for District Attorney campaign. While there were many independent efforts, we placed three seasoned organizers inside the campaign, a bigger commitment than any other organization."

"In part as a result of their relentless efforts and experience with innovative technologies rarely used in a municipal race, they helped make it possible for volunteers to personally send over 160,000 text messages and make over 36,000 phone calls to the voters the campaign targeted as most needing to hear Larry’s message," Bond wrote.

"And while volunteers talking to voters was the soul of the campaign, every campaign needs funding, and Real Justice PAC also raised more than $36,000 directly into the Krasner campaign," Bond wrote. "This is a significant percentage of funds raised in a municipal race and it made a real difference because the money could be used directly by the candidate to cover the campaign’s most pressing needs."

Another co-founder of Real Justice PAC is Shaun King, a Black Lives Matter activist dubbed "Talcum X" by critics who questioned his claimed status as supposedly being biracial, because both of King's biological parents are white. [That led King to claim that his mother had an affair with a black man who was his real father.]

Under terms of the settlement agreement with the Ethics Board, Krasner's campaign committee paid a $4,000 fine and gave the city $11,000 to compensate for the excess contributions that came from Real Justice PAC. According to the settlement, the PAC also agreed to pay an $8,000 fine to the city.

Real Justice's generosity could have been extended to paying the Krasner campaign's fines, but the Ethics Board closed that door. 

The settlement agreement, dated Feb. 27, 2019, stipulates that the Krasner campaign "shall not use funds received from Real Justice PAC, its officers, or affiliates to pay the penalties or disgorgement required by this Agreement."

Officials at Real Justice PAC did not respond to a request for comment on the $50,000 disparity between the campaign contributions to Krasner that they listed on federal and city disclosure forms. 

Officials at the Larry Krasner For District Attorney committee also did not respond to a request for comment. Additionally, both Krasner and Jane Roh, his official spokesperson, did not respond to a request for comment. 

In my emails, l asked Real Justice, as well as Krasner and the Krasner for D.A. campaign committee, about what safeguards, if any, have they had adopted this time around to make sure they don't run afoul again of the city's elections laws.

Right now, the answer to that question appears to be nothing. 

D.A. Covers Up Wall Memorializing Cops Killed In Line Of Duty

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

In a move that's sure to offend every cop in the city, District Attorney Larry Krasner's office has covered up a "Wall of Remembrance" that features plaques honoring some 200 hero cops who died in the line of duty.

The Wall of Remembrance is located on the mezzanine level outside the Ray Harley Conference Room at the D.A.'s office at 3 S. Penn Square.

"A fucking disgrace," said one cop. "Here's what Krasner thinks of cops who have died in the line of duty," texted another cop who sent along the photo at right.

In the photo, the wall is covered with a sheet that bears repeated images of DAO logo of the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office.

We already knew that Larry Krasner hates cops. When he was a defense lawyer, he sued the police department 75 times. At his victory party, the crowd chanted "Fuck the FOP." 

But this move is over the top.

FOP President John McNesby was outraged.

"He [Krasner] has been pissing on cops his whole career," McNesby wrote in an email. "This is a whole different situation when you smear the memories of those that gave their lives protecting the community in the line of duty."

"Those in the Law Enforcement community sadly know what kind of person he is," McNesby said. "More of a reason to move him out of that position."

The FOP has endorsed Carlos Vega for D.A., Krasner's opponent in the May 18th Democratic primary.

As he has done for the past 19 months when fielding questions from Big Trial, Krasner didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did Jane Roh, his alleged spokesperson. 

When Krasner's fans chanted "Fuck the FOP" at his victory party back in 2017, McNesby was similarly outraged, as was then U.S. Attorney William McSwain.

“There is a new culture of disrespect for law enforcement in this city that is promoted and championed by District Attorney Larry Krasner – and I am fed up with it,” McSwain said. “This vile rhetoric puts our police in danger. It disgraces the Office of the District Attorney. And it harms the good people in the City of Philadelphia and rewards the wicked.”

Sadly, the sentiment expressed in that chant is shared by some of Krasner's own employees. During the George Floyd riots, an assistant district attorney posted on Instagram, "FUCK THE COPS."

Since he took office, Krasner has eagerly indicted cops, whether he had the evidence or not. Such as the case that he filed against former staff Inspector Joe Bologna that a judge recently threw out of court.

During the George Floyd protests, Krasner dropped the charges against protesters who got arrested for assaulting an officer. Protesters such as Evan Gorski, the Temple student that Bologna allegedly hit in the head with a metal baton, allegedly causing a wound that required 10 staples and 10 sutures to close.

The only problem --- video of the incident, broken down frame by frame in the courtroom, clearly showed that Bologna never struck Gorski in the head; instead, his baton struck a backpack, which was on Gorski's left shoulder. By department guidelines, that was an acceptable use of force.

The video also showed that Gorski had not a drop of blood on his head or any other part of his body. But the video also showed that Gorski clearly interfered with officers, and was clearly seen stealing Bologna's baton and throwing it away.

There's at least 40 cops from the Philadelphia District Attorney's office who are assigned to work in the D.A.'s office. One of those cops was pissed when he saw the picture of the covered up Wall of Remembrance.

"Fuck him. That's blatant disrespect," the cop said about Krasner.

"How could a Philadelphia police officer walk into that building with his or her head held up high when the D.A. covered up the faces of their brothers and sisters killed in the line of duty," said another cop.

Krasner not only has no respect for cops killed in the line of duty, the cop said, but he also has no respect for the families of those dead cops, who are crime victims.

The wall was put up when Lynne Abraham was D.A. Former D.A. Seth Williams added to it. But Larry Krasner covered it up. 

Tonight, cops were calling on Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw to pull all the cops who work in the D.A.'s office out of that office as a protest.

Outlaw could not immediately be reached for comment. 

Larry Krasner Doubles Down On Stupid

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

The "Wall of Remembrance" in the D.A.'s office that honors 24 cops killed in the line of duty remains covered by a shroud that bears the repeated emblem of the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office.

At a press conference yesterday, District Attorney Larry Krasner compounded his prior sins of arrogance and deceit by doubling down on stupid.

"I do not regret doing what is legally required," Krasner told reporters. To get himself out of a public relations jam, the D.A. yesterday blamed the pandemic. He claimed that because of the pandemic, the large conference room on the mezzanine level of the D.A.'s office where the Wall of Remembrance is located inside had to be used for "new" purposes that legally required the "temporary blockage" of the wall.

What Krasner was attempting to do through obfuscation and legal mumbo-jumbo was to imply that because of the pandemic, the conference room where the wall is located was possibly being used by the D.A.'s office to convene a grand jury, about which everything is supposed to be kept secret.

Krasner also attempted to use the police commissioner as a shield to protect himself from further negative political fallout. He did this by telling reporters that he contacted Outlaw to explain what happened, and by implying everything was Jake with the P.C. 

"The commissioner is now aware of the details surrounding the temporary blockage of those photographs from public view," Krasner assured reporters. Of course, he refused to admit he made any mistake and of course he didn't apologize, which would have ended this sorry episode.

Because here's what the general public may not understand about Larry Krasner -- he views himself as a messiah. A messiah who's leading a criminal justice revolution to free the oppressed, which constitutes anybody who's currently behind bars. 

And as a messiah who's trying to free his people, Larry Krasner is not only infallible. He's also far above being questioned by mere mortals about any of his lofty new policies and procedures. All of which came apparently down glistening from Mount Sinai the day the anointed one took office

"I do not regret doing what legally is required," Krasner told reporters. Because of the pandemic, he said again, the D.A.'s office was required to "use spaces, including our largest spaces, for purposes that were new and we were required to do it in an unprecedented way."

As a former D.A. publicly explained, this explanation is B.S.

Veteran prosecutors have also confirmed that in the past few decades, conference rooms in the D.A.'s office were never used to convene grand juries. Because past precedent in the D.A.'s office was to convene grand juries in either courtrooms at City Hall, or in city-owned offices scattered around town.

The idea being that grand juries should be held in neutral sites, which, of course, doesn't include the D.A.'s office.

The Wall of Remembrance that features memorial plaques bearing the faces of fallen officers was dedicated in 2009 when Lynne Abraham was district attorney. In an email to the Inquirer, Abraham blasted the official explanation from the D.A.'s office, first issued by Jane Roh, Krasner's spokesperson on Twitter, as “utter nonsense” and “Jive talk!”

“I don’t accept any of those statements and you shouldn’t either," Abraham told the Inquirer. "If Krasner wants to take the photos down, he should hitch up his big boy pants and remove them instead of having his people make up baloney."

At his press conference yesterday, Krasner said that's exactly what he's planning to do. And that when he talked to Outlaw, they agreed that what should be done next is to move the Wall of Remembrance to a new location. 

Krasner furthered attempted to defend himself against the public outcry over his blatant insult to dead cops and their families by blaming his opponents, like the FOP, and saying that they were just playing politics. 

What Krasner left unspoken was that as a messiah, he's above that kind of thing. As Krasner proceeded to explain in a lecture to reporters.

"I think you all better strap in to your seats and put on your seat belts because what you're about to see, unfortunately, will be some people who are much more interested in politics than they are in prosecution," Krasner said.

"We cannot treat this as a reality show."

This is rich because Krasner, who has zero interest in prosecution, is also playing politics. And he's betting that by floating some legal gibberish and hiding behind the police commissioner and the pandemic it'll get his sorry ass out of this scrape.

Sorry, Larry, that ain't happening.

Why?

Because we all know that the police commissioner is a timid puppet of the mayor, who does whatever he tells her to. We're talking about the mayor who employed the same campaign manager that's working right now on the D.A.'s own reelection campaign.

All progressives feed at the same trough. 

We also know that right now Kenney the career politician is casting a covetous eye around the political landscape for the next public office that he plans to run for. Because as a bloated career politician who's been on the public dole his entire life, that's all he knows. 

And to get there, to reach his next elected office, Kenney, who's repeatedly sold out the citizens of this city to further his own political ambitions, is going to need him some George Soros bucks, the same millions that got Larry Krasner elected D.A.

And so not only is Jim Kenney never going to criticize Larry Krasner, even though people are dying in the streets every day because of his policies. But Outlaw, as Kenney's puppet, is also never going to criticize Larry Krasner.

So hiding behind the mayor's muted puppet, Mr. Krasner, isn't going to get you anywhere.

The truth, Mr. D.A., is that if you're actually convening a grand jury in that conference room, you shouldn't be displaying all those logos of the D.A.'s office, which is what that shroud is plastered with that you've presently got draped over the Wall of Remembrance.

We now reach the bottom line of this episode. If there actually is a grand jury meeting in that conference room, Mr. D.A., could it possibly be the one that's presently at work trying to indict the two officers who shot Walter Wallace Jr. last year, setting off three days of riots and looting in the city?

The fact that you're scheming to indict those two cops for murder is not exactly a big secret. 

We're talking about the incident where the mentally unstable Wallace, who was the subject of three protection orders taken out by members of his own family, was menacing his own parents with a knife. 

And when the cops showed up after the family called them to the scene, Wallace, with his knife held high, repeatedly pursued the two cops out into the street, and repeatedly ignored their orders to drop the knife.

Hey Mr. D.A. Is the real reason you covered up that Wall of Remembrance because you didn't want the grand jurors to see all those plaques of those fallen officers?

Is the real reason you covered up that Wall of Remembrance because when you present your twisted version of the facts to a bunch of gullible citizens, you didn't want them to look up at the faces of those fallen cops?

Because you didn't want those grand jurors to realize that when those two cops pulled the trigger, what might have been going through their heads was how they didn't want to wind up as another couple of plaques on that same wall?

D.A.'s Staffer Beats Murder Rap In Shooting Death of Prostitute

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

The state Attorney General's office has decided that a staff member of the Philadelphia District Attorney's office acted in self defense last year when he shot and killed a male prostitute.

At 10 a.m. on Oct. 20, 2020, DeVonte' Douglass, then the D.A.'s gun violence coordinator, shot and killed Vernon Harris, whom he had met on Instagram, and agreed to meet near the Mount Peace cemetery to have "a sexual encounter in exchange for money," police said.

“After a thorough investigation into the fatal shooting of Vernon Harris on October 20, 2020, the Office of Attorney General has determined Devonte’ Douglass acted in self defense when he fired his weapon and will not be charged with homicide," a spokesperson for the AG's office said today.

However, the spokesperson said, "Mr. Douglass was arrested and charged for other crimes surrounding Mr. Harris’ death, including soliciting for prostitution and misleading investigators about the facts surrounding the fatal shooting.” Douglass was also charged with possession of an instrument of crime.

After Douglass's encounter with Harris, which took place in the back seat of a car, Douglass told police, Harris stood outside the vehicle and pointed a gun at Douglass, and demanded all his money.

Harris then placed his gun inside his waistband. But when Harris started reaching around the vehicle, Douglass told police that he feared that Harris was going to take out his gun and shoot him. So Douglass drew his gun and shot Harris twice in the chest, killing him. Then he ran across Lehigh Avenue, pleading for someone to call police. 

Police recovered a 9 mm gun registered to Douglass. As a member of the District Attorney's Immediate Response Team, DeVonte' Douglass routinely visited crime scenes, hospitals, and the medical examiner's office when there was a homicide, to offer help to victims' families. 

Douglass, wearing his DA's ID badge around his neck, was transported to the homicide unit. Then, the case was turned over to the attorney general's office for investigation because the D.A.'s office had an obvious conflict of interest. 

Police confiscated a Smith & Wesson .357 magnum from Harris's waistband. 

Harris had a dozen prior arrests, including three for robbery, as well as for assault, theft, criminal mischief, and narcotics. His last arrest was on July 14, 2019 for robbery, aggravated assault, and reckless endangerment. He was out on bail of $30,000 monetary, meaning he had to put down 10 percent, or $3,000 to get out of jail. 

But on May 21, 2020, Harris's bail was lowered to $30,000 unsecured, meaning he didn't have to post a cent with the court to get released. He was yet another member of the get-out-of-jail free club that happens frequently under D.A. Krasner.

Harris was released from prison on June 2, 2020, and was on probation until February, 2021. But Harris only lived for another five months before his fatal encounter with Douglass.  

Douglass had been placed on administrative leave last fall by D.A. Krasner pending the outcome of the attorney general's investigation. As far as Douglass was concerned, it's a shame his case wasn't  investigated by the D.A.'s office.

Because not only would Douglass have beat the murder rap but he also would have never been charged with soliciting a prostitute. Because under the enlightened regime of noted criminal justice "reformer" Larry Krasner, prostitution isn't a crime.

Krasner, of course, did not respond to a request for comment. 

For the state attorney general's office, today was the second time in three months that that office had to preside over the disposition of a criminal case involving a member of the Philadelphia District Attorney's office. 

On May 11, 2020, police arrested Assistant District Attorney Dana Lynn Bazelon, 40, of Center City,  after she allegedly left her four-year-old daughter unattended in a parked car.

Cops were on routine patrol on the 200 block of Rittenhouse Street in the Mount Airy section of the city at 3:21 p.m. when they were flagged down by a man who told them a child had been left alone in the back seat of a gray Ford Fusion.

The police made eye contact with the child, unlocked the car door through an open window and took the child into custody. The victim's mother, identified as Dana Lynn Bazelon, 40, of Center City, returned 34 minutes later with her six-year-old son.

The mother told police that she went for a walk with her son and didn't want to wake her daughter because she hadn't been sleeping well. Bazelon was and is an assistant district attorney who on her Facebook page Bazelon states that she is a "proud Philadelphian" and "criminal justice reformer" who serves as a "policy advisor" to D.A. Larry Krasner.

Police charged Bazelon with child endangerment. She was placed in custody and police transported Bazelon and her two children to the Special Victims Unit, where the four-year-old was reported in good condition.

On Dec. 28, 2020, the attorney general claimed they released an official statement to any parties that inquired on the disposition of the case. It was a statement, however, that wasn't reported anywhere, until now.

"Following her arrest, Dana Bazelon successfully completed ARD conditions requested by the Commonwealth, including participating in parenting counseling and remaining arrest-free for six months," an official spokesman for the attorney general's office said. "As a result, the Commonwealth withdrew the charges against her today."

So the D.A. is batting .5000 when it comes to beating the rap for staffers who got arrested last year. 

You have to wonder, however, is that a district attorney's office that Larry Krasner's running over at 3 South Penn Square, or is it a halfway house?

Where's The Macy's Rapist At? Don't Ask Our Clueless D.A.

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

How clueless is the District Attorney's office in Philadelphia under D.A. Larry Krasner?

Yesterday morning, Assistant District Attorney Lyandra Retacco stood in front of Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Patrick Dugan, to discuss the whereabouts of one Jaleel Uqdah, 22, of West Philadelphia.

Mr. Uqdah had a status conference scheduled in front of the judge because he had been arrested during the George Floyd riots last June for allegedly breaking into a Family Dollar store and doing some free shopping. Of course, Uqdah got a get-out-of-jail free card from his Uncle Larry shortly after his arrest, and so he was recently at large.

But Assistant District Attorney Retacco didn't think Uqdah was a free man. In court, according to court records, she told the judge that Uqdah was still in custody at the Delaware County Prison where Retacco believed Uqdah was still serving time for a previous 2017 arrest for receiving stolen property. 

And so at the hearing in front of Judge Dugan, the public defender agreed to accept service on Uqdah's behalf of the notice of when to appear in court next on April 1st in Courtroom 406. 

The only problem: a couple of hours earlier yesterday morning, at 7:30 a.m., police were out in West Philadelphia arresting Uqdah for raping a 55 year-old woman in a rest room at Macy's. It took the coordinated efforts of the Philadelphia police, the public, and SEPTA police, working with surveillance footage from both Macy's and SEPTA, to catch the accused rapist.

And so Uqdah was in custody yesterday, charged with rape, robbery and aggravated assault, with no thanks to the brain dead district attorney's office. Now we can only hope that Let-Em-Loose Larry doesn't let Mr. Uqdah out of jail again.

When police arrested Uqdah yesterday for the Sunday rape at Macy's, he was at his home in West Philadelphia. Police said they recovered clothes that Uqdah was wearing the day of the rape.

On Sunday, Uqdah walked into Macy's at 11:11 a.m, and within three minutes he was hiding in the bathroom, waiting for a victim, Captain Mark Burgmann told CBSN Philly. 

When the alleged victim entered the rest room, Uqdah allegedly hopped out of one stall into her stall, and threatened to stab her with 12-inch cooking skewers. Then he allegedly raped and robbed her before he fled.  

Uqdah was captured on surveillance video hopping the subway at Market-Frankford El. Then, he got off at 52nd and Market, and took a bus to Girard Avenue. 

Capt. Burgmann credited the suspect's arrest to crimefighting teamwork from the public, Macy's and SEPTA.

"It took a lot of work and we're very appreciate of that," Burgmann said.

He didn't mention the D.A.'s office.

In a statement, according to ABC6, a spokesperson for the District Attorney's office said it will continue to prosecute two unresolved cases involving Uqdah that have been delayed multiple times due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The first was an arrest for burglary and related charges stemming from the looting of a Family Dollar store. The second case, the D.A. said, involved charges for theft and related offenses stemming from an August 2019 incident involving a SEPTA cashier booth.

According to court records, Uqdah was arrested on June 2, 2020 and charged with burglary, criminal trespass, and possession of an instrument of crime in connection with the looting of the Dollar store.

His bail was set at $5,000 unsecured, meaning he didn't have to post a cent before he got out of jail free. Thanks, Uncle Larry.

Uqdah's preliminary hearing in that case has been canceled or continued a total of seven times, according to court records.

Yesterday in court, ADA Retacco told the judge that Uqdah was in the Delaware County Correctional Facility as of Sept. 18, 2017 and was still in custody.

Is lying to a judge a crime? Or can ADA Retacco simply plead gross incompetence?

Court records say that Uqdah was arrested on Sept. 1, 2017 in Delaware County and charged with receiving stolen property. On Dec. 11, 2017, he was sentenced in a  receiving negotiated guilty plea to 23 months in jail and two years probation.

If he served that prison time consecutively, he would have been out by the end of 2019. Officials at the Delaware County Sheriff's Department did not respond to a request for comment. 

And of course District Attorney Krasner, and his loyal spokesperson, Jane Roh, did not respond to a request for comment.

At least they're consistent. For the past 19 months, I've been firing questions at Krasner and Roh regarding some 80 stories that have documented the incompetence and corruption in the D.A.'s office under Krasner.

And for the past 19 months, Krasner and Roh have been stonewalling. But they sure love to talk to their progressive comrades over at The Philadelphia Inquirer, which will continue to function as the official house organ of the corrupt local Democratic party, thanks to a $10 million gift from the feds.

Back on June 18, 2020, the crack staff at the D.A.'s office was reporting that Uqdah was still in custody at Delaware County. According to court records, the D.A. made the same report at a court hearing on July 24, 2020, which was why a requirement that the defendant had to show up in court was waived.

The same thing happened on Aug. 1, 2020; the defendant's presence was waived because he was believed to be still in custody in Delaware County.

Uqdah was arrested three times in 2019, according to court records.

The most recent arrest was on Oct. 17, 2019 for simple assault. But on Dec. 26, 2019, in front of Judge David Shuter, that charge was withdrawn by the D.A.'s office.

Thanks, Uncle Larry!

Uqdah was arrested previously on Aug. 1, 2019 and charged with two counts of theft, receiving stolen property, using an access device used to obtain property or service, and defiant trespass.

He was also arrested on July 26, 2019, and charged with criminal trespass.

Despite his numerous arrests, thanks to his Uncle Larry, Uqdah was out of jail and free to commit more crimes.

Until he got arrested yesterday and charged with raping a woman at Macy's.

At the office of D.A. Krasner, it continues to be amateur hour. 

How To Tank A High-Profile Murder Case

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

When Michael White was going on trial for the murder of Sean Schellenger, District Attorney Larry Krasner had no time to meet with the victim's mother.

So on the Friday before jury selection was to begin on Monday, Krasner had to tell Linda Schellenger during a hastily arranged phone call that he was planning to drop a third-degree murder charge against White.

When Linda Schellenger protested that Krasner should let the jury decide whether White committed murder or not, the D.A. exploded. 

"He literally yelled at me on the phone," Linda Schellenger recalled. He admonished her for "questioning his authority and his intellect," she said, before telling her, "This is my decision."

Before trial, Linda Schellenger had called the D.A.'s office for five straight days trying to set up a meeting with Krasner, but he never called her back.

But more than a year before the case went to trial in October 2019, the D.A. huddled behind closed doors for more than three hours with the accused killer and his legal defense team composed of four lawyers and an investigator. 

In contrast to how he treated Linda Schellenger, Krasner had plenty of time -- and sympathy -- for Michael White.

"This is not going to be some kind of hard cross examination," Krasner began by telling White. "Uh, we'll listen to you for whatever that takes . . ."

During that July 25, 2018 meeting between White and the D.A., Krasner came across like a public defender or the career defense lawyer that he was for 30 years before he was elected D.A. At times Krasner sounded like a social worker; anything but a prosecutor. 

But when he met with White, Krasner was the sitting district attorney of Philadelphia who was about to tank a high-profile murder case.

The session between Krasner, White and his lawyers was technically known as a proffer. 

A proffer is an interview conducted pursuant to a written agreement drawn up between a prosecutor and a criminal defendant that allows the defendant to tell the government about his knowledge of a crime without suffering the usual consequences. 

The proffer comes with the assurance that if the defendant subsequently testifies as a prosecution witness, as long as he tells the truth and sticks to the same story, the defendant doesn't have to worry about what he said at the proffer being used against him in court. 

A prosecutor will typically arrange a proffer with a defendant to find out if he's willing to give up any unindicted co-conspirators, or any previously unknown details of a crime. 

Prosecutors will tell you that there was no reason to conduct a proffer with White, because he acted alone, there were eyewitnesses, and the entire crime was caught on video. Hence, there wasn't much to learn by meeting behind closed doors with the accused killer.

But under Krasner, the career defense lawyer, the purpose of the proffer flipped from playing offense to defense. Under Krasner, the proffer became a prep session coach up White, so he could beat the rap.

It was highly unusual for a sitting district attorney to personally involve himself in a high profile murder case. It was also unusual for the D.A.'s office to voluntarily share with White all of the prosecution's evidence that they intended to use against him at trial.

At a proffer, the normal playbook for a prosecutor is to have the defendant walk in naked, knowing nothing about what the prosecution knows or doesn't know. And then it's time for the defendant to start talking, and give up everything he knows about the crime.

But that's not the way Larry Krasner played the game. The evidence against White that the D.A. voluntarily shared with the accused killer and his team of lawyers included statements from witnesses, as well as a cell phone video taken by a bystander that showed White plunging a black, foot-long serrated knife with a seven-inch blade into the back of an unarmed Sean Schellenger. 

The knife sunk so deep, some seven inches, that it pierced Schellenger's aorta. 

While Schellenger bled to death in Rittenhouse Square, White ran away, catching a subway to his aunt's house. Along the way, he threw his bloody t-shirt in a trash can, and the bloody knife that was the murder weapon on top of a roof.

At the beginning of the proffer, Krasner told White that he was there to hear White's side of the story.

"So make real sure as you sit here now having seen the video, having seen what the witnesses are going to say, make real sure that what you say is true," Krasner cautioned. 

The D.A. made it clear that nobody had any intention of grilling White.

"We're going to ask you a bunch of open-ended questions," Krasner said. "This is not going to be some kind of hard cross-examination. Uh. we'll listen to you for whatever that takes; 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 20 minutes to try to really understand what occurred . . ."

"This is not going to turn into someone yelling in your face or point the finger in your face, but your obligation, the weight on your shoulders to tell the truth is heavy, and it's heavy because of your future," Krasner said. "It's also heavy because of what happened here."

Anthony Voci, then the D.A.'s head of the homicide unit, took over the questioning. Voci asked White about his job as an Uber Eats driver. On the night he killed Schellenger, White was making deliveries on his bicycle. In his backpack, for protection, White had brought along his serrated knife.

Between 10:45 and 10:53 p.m. on July 12, 2018, a nervous White stated, the then 20-year-old was headed to 3200 Chestnut Street with an order of chicken tenders and fries. 

On the way, he cut through the streets bordering Rittenhouse Square.

"Um, I see a black Mercedes Benz going eastbound trying to make a right turn southbound on 17th Street and there's a Ford Taurus parked directly on the corner and the Benz had uh, attempted to make a right turn, and I tried to go between the two cars, but the Benz had cut me off," White said.

"Mr. White, slow down," Krasner interjected. "Take a deep breath. Mr. Voci wants you to explain in detail everything that happened. Don't be rushed, OK?"

White explained that he was riding his bicycle on the sidewalk, trying to get around the Mercedes, "but he didn't give me the right of way, and he was trying to to make the turn. But I noticed the driver was like screaming, like move, move, move, like very furiously."

White said he thought the driver of the Mercedes was screaming at the driver of the Taurus that was parked on the corner at Chancellor and 17th Street, blocking the street.

"I heard him [the driver of the Mercedes] say the N word. I read his lips," White said.

According to White, a passenger in the front seat and was "speaking outside [the car] to everybody, like excuse my friend, we just left the bar. We had just drank a little bit. He was excusing his behavior."

And then, according to White, he saw Sean Schellenger for the first time. According to White, the 37-year-old developer, got out of the back seat of the Mercedes and "began to confront the guy in the Ford Taurus." 

Schellenger, a big former Penn State football player and high school wrestling champion, was, in White's opinion, acting "in a manner that seem aggressive."

When Voci asked why the thought that White replied, "Because his sleeves were rolled up and he was walking like . . . like when you're about to approach someone to fight him."

That's when White decided to get involved in a dispute that by White's own admission, was already over.

"At that point I point out to Sean, I say, you don't have to act like that," White said. "You're acting like a tough guy. Because he was approaching the driver of the Taurus in a way that seemed aggressive, and I didn't like the situation . . .  I didn't like the way it looked."

"Had any point in time had Sean said or done anything to you?," Voci asked.

"No," White replied.

White stated he was standing on the sidewalk about ten feet away from the two cars, holding his bike. 

Then, White said, the driver of the Taurus "walked over to me and assured me that everything was OK. And he [the driver of the Taurus] shook my hand and confirmed it."

But, White said, Schellenger "turned his attention to me."

"He grit his teeth at me. He looked me in my eyes and said, he said, 'I'm going to beat the black off you,'" White said.

None of the other witnesses interviewed by the police, however, heard Schellenger say anything racial during his confrontation with White. Only White told this story, and his talking points seemed well-rehearsed.

Law enforcement sources, however, told Big Trial that they believed the racial angle in this case was manufactured. Schellenger had a black former girlfriend, and many former teammates who were black, all of whom attested to authorities that Schellenger wasn't prejudiced.

But that's the story that White and his legal team were running with, as White proceeded to explain.

"At that point, I thought to myself, if someone says they're going to beat the black off me then that means, you know, you're going to beat the identity off of me because I identify as black," White said.

"That's what I've been my entire life, so at that point, I feared for my life," White said. "I got off my bike. I left it on the ground. I took my backpack off. I pulled the knife out in a way to say, please back the fuck up."

An eyewitness to the crime who was a friend of Schellenger's would testify that he heard White say, "You want this?" as he brandished the knife, before warning Schellenger, "You don't want this."

But in White's version of the story, Schellenger was the verbal aggressor who then got physical. 

"Then he [Schellenger] charged me and tackled me to the ground," White said.

As Schellenger was tackling him, White said, he stabbed Schellenger, "not knowing how deep this wound was about to be, or anything, I just stabbed down."

"At that moment in time, um did you intend to kill him," Voci asked.

"No, I did not," White said; "I was just trying to get out of that situation alive."

Voci asked if Schellenger was armed.

"No, but he was considerably larger than me," White said, before returning to his mantra. "And he had just threatened to beat the black off of me."

Voci asked what happened to Schellenger after White stabbed him.

"He finished the tackle to the ground and at that point his body went limp and I just threw him off," White said. 

"And then after that, I got up. I looked around at what had just happened, and I said oh shit, and I ran because I was just scared at what had just unfolded, like this isn't something that normally happens in my day-to-day life."

Before he got on a trolley at 30th Street and Market, White said he took off his white T-shirt "so I could wipe the blood off my face."


"Was that blood on your face your blood or Sean's blood," Voci asked.


"It was Sean's blood," White said.


White said he put the bloody t-shirt in his backpack, and then he rode the trolly to 52nd and Lancaster, where his Aunt Tonya lived.


When he got off the trolley, he threw the backpack with the bloody T-shirt in a trash can on the street, because "I just wanted to get everything off of me," White said. "I wanted to get rid of everything because it, it was a scary situation I didn't intend to kill anybody. I didn't have that in my mind."


Next, White said,  "I took the knife out of the bag and I just threw it on somebody's roof."


Although White claimed he didn't intend to kill Schellenger, White admitted to Voci that he did intend to stab him.


Voci didn't have any more questions. 


Krasner took over.


"So Michael, I don't have a lot of questions about the incident," Krasner said. "But I do want to ask you some other questions about your life."


Krasner asked if White was a member of a church.


"I don't go to church regularly," White replied, "but I do believe in God."


Krasner asked about White's hobby of writing poetry, and if he ever wrote a poem about the killing of Schellenger.


"No," White replied.


Krasner asked about White's education, the schools he went to, and why he dropped out of Morgan State University in Baltimore.


"I was suffering a lot back home," White told the D.A.


The D.A. asked about the trouble at home.


His mother was struggling, White said, because she didn't have "enough money."


Krasner asked about White's grades at college during the two semesters he was there.


"They weren't very like spectacular at all," White said, before admitting to the D.A.'s follow-up questions that his grades were "failing."


"Why did you want to pursue sociology?" Krasner asked.

"Because I've always wanted to know why people do the things that they do, and I figured sociology was the best way to figure that out because it's the study of like social interactions," White said.

"How do you feel about what you did?" Krasner asked.

"I feel extremely remorseful for the simple fact that a man's life was lost," White said. "I also feel remorseful for the fact that his family had to bury him in a manner in which they didn't expect. And personally, it's something that I want to take back because I know murder is a sin. That weighs heavily
like on my mind on a daily basis ever since this happened."


"I thought I heard you say basically that you turned yourself in because they knew that they would catch you," Krasner said. "Is that, is that accurate or did I misunderstand you?"


"I think you misunderstood me because it wasn't a thing where I was trying to run or get away," White said. "I want that to be very clear. I wasn't running from anything. The only thing I ran from was the crime scene because I was shocked at what had just happened . . ."


"I want to make that clear," White said. "Because I feel like you guys think that I wanted to escape from this somehow, some way when that was not my intention. I am a person who accepts full responsibility when they do something wrong. I'm a person who understands when they do something wrong. I'm a person who will own up to that."


"So did you do something wrong?" Krasner asked.


"Personally, I was defending my life, so no, I don't think I did something wrong, but in the eyes of God, yes, I did do something wrong," White said. "I took a person's life. That's a sin. When you read the Bible, that's part of the ten commandments."

"Why did you take out the knife?" Krasner asked.


"He told me he was going to beat the black off of me," White repeated. 

"I understand that," Krasner said.

White then launched into another speech, and this one was a doozy.

White proceeded to compare the stabbing to death of Schellenger to the case of Emmett Till. The 14-year-old black boy was beaten and lynched in Mississippi back in 1955, after he allegedly whistled at a white woman in a grocery store, a tragedy that took place some 40 years before White was born.

"So when I hear that, I think of my identity. I identify myself as black," White said. "I'm an African American male. So if someone says they're going to beat the black off of me, I think to myself my identity is going to be taken off of me, and the only way that can happen."

"I think back to the Emmett Till case," White said. "He had the black beaten off of him, and he ended up dead. And I've seen this happen over and over and over and over in different situations. I'm not saying that this was like that situation but it was something that I feared."

In the room some people were rolling their eyes during White's Emmett Till speech, but Krasner was drinking it in. When he went on trial, however, White chose not to reprise his Emmett Till speech for the jury.  

"What were you hoping to accomplish when you pulled out that knife," Krasner asked. 


"I thought that he would see the knife and he would back away from me because he saw the size of the knife," White said. "There was never a point where I was like wanting to kill this man. I wanted him to see the knife and back the hell away from me."

Krasner asked again about White's home life.

"It was just bad," White said, and then he revealed how bad. In 2009, White said, his father was arrested for repeatedly raping his sister, who got pregnant, and had a child.

White's father went to jail, his mother got depressed. The family plunged into economic despair.

"The lights have been off, the gas has been off," White said; his family "barely had any food." 

Then, in 2014, White got hit and run over by a truck. After he got out of the hospital, White told Krasner he got kicked out of the house and he wound up in therapy. Then, he tried to kill himself a "couple of times."

White showed Krasner a scar.

"I see it," the D.A. said.

Krasner asked White why he carried the knife.

White explained that he'd been robbed twice in the past, in 2015, when he was 17.

The first time, he said he got "robbed at gunpoint, and I said, Ok. I just gave up my stuff."

The second time he got robbed, he was walking up 58th Street and "a bunch of people just came up behind me, and jumped me, took my phone, took my wallet, took my bag. And I was just left without nothing."

When Krasner asked if White had ever reported either robbery to the police, White said no.

When Krasner asked why, White said the first time, he didn't want to be killed "for snitching." The second time, White didn't have a "clear description" of his assailants, and the only things he lost were "material things" that can be replaced.

The prep session was almost over. Krasner brought up Linda Schellenger, the victim's mother, whom White was sure to run into at the trial. And Krasner asked, "What would you say to her if she was here."

"The first thing I would do is apologize," White said.

"For what," Krasner asked.

"For the incident that happened on July 12th," White said.

"Incidents don't happen by themselves, right?" Krasner said. "What would you apologize to Mrs. Schellenger for?"

"I would apologize to her for being the reason that Mr. Schellenger's life is no longer being lived," White said.

When Michael White was first arrested, the charge against him was first-degree murder. After the July 25, 2018 proffer session, less than a week later, on Aug. 1, 2018, Krasner dropped that charge down to third-degree murder.

When the case went to a preliminary hearing, on Oct. 30, 2018, White's lawyers went on offense.

"What has caused the press to parachute in and the courtroom to be packed is the intersection of class and race," asserted Dan Stevenson, White's lawyer.

"A very large, a very drunk, rich white man," Stevenson said, tackled a "poor black kid who was defending himself in a physical assault."

But Assistant District Attorney Voci wasn't buying it.

After the hearing, where White was held over for trial, Voci told reporters, "Race and class has nothing to do with this case. It's two human beings who got into a verbal confrontation and ended with one dead."

"The reality is, no one is going to know what was going through Sean's mind at that time," Voci told reporters.  "He was trying to disarm a dangerous person who had drawn a knife for no reason whatsoever after interjecting himself into an argument."


George Parry, a Philadelphia lawyer who's a former state and federal prosecutor, was puzzled by the D.A.'s proffer session with White.

"The whole situation makes no sense to me whatsoever," Parry said. "They had eyewitnesses that saw White stab Schellinger in the back."

"What do you need a proffer for?" Parry said. "Why even talk to him? They had this guy dead to rights on murder."

In Pennsylvania, to prove first-degree murder, it's necessary to show that the defendant acted willfully, deliberately, and with premeditation to kill another person.

When it came to the murder of Sean Schellenger, White had already stated that he interjected himself into an argument that was already settled. 

Instead of going on his way to deliver that order of fries and chicken tenders, White stated that he went into his backpack, and pulled out his foot-long knife and brandished it at Schellenger. 

And then when Schellenger charged him, White stated that he deliberately and willfully stabbed Schellenger to death. 

"It's a first degree murder job," Parry said. "I don't know how you dress it up as anything else."

Parry said he also didn't understand all of Krasner's questions about White's troubled home life.

"What the hell has that got to do with anything?" Parry asked.

In a lecture he gave at UCLA on Oct. 31, 2018, "Reimagining the role of the prosecutor," Larry Krasner, however, talked about the advantages of doing proffer sessions with criminal defendants. Why? Because he's a new breed of prosecutor.

"When there is such an adversarial relationship between the defense and the prosecution, there is no trust," Krasner said. But, Krasner said, things are different since a career defense lawyer like himself had taken over as D.A. 

As Krasner explained about criminal defendants, "They think, 'We will give them a fair call,' that we’re the umpires on this stuff, and we won’t just use it against them," Krasner said. "So that to me is an advantage that I never perceived we would have but I think it’s a tremendous advantage."

And then Krasner, who did not respond to a request for comment for this story, made an apparent reference to Michael White's case.

"We have one case where the murder weapon would have been long gone except that when the proffer happened, the person came in and he told us where it was, and we went and got it," Krasner said.

Even Krasner called the knife a "murder weapon."

On the day jury selection was supposed to begin, Oct. 5, 2019, Krasner dropped the third-degree murder charge against White, leaving voluntary manslaughter as the most serious charge that White was facing.

It was a move that greatly aided White's chances of walking.

Why? Because to prove third-degree murder, a prosecutor must only show that a defendant acted recklessly, and not intentionally. But it's actually harder to prove voluntary manslaughter, because a prosecutor has to prove that the defendant acted with willful intent to kill someone. 

What was the result? In court on Oct. 17, 2019, on the charge of voluntary manslaughter, the jury acquitted White.

The only charge the jury convicted White of was tampering with evidence, because White had admitted he had tossed the murder weapon on a roof. For that crime, the judge sentenced to two years probation. 

Krasner, in an email statement released by his office right after the verdict, stated that his “heart goes out to family and friends of Sean Schellenger, whose pain and trauma are evident even today.”

But Linda Schellenger didn't buy it.

As far as she was concerned, the verdict in her son's murder case was a travesty of justice "totally orchestrated from the beginning" by District Attorney Larry Krasner. 

George Parry agrees. 

"Larry's just in the wrong job," Parry said. "He should have stuck to being a defense lawyer."

Because as a prosecutor, Parry said, "Larry has no time for victims. They get in the way of his social justice narrative. They're a speed bump on the way to social utopia." 

What about justice for Sean Schellenger, and his grieving mother, who told me that every day, she wakes up with "a white elephant sitting on my chest."

"What was done to that woman and her family was just horrifying," Parry agreed. "She was re-victimized by the district attorney who's supposed to be sticking up for her dead son."

Judge Rips ADA For 'Lack Of Candor;' Tosses Abuse Case Against Cop

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

On Jan. 7th in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court, Judge Karen Simmons called out Assistant District Attorney Rachel Black, one of District Attorney Larry Krasner's hand-picked rookie prosecutors, for lying to Her Honor.

"Everything that has gone on so far with this case when it's in front of me, I find that your email and your arguments to be disingenuous, and I find that they lack candor to the court, and that's a huge problem for me," Judge Simmons told Black, who's a member of the D.A.'s Special Investigations Unit that specializes in prosecuting Philadelphia police officers.

In 2019, Krasner personally recruited Black, then a staff attorney for The Legal Aide Society of New York City, to join the D.A.'s office, even though Black had no previous experience as a prosecutor.

But in court, the rookie prosecutor made an enemy out of Judge Simmons. After the judge blasted ADA Black for a lack of candor last month, she dismissed Black's case. 

The Commonwealth v. Carl Holmes accused a former chief inspector in the Philadelphia Police Department of sexually abusing three females who are former cops. Even though more than a dozen years ago, the same exact allegations were previously investigated by the police department's Internal Affairs Division and the District Attorney's office, with the result that no charges were ever filed. 

For D.A. Larry Krasner, the tossing of the Holmes case was a temporary setback in his war on cops, which to date has produced few victories. Cases that Krasner previously filed against cops have been either been lost in court or tossed by judges at preliminary hearings for lack of evidence. The most recent example happened last month, when Krasner's case against Staff Inspector Joe Bologna got tossed. 

But this time around in the D.A.'s war on cops, the Holmes case represented a new low, even for Larry Krasner. A sitting judge just tossed a case because she determined that one of Krasner's ADAs, in their zeal to convict a cop, had committed prosecutorial misconduct by lying to a judge.

KRASNER'S PROGRESSIVE AGENDA: FREE CRIMINALS, INDICT COPS

When he was a defense lawyer, Larry Krasner sued the Philadelphia Police Department 75 times. After he got elected D.A., thanks to a $1.7 million donation from George Soros, Krasner decided to continue his personal war against cops, only this time from inside the D.A.'s office.

In the past four years, Krasner's office has prosecuted a total of 35 cases against police officers. That's after Krasner decriminalized prostitution, drug possession, and retail theft under $500, which has caused store owners all over the city to have to hire private security, because were being robbed blind.

Krasner has also given scores of alleged rioters and looters a free pass out of the criminal justice system, even those who assaulted cops. Our reform D.A. is also notorious for being overly lenient in prosecuting gun crimes, and for giving armed and dangerous criminals a get-out-of-jail card so they can commit more mayhem

The losers are the people who are being shot, stabbed and wounded all over town by the criminals that "Uncle Larry" lets out of jail every month.

Over the past two months, here are three horrific examples of what I'm talking about:

-- Taray Herring, a registered sex offender with more than a dozen arrests on his rap sheet, got out of jail without spending a cent because his Uncle Larry was worried he'd catch COVID. After he got out of jail, Herring confessed to police that he used an electric saw and a hack saw to dismember the body of Peter Gerold, a 70-year-old licensed massage therapist. Herring further confessed that he had deep fried various body parts, wrapped them in plastic, and disposed of them in various dumpsters. The cops caught Herring while he was riding around in a U-Haul van, with a headless torso in back. 

-- Adriano Coriano, an abusive-ex husband who shot and killed his ex-wife, Gladys, 55, while the D.A. sat on a request for an arrest warrant for nearly a week from the cops, who wanted to lock up Coriano for repeatedly violating a protection order against his ex-wife and her two sons.

-- Josephus Davis, a two-time convicted robber, who after two of Krasner's ADAs laid down at two bail hearings, got out of jail on reduced bail. Just two weeks later, Davis shot and killed Milan Loncar, a 25 year-old recent Temple grad was out walking his dog, Roo. As a surveillance camera captured the event, Davis held up Loncar at gunpoint, and then murdered him. 

While Krasner has been giving all kinds of criminals like the trio above a pass, he's charged a total of 30 police officers with committing various crimes. Of the 35 total cases, 12 were tossed at preliminary hearings, after judges decided there wasn't enough evidence to justify going forward.

Of the 35 total cases, three cops have taken misdemeanor pleas. 

One cop qualified for ARD, or an Accelerated Rehabilitation Disposition program.

Two cases against cops went to trial and Krasner's crack prosecutors lost both cases. 

Seventeen of Krasner's cases against cops remain open.  

KRASNER'S ROOKIE PROSECUTOR GETS CAUGHT LYING IN COURT

The trouble with Judge Simmons started when Assistant D.A. Black told the judge that the prosecution wasn't ready to proceed with her case at a scheduled preliminary hearing because one of Black's three complaining witness who claimed that Holmes had abused her couldn't make it to court. 

Black explained to Judge Simmons that during the pandemic, "My third complaining witness had temporarily gone to Florida with her mother, and she has a very serious health issue that is a permanent health issue; it's a degenerative health issue."

The concern was that the witness, former police officer Elisa Diaz, might further endanger her health by traveling to Philadelphia, where she could have caught COVID.

That's when Gregory Pagano, Holmes's defense lawyer, stood up in court and started talking about the witness's Facebook posts, which told a radically different story.

Pagano told the judge that Diaz, who works as a bartender in Florida, "did drive to Florida in an RV," and that her Facebook postings reveal that "she believes that this whole Coronavirus thing is a hoax and it's a sham."

"She certainly is not holding herself out to be a person that is concerned at all about contracting the Coronavirus," Pagano said.

The judge was miffed.

"This witness has made it clear with her own words that she doesn't find it necessary to wear a mask and that's willing to come out" to Philadelphia," the judge said, about Diaz's Facebook posts. "And so I don't understand why we're here not having her here if she's willing to come out."

For almost a full year, the D.A.'s office had been claiming that Diaz's poor health was preventing her from appearing in Common Pleas Court.

At a March 12, 2020 preliminary hearing, the D.A.'s office had filed a motion saying that due to concerns over COVID, Diaz was unable to safely travel to Philadelphia.

When the hearing was continued until April 30, 2020, the D.A's office stated in a motion that flights and hotels could not be booked for Diaz due to her medical condition and the growing threat of COVID.

In that motion, the D.A.'s office stated that Diaz was "simply unable to safely travel to Philadelphia."

The D.A.'s office further disclosed that on Dec. 20, 2019, Diaz had relocated "temporarily" to Florida with her family. According to a response brief filed by Pagano on July 13, 2020, Diaz traveled from Philadelphia to Florida in a "fully-equipped RV, with a bed and mattress, full bathroom, kitchen couches and fireplace," 

When the preliminary hearing that had been delayed for a year was finally rescheduled for Jan. 7th, ADA Black committed another faux pas. At 12:25 p.m. on Jan. 6th, the night before the preliminary hearing, Black sent an email requesting a continuance. She also neglected to mention that she had already told her witness, who was still down in Florida, not to bother appearing in court the next day.

That prompted Pagano to complain to the judge that the D.A.'s office "have been oblivious to their obligations and duties in the case," as they continue to "ignore the rights of Mr. Holmes."

In court, Black then attempted on the fly to redefine what she meant about the health risks associated with bringing Diaz up from Florida to appear in a Philadelphia courtroom.

"Florida seems to be being extremely irresponsible" when it comes to COVID, Black asserted. In a burst of creativity, Black argued that "part of the decision of the Commonwealth is not bringing someone from Florida who may not believe that a mask is valid into our city that is doing a good job protecting its citizens."

In other words, Black was no longer worried about protecting Diaz from COVID; now she was worried about protecting the citizens from Diaz, because she apparently doesn't believe in wearing a face mask during a pandemic.

Black then apologized to the court, saying, "I should have sent the email earlier." But she added, "I don't think that should effect the legal outcome of the case."

"Nonetheless, my point at the beginning is how I'd like to end, which is, regardless of my intent, if I left the court with the impression that I was not being forthright, I apologize."

The judge wasn't buying it.

"I am troubled," the judge said. "We're now a year later and the Commonwealth witness, Miss Diaz, never, from what I can see from the docket, has never been in a courtroom in Philadelphia."

"And each time, the Commonwealth has stated that they were ready to get the case to a preliminary hearing room," the judge said. "And each time we have been in a preliminary hearing room, the Commonwealth has not been ready."

An angry Pagano asked that the case be dismissed by the judge with prejudice, which would have barred the D.A. from refiling the charges against Holmes. The judge set a Jan. 13th hearing date to address that motion.

Black told the judge she would be available on that date, but since the judge was challenging her credibility, she was going to have to bring reinforcements.

"I would like to have a supervisor here that can argue this case now that I can no longer speak on the record because my license to practice law has been implicated," Black said.

"Absolutely," the judge said.

LYING IN COURT, ROUND TWO: 

A week later, on Jan. 13th, Judge Simmons was back on the bench blasting ADA Black again, only this time in front of a couple of Black's supervisors: First District Attorney Robert Listenbee, and Assistant District Attorney Patricia Cummings. 

[In case you want to get a firmer handle on what kind of prosecutors Krasner has recruited to prosecute cops, as Big Trial has previously reported, Cummings, who's the head of the D.A.'s Conviction Integrity Unit, and oversees Black's work, is herself an ethical disaster. A five-part Showtime series portrayed Cummings as the villain in the jailing of a former high school football star who was falsely accused and sentenced to 25 years in jail without parole for sexually assaulting a four-year-old child.] 

In her remarks from the bench, Judge Simmons said she believed Black's "actions were intentional . . . to the point to be not candid and to mislead this court." 

Pagano told the judge the D.A.'s office deserved no special favors, and that's why she should grant his motion to dismiss the case with prejudice.

"Make no mistake, they have played hardball with this man every step of the way," Pagano said about the D.A.'s treatment of his client. "And now they're looking for this court to play softball with them and it is intolerable."

Pagano said that the case never would have been filed by the D.A.'s office if the defendant was not "Carl Holmes, Chief Inspector from the Philadelphia Police Department." As far as Pagano was concerned, the D.A.'s Special Investigations Unit was pursuing a vendetta.

Cummings declined to address the court, saying "I don't think it's necessary." 

"I absolutely agree with you," the judge said. 

Judge Simmons told Black's supervisors that as soon as she learned about Elisa Diaz's Facebook posts, "as quick as I could snap my fingers" ADA Black "started making argument that, well, it's really not about the complaining witness, Miss Diaz, it's about the citizens of Philadelphia."

As the judge recounted the story, she said that Black argued in court that she didn't want to have Diaz "go through the airport and come through Philadelphia and put us all at risk."

"And at that point," the judge told Black's supervisors, "I realized I had had enough because if I can't trust Miss Black or anyone else from the District Attorney's office who are prosecuting these cases . . . then I don't know what to do with you, actually, I really don't."

"Because as a judge, I cannot, I will not, I do not go out and investigate every comment and statement that's made from the attorneys that appear in front of me," the judge said. "That I have to and I must rely on the authenticity and the honesty of the lawyers that appear in front of us. All of us judges must."

The judge told Black's supervisors that she had concluded "Miss Black's actions were inappropriate, they were wrong, they were intentional."

"They do rise to the level of prosecutorial misconduct," the judge said, but it didn't reach the level of misconduct required to dismiss the case with prejudice.

The judge then denied Pagano's motion to have the case against Holmes dismissed with prejudice. But she advised Black's supervisors to "seriously take an honest, clean-slate view of what's been going on [with this case] since October of 2019," when it was first filed, before the D.A.'s office decided what to do next. 

Against the backdrop of the pandemic, when the courts have basically been closed for a year, and the backlog of cases is overwhelming, the judge was asking the D.A.'s office to reconsider if they really needed to try Carl Holmes on allegations that not only were 13 years old, but had previously been investigated by both Internal Affairs and the D.A.'s officer under a previous district attorney.

"I'd just like to thank the court for its careful consideration of the issues," Listenbee told the judge. Then he assured her that the decision about what to do next with the case "will be decided at the highest level at the district attorney's office."

Anybody who knows Larry Krasner can guess what happened next.

On Feb. 5th, just like he did with Staff Inspector Joe Bologna after the charges against him were thrown out of court, the D.A. promptly refiled the charges against former Chief Inspector Carl Holmes.

THE COMMONWEALTH V. CARL HOLMES

The charges against Holmes, a 6-foot-6 former offensive tackle at Temple University, were originally filed on Oct. 24, 2019, after he was indicted by a grand jury. A preliminary hearing was held on March 12, 2020, as to the allegations of two of the complainants, Christa Hayburn and Michele Vandegrift. The third complainant, Elisa Diaz, was unavailable, and so that preliminary hearing was postponed for nearly a full year.

Holmes was charged with aggravated indecent assault, indecent assault by forcible compulsion, and indecent assault without consent. The grand jury accused Holmes of assaulting three female police officers, kissing them, fondling their breasts and digitally penetrating their vaginas.

Pagano, Holmes's lawyer, insisted his client was innocent, and that when the case finally went to court, Holmes would be found not guilty. Pagano also argued that the indictment of Holmes amounted to a witch hunt.

In a motion to dismiss the case filed on Sept. 25, 2020, Pagano argued that "the allegations in this case have received extensive local press coverage beginning approximately ten years ago. All of the complainants in this case have exhaustively litigated civil claims against the police department in the court system for approximately 10 years."

"The police department's internal affairs unit and the DAO investigated all of complainants' allegations for approximately 10 years," Pagano wrote. "No criminal charges were filed in any of the cases" and in one of the cases, the D.A.'s office decided not to pursue charges.

The dismissed case involved Hayburn, who told the Inquirer in 2017 that she had been fired by the police department after she was accused of lying about a medical issue. 

In his motion to dismiss the case, Pagano said that ADA Black had failed to turn over grand jury transcripts, even though a motion to compel discovery production was filed five months earlier.

What records that were turned over Pagano said, revealed that "the presentment in this case is the product of prosecutorial misconduct -- including but not limited to gross neglect and the investigation and in the presentation of evidence to the grand jury, including the presentation of perjured testimony, selective presentation of evidence to the grand jury and the omission of relevant facts and evidence to the grand jury."

Hayburn, a former police offficer, alleged that on Jan. 6, 2006, Holmes, who at the time was her boss, dragged her into the passenger seat of his Dodge Durango, kissed her, grabbed her breasts and vagina. And then, Hayburn charged, Holmes dropped his pants, grabbed her hand and made her jerk him off.

In the investigations of Hayburn's allegations conducted by Internal Affairs and the DAO, 33 cops and 7 civilians were interviewed, Pagano wrote, and phone records were obtained by subpoena. Holmes's police car was seized and searched for forensic evidence, as were Hayburn's clothes. 

In addition, another officer that Hayburn claimed she had told about being abused by Holmes, Police Officer Rollie Ramos, "did not corroborate what she says," Pagano wrote.

"Due to glaring inconsistencies and lack of corroboration between Ms. Hayburn's story and the evidence, the DAO declined to prosecute the case" in 2008, Pagano wrote.

Former police officer Vandegrift, who also claimed she also was assaulted by Holmes, didn't disclose the alleged incident to anyone for seven years, Pagano wrote. 

he third alleged victim, Elisa Diaz, "did not disclose for almost 15 years," Pagano wrote.

THE D.A.'S DUE DILlIGENCE 

As far as Pagano was concerned, the D.A.'s most recent investigation that preceded the indictment of Holmes was a complete farce.

When the D.A.'s office decided to file charges against Holmes in 2019, they didn't even review their own file from 2008, Pagano wrote, because they could not find it until June of 2020. 

The district attorney's office didn't bother obtaining transcripts from previous legal proceedings, nor did they interview any witnesses, Pagano wrote. Instead, the district attorney merely interviewed the three complainants, accepted their testimony as gospel, and indicted Holmes.

Had the D.A.'s office done a "reasonable investigation" before it indicted Holmes, Pagano argued, "it would have detected Ms. Hayburn's lies to law enforcement and her perjury to the grand jury before the presentment and before charging."

To make matters worse, in May of 2018, the District Attorney's office appointed Hayburn to the D.A.'s Crime Victim Advisory Committee [CVAC]. Her official CVAC biography released by the D.A's office stated she was a "survivor of sexual violence at the hands of a fellow police officer." 

She was appointed secretary and stayed on that committee until March 14, 2019. The D.A.'s office, however, didn't see a conflict.

"Ms. Hayburn's volunteer and peripheral role int he CVAC during the part of the DAO's investigation into sexual assault allegations against Carl Holmes does not create a conflict of interest," wrote Krasner and Black.

"Nor does that limited advisory poostiion 'corrupt' the case against the defendant in any way," Krasner and Black wrote. "While the DAO should have disclosed Mrs. Hayburn's role on the committee earlier, this oversight underscores the wall between the Special Victims Unit and the rest of the DAO meant to protect the integrity of secret investigations."

In his motion to dismiss the charges against Holmes, Pagano argued that after the district attorney's office and Internal Affairs investigations didn't produce an indictment of Holmes back in 2008, "Hayburn turned to the press, and for 10 years, she was a persistent and public critic of Holmes and the police department."

"The Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News responded with alacrity and biased press coverage for more than 7 years," Pagano wrote. "Hayburn was interviewed, photographed and quoted in several front page articles by the Philadelphia Daily News and Philadelphia Inquirer."

Pagano cited several stories that he said were biased, including:

-- a 2012 Daily News story written by Barbara Laker, David Gambacorta and Dana DiFilippo, "Despite A Litany of Complaints & Lawsuits, Why is Carl Holmes Being Promoted Again?"

--  A 2017 Inquirer story written by Chris Palmer, "Commander Cost City $1.25 Million For Sex-Harassment Claims."

-- a 2019 Inquirer story written by Laker, Gambacorta and William Bender, "How A Flawed System Hid A Philly Police Commander's Sexual Misconduct for 15 years."

On top of that, "Hayburn authored a book about her alleged experiences as a sexual assault victim, Silver Linings," Pagan wrote. She has also "spoken at corporate and other public events and written extensively on the Internet about this case."

The damage to Holmes has been heavy, Pagano argued.

"Mr. Holmes has endured, and will continue to endure, significant damages as a result of the presentment and charges," Pagano wrote. "He is married 15 years and has two children 15 and 12. He is an attorney and licensed in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania."

"Mr. Holmes lost his job as Chief Inspector and was employed by the Philadelphia Police Department for 29 years," Pagano wrote in a May 27, 2020 motion to compel discovery. "His reputation and career are irreparably damaged. He is unemployable as a result of the pending charges. Mr. Holmes was required to post bail in the amount of $800,000, 10% as a result of the pending charges."

POSTSCRIPT

It would be nice if the Commonwealth v. Holmes happened in a vacuum, but it was part of a much bigger story.

It was all the hoopla and media coverage of sexual harassment claims, like the ones made against Holmes, that brought about the forced resignation of former Police Commissioner Richard Ross, at the hands of Mayor Jim Kenney.

It was the media circus that prompted Mayor Kenney to seek out a black female as his new police commissioner. At the expense of every other qualification for the job, such as leadership, gravitas, and practical experience, when it came to fighting crime.

And how did that work out?

Well, thanks to the wonderful synergy of when our progressive media and our progressive mayor are all thinking and acting in ideological lockstep, with all the same blindspots, we got Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw.

And how did that work out?

Well, as Big Trial's been reporting for more than a year now, Outlaw's been a lightweight and a complete failure since the day she took office, and she issued her first formal policy directive, about nail polish. 

With Ross and other top police brass gone, and Outlaw in charge, we wound up with a city completely unprepared and defenseless against two different waves of rioting, looting and arson fires.

And with Uncle Larry over at the D.A.'s office letting scores of armed and dangerous criminals out of jail every month, we've got a record-high murder rate. It's a rampage that our collective progressive braintrust -- Kenney, Outlaw & Krasner -- don't have a clue about how to stop the bloodshed.

We had nearly 500 murders last year -- more than New York City, which has 4 1/2 times our population. And as of yesterday, with 83 murders in 63 days, we're on a pace this year for 628 murders.

Isn't that great?

On the road to becoming a progressive utopia, the city went straight to hell. And with the corrupt and incompetent still in charge, there's no turnaround in sight. 

Another Judge Admonishes Another Krasner ADA For Lack Of Candor

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

A couple of overzealous prosecutors who work for District Attorney Larry Krasner have a documented history of being untruthful when it comes to dealing with judges.

In January, Philadelphia Common Pleas Court Judge Karen Simmons admonished Assistant District Attorney Rachel Black for a lack of candor regarding the ability of one of the complainants to show up in court in a sex abuse case against former Chief Inspector Carl Holmes. 

Basically, Judge Simmons caught ADA Black over the course of a year in court repeatedly making a bald-faced lie -- that a complaining witness who had accused Holmes of sexual abuse was hiding out in Florida, for fear of catching COVID. The truth was that the witness herself, in one Facebook post after another, dismissed the pandemic as a hoax and a sham, and had previously driven from Pennsylvania to Florida in a fully equipped RV, so she was perfectly capable of driving up to Philadelphia. 

"Miss Black's actions were inappropriate, they were wrong, they were intentional," Judge Simmons stated in court to two of ADA Black's supervisors on Jan. 13th. One of those supervisors who came to court to defend ADA Black was her boss, Assistant District Attorney Patricia Cummings, head of the D.A.'s Conviction Integrity Unit.

But according to a federal judge, ADA Cummings has the same problem that ADA Black does.

On Feb. 11th in U.S. District Court, Judge Mitchell Goldberg issued a formal 23-page "memorandum opinion" that amounted to an admonishment of ADA Cummings for violating her "duty of candor" to the court. Judge Goldberg wrote that Cummings should have informed him that she had parallel litigation going in state court in her crusade to get Antonio Martinez out of jail, who was serving a life sentence after he was convicted in a 1985 double homicide.

“While I will not impose sanctions, an admonishment of the District Attorney, as set forth in this Opinion, is appropriate,” Judge Goldberg wrote on Feb. 15th. The judge said he would henceforth require the Philadelphia DA to submit status reports on future cases, adding, “I typically do not impose requirements of this nature on counsel, but such oversight of the District Attorney is now unfortunately warranted.”

Yesterday, there were rumors circulating through the Philadelphia legal community that ADA Black had resigned. Black, however, did not respond to a request for comment; neither did her boss, District Attorney Krasner, nor his official spokesperson, Jane Roh.

ADA Patricia Cummings, however, is still at large.

Last October, a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court judge vacated Antonio Martinez's 31-year-old conviction because his constitutional rights had allegedly been violated.

Martinez, at 73, was a free man. But the judge's decision in state court blew out a parallel case that the D.A. had going in U.S. District Court to free Martinez in Judge Goldberg's courtroom.

In his 23-page admonishment, Judge Goldberg said he had arranged a hearing in federal court where the D.A. would have had a chance to question one of the original prosecutors in the Martinez case about shocking allegations of prosecutorial misconduct made in federal court by Cummings.

In his memorandum opinion, the judge cited many concerns that he had about the crusade that Cummings was on regarding the facts in the original Martinez case, and the many shocking allegations that Cummings had made in federal court against the original prosecutor in the case: 

First, the City of Philadelphia’s District Attorney’s Office (the “District Attorney”), through Patricia Cummings, Supervisor of the Conviction Integrity Unit (the “CIU Supervisor”), has continually and forcefully advocated that convictions for a double homicide, occurring thirty-five years ago, reviewed and affirmed by the Pennsylvania Superior Court, should be vacated.

Although a Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”) petition was pending in state court, which would normally preclude my involvement, the CIU Supervisor articulated numerous, specific reasons why the District Attorney was waiving state court exhaustion and affirmatively represented that she and Petitioner’s counsel had agreed to litigate this matter in federal court.

The reason given for the request that I vacate Petitioner’s homicide convictions was disconcerting: a veteran former Assistant District Attorney (the “Trial ADA”) or the assigned detectives had knowingly and intentionally withheld substantial evidence pointing to another suspect. Then, according to the CIU Supervisor, the Trial ADA prosecuted a potentially innocent person, obtained a first-degree murder conviction, and stood silent as a life sentence was imposed. 

But according to Judge Goldberg, in federal court, Cummings hd shown no interest in questioning the original prosecutor to determine whether any of the allegations she had made against him were actually true:

Yet, before making these remarkable allegations, the CIU Supervisor made no effort to obtain any type of explanation or information from the Trial ADA or anyone associated with the original prosecution. The CIU Supervisor has also never offered a plausible reason or motive as to why the Trial ADA would engage in such unethical, reprehensible conduct.

The answers to these pressing questions and others were about to be explored through the testimony of the Trial ADA at an evidentiary hearing scheduled before me on November 10, 2020. Although the District Attorney had unilaterally pre-determined that this veteran prosecutor’s testimony would not be credible, I viewed, and continue to view, his testimony as indispensable information that any responsible prosecutor and/or judge would want to carefully consider before agreeing to overturn a double homicide state court conviction.

Answers to many unasked questions were especially important when the only information before me about the Trial ADA’s version of events was a report from the CIU Supervisor, advising that the Trial ADA believed the District Attorney had made several critical misstatements to me. 

Yet, two weeks before the Trial ADA’s testimony was to be heard, and unbeknownst to me, at a hearing in state court, which had been scheduled and fully prepped, complete relief was granted and Petitioner released.

When Judge Goldberg got upset by Cummings's lack of candor, he gave Cummings an opportunity to explain herself in court, but it didn't go well:

In an effort to provide the CIU Supervisor with every benefit of the doubt, I gave her an opportunity to explain her conduct. Unfortunately, the Supervisor of the District Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit believes that what occurred in this case was perfectly acceptable. The CIU Supervisor stated that she “absolutely believed” that she had no obligation to inform me of the state proceeding . . . These statements reveal the poorly informed thought process that led us to where we are today in this case.

Judge Goldberg also rejected an argument put forward by the D.A.'s office that Cummings didn't have to disclose to the judge what she was up to in state court because her involvement in the litigation in state court to free Martinez was "short-lived."

The judge then listed seven bulleted items detailing past actions by Cummings that refuted that argument, and showed that she was heavily involved in the state litigation to free Martinez.

Those actions included:

-- Cummings voluntarily turning over more than 3,400 pages of the D.A.'s files in the case to a defense lawyer for Martinez;

-- Cummings "directly communicated" with the state judge when the petition to free Martinez in state court was in danger of being dismissed;

--- Cummings emailed the state judge to set up a conference between herself, Martinez's lawyer, and the judge before an Oct. 23 hearing was held in state court that led to the release of Martinez.

That led Judge Goldberg to conclude:

Based on these facts, I cannot accept counsel’s arguments that they had no duty to inform me of the state court proceedings because their involvement in those proceedings was so brief. Over the course of approximately a year and half, and after a PCRA petition had been filed in state court, counsel were both engaged in substantial discussions regarding relief for Petitioner, thousands of pages of documents were exchanged, state court Orders were issued, and status conferences in state court were scheduled.

In a statement from the D.A.'s office that was published by the the D.A.'s official apologists at The Philadelphia Inquirer, D.A. Krasner didn't offer any apologies on behalf of Cummings; instead he implied that Judge Goldberg was actively engaged in a conspiracy and an ongoing cover-up of past prosecutorial misconduct:

In my opinion, it is no surprise that when you do the work of undoing institutional wrongs, there is resistance from people who want to make excuses for those wrongs. On behalf of all Philadelphians, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office will not be cowed or deterred from our duty to seek justice in the future.

In Philadelphia, the Inquirer and other media outlets continue to cast Cummings as a reformer engaged in rescuing the innocent and wrongly convicted from jail cells that they were unjustly confined to. 

 But Cummings's unethical conduct in a past case back when she was working as a criminal defense lawyer in Texas have drawn a national audience.

As Big Trial has previously reported, Cummings has been portrayed as the villain in a five-part Showtime series,"Outcry," that ran last June. It's the story of Greg Kelley, an 18-year-old high school football star in Texas who in 2014, was sentenced to 25 years in prison without parole for sexually assaulting a four-year old child in a day care.

Only Kelley was falsely convicted. Patricia Cummings was Kelley's defense lawyer at the time, whom a judge found, was not only ineffective, but she also had an undisclosed conflict of interest. It turned out that Cummings had as a former client the woman who owned the day care where the attack took place. And that client of Cummings had a son who not only lived at the day care where the attack took place, but he was also suspected of being the real child abuser. 

But Cummings kept quiet about her conflict for three years while Greg Kelley, an innocent man, rotted in jail. [The picture at top is of Cummings and Kelley in a Texas courtroom].

The Showtime series, completely ignored by Krasner's official apologists at the Inquirer, does not present a pretty picture of Larry Krasner's crusader. 

Cummings has another role in the Philadelphia D.A.'s office that the general public is not aware of.

Every month, her unit goes through the personnel jackets of police officers. And every month, Cummings' unit voluntarily turns over materials from those personnel files to defense counsels, to aid them in their efforts to impeach those officers. The net effect is to disqualify cops from testifying at trial against criminal defendants.

Every month, cops receive letters like the following that refer to so-called Giglio information, material used to impeach the character or testimony of a prosecution witness at a criminal trial:

Dear Officer .  . .

The DAO has received Giglio information regarding you as reflected in the summary below . . . 

Pursuant to the law and the DAO's policy regarding police misconduct disclosures, the misconduct will be disclosed to the defense in all cases where you may be called to testify as a witness and said disclosure may also be made if required in closed cases where you were a critical witness.

Also, if required by law, supporting documentation in our possession regarding the misconduct will be disclosed to the defense.

Please note, if you believe our information is incorrect, feel free to communicate to us in writing through counsel.

Thank you for your attention in this matter.

Respectfully,

Patricia Cummings
Assistant District Attorney

For an accused cop, there is no forum where a police officer may defend himself, other than the unfriendly confines of the D.A.'s office.

The net effect has been that hundreds of police officers in the Philadelphia Police Department, if not thousands, are now prohibited from testifying against criminal defendants, thanks to the under-the-radar anti-cop campaign being waged by ADA Patricia Cummings, with the full support of cop-hating Larry Krasner.

Against this backdrop of yet another possible witch hunt against cops being conducted by the D.A.'s office under Larry Krasner, I'd like to offer any accused officer a possible means of recourse.

Step one: print out the following Big Trial story about Cummings's own ethical lapses, as portrayed in the Showtime series.

Step two: mail that copy back to ADA Cummings at the D.A.'s office and "respectfully" inquire how ADA Cummings can make any charges of possible misconduct against police officers when she has engaged in some glaring acts of misconduct and ethical lapses of her own, as showcased in the Showtime series.

Step three: contact ralph@bigtrial.net and let me know how you made out.

Feds Charge Sonny D In Theft Of $7.8 Million From Produce Market

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Editor's Note: This story originally ran on Oct. 8, 2018. On Thursday, the feds and the state police in a joint investigation charged Caesar "Sonny" DiCrecchio with fraud, conspiracy, money laundering and tax evasion, among other charges, in the theft of more than $7.8 million from the Philadelphia Wholesale Produce Market. 

By Ralph Cipriano and George Anastasia
for BigTrial.net

As president and CEO of the gigantic Philadelphia Wholesale Produce Market, Caesar DiCrecchio, AKA "Sonny D," was always doing good deeds for those in need.

 Like sending a boy stricken with cancer to the Super Bowl. Or taking 135 homeless kids from a shelter out on a shopping spree to buy Christmas presents.

"A Person Never Stands So Tall As When They Kneel To Help A Child -- Sonny D." That's the quote that volunteers wore on the backs of their matching purple jerseys when they chaperoned the annual "Sonny D's Holliday Shopping Party," sponsored by Sonny and his wife, Michelle.

"It's beautiful what Sonny and Michelle do for the children,"said Karen Patton-Faucett, assistant director of Stenton Family Manor, a shelter for families, during a 2016 tribute video to Sonny D posted on youtube.com. Over the years, the scores of volunteers who flocked to Sonny D's annual shopping party to help homeless kids pick out presents and wrap them included then-Eagles Quarterback Donovan McNabb.

But they may have to cancel the party this year. A woman who answered the phone at the produce market said that Sonny D "resigned" suddenly on Aug. 15th, and left without leaving much forwarding information. Meanwhile, a forensic accountant is digging through the market's financial records, searching for missing money that's said to be between $3 million and $5 million.

The FBI is on the case; agents interviewed Sonny D voluntarily for three days, without benefit of a lawyer. As a result, multiple sources say, Sonny's in big trouble. Instead of a do-gooder, the feds see DiCrecchio as a con artist who was doing business with shady characters and financing his good deeds with stolen money.

When he talked to the feds in August, several sources say, DiCrecchio basically confessed to taking the money. The feds, according to those same sources, told DiCrecchio he was going to jail, and if he wanted to make things easier on himself, the only option left was to become a cooperator.

The feds grilled DiCrecchio about his relationships with a couple of convicted felons, former mobster George Borgesi, and former state senator Vincent J. Fumo, both of whom had contracts down at the produce center. The feds wanted DiCrecchio to wear a wire on Borgesi and Fumo, as well DiCrecchio's bosses on the produce market's board of directors.

The FBI also wanted DiCrecchio to front a sting operation where he would dispense money advanced by the feds to targets of the investigation, so the feds could trace what the targets did with the money. The feds, underworld sources say, told DiCrecchio they wanted him to be their "5K1 boy," but Sonny D had no idea what they were talking about. The feds were referring to Section 5K1.1 of the federal sentencing guidelines that allow for a reduction in a mandatory minimum sentence for a cooperator who renders "substantial assistance" during a federal investigation.

Sonny D could not be reached for comment, and he claims he doesn't have the money to hire a lawyer. But in a lengthy, 1,500-word email to his former bosses, DiCrecchio admitted that he made "mistakes . . . over money." And that as a result of the scandal, he's a "broken soul" seeking forgiveness.

But one thing he wasn't willing to do to "save his ass," he wrote, was wear a wire. He also, according to sources, refused to participate in any sting operation. As Sonny D bitterly wrote to his former bosses, he may be getting treated like he's "some thief" who's the "scum of the earth," but Sonny D's no rat.

THE MARKET

The wholesale produce market, which does about $1.5 billion worth of business annually, is an enormous facility built on 20 acres of formerly abandoned land in the old Philadelphia Auto Mall on Essington Avenue in Southwest Philly.

When the $218 million facility opened in 2011, it was billed as the "world's largest fully-enclosed, fully-refrigerated wholesale produce terminal." The Philadelphia Inquirer described the new facility in a headline as the "world's largest freezer." The main building where DiCrecchio used to work, is a quarter-mile long, bigger than 14 football fields, and employs 1,500 workers.

Fruit peddlers and grocery store owners flock to the wholesale produce market to buy fruits and vegetables grown locally as well as around the globe. The produce is sold in the Italian Market, at the Reading Terminal, and in stores all over the city.

But the word is out about the scandal. For more than a month, fruit peddlers, merchants and mobsters have been buzzing about Sonny D and the missing millions.

"It's all hush-hush down there," one fruit peddler said. "They're not saying anything."

The produce market's board of directors are a frequent target of criticism.

"They look stupid," a merchant said. "How could they not have known what was going on," said another.

THE FEDS MOVE IN

The current federal probe, sources say, began when the FBI began investigating a $750,000 contract for LED lighting systems at the produce center arranged through DiCrecchio. The lighting company is linked to George Borgesi, the nephew of former Philadelphia mob boss Joseph "Uncle Joe" Ligambi.

In 2011, Borgesi was acquitted of 14 counts in a federal racketeering case. But federal authorities are now raising questions about how the lighting contract was awarded. Borgesi, through associates, has insisted it was a legitimate business deal and that the highly efficient lighting systems will prove to be an economic benefit and save money over the long haul.

But Borgesi is an ex-con that the feds are stilling keeping tabs on. In 2001, Borgesi was convicted along with mob boss Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino and five others in another high-profile racketeering case, and served a 14-year prison sentence. Since he got out of jail, Borgesi has been associated with various companies such as mortgage lending, electrical lighting and glass installation.

Both Borgesi and his lawyer declined comment for this story. Through associates, however, Borgesi has claimed that all of his business ventures are legitimate. And that all the unwarranted attention from law enforcement makes it more difficult for Borgesi and those who work for him to make an honest living.

An FBI spokesperson declined comment; a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's office did not respond to a request for comment.

According to underworld sources, when the feds came to see him, Sonny D argued that Borgesi had done his time and deserved a second chance. The feds, according to those same sources, replied that Borgesi, who beat murder charges when he was convicted of racketeering in 2011, should have done more time.

GARBAGE MOBSTERS

DiCrecchio and the produce center have a history of dealing with at least one company tied to organized crime. From 2000 to 2010, the produce center had a contract with TopJob, a trash hauler that formerly employed Uncle Joe Ligambi as a salesman. The former mob boss's involvement in the market was detailed in a 2011 racketeering indictment.

According to the feds, TopJob was paid about $17,000 a week to remove trash from the old produce center. Federal authorities alleged that Ligambi's position as a salesman with TopJob was a no-show job for which the mob boss received a weekly salary of $500 to $1,000, plus medical benefits.

Authorities alleged that Ligambi and his family accrued more than $220,000 in medical costs which were paid by insurance companies while Ligambi was a TopJob employee. The government also charged Ligambi with insurance fraud.

But over the course of two trials the government failed to prove its case. DiCreccho testified as a witness for the defense, and claimed the trash hauling contract was legitimate. The jury must have believed him; Ligambi was found not guilty of most of the charges he faced. And, after the second trial, the government opted not to pursue two remaining charges that two juries had deadlocked on.

But as far as authorities were concerned, Ligambi was up to no good.

In a 2011, the New Jersey State Commission of Investigation [SCI] cited Ligambi's involvement in TopJob in a report that focused on the mob's alleged incursion into the trash-hauling business. "Uncle Joe" was one of nearly a dozen reputed mob figures linked to various trash companies in the Garden State. The SCI report focused on what authorities described as "garbage mobsters" who had a "hidden hand" in the trash industry.

TopJob is long gone from the wholesale produce market, but FBI agents questioned DiCrecchio about a current trash-hauling contract with another company that the feds thought was suspicious. After DiCreccho departed from the produce market in August, the entire board of directors resigned. A new nine-member board of directors that took office promptly replaced the trash hauler, as well as a firm that was handling recycling down at the produce market.

The new chairman of the board, George Binck of Procacci Bros. Sales Corp., did not respond to a request for comment.

THE FUMO CONNECTION

Sonny D and the former state senator had a working relationship dating back to when Fumo lined up $150 million in state aid to build the new produce center. Prior to Fumo's intervention, DiCrecchio told a federal judge at Fumo's sentencing in 2009, the produce market had negotiated a deal with then Gov. Jim McGreevey to move their operation across the river to New Jersey.

"Our facility was about 43 years old at the time," DiCrecchio told Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter at Fumo's sentencing. The old market was too costly to modernize, DiCreccho testified. What was needed was a brand new facility. According to DiCrecchio, that's when Fumo came to the rescue.

Over a seven-year period, DiCrecchio told the judge, "He [Fumo] was relentless" in getting the deal done to keep the produce market in Philadelphia,  "At every meeting, every meeting, he was pushing."

Fumo, who declined comment, was convicted in 2009 on 137 counts of corruption. After serving a four-year sentence, he started a consulting business advising companies on how to deal with government.

THE LAST WORD

Sonny D had presided over the market for 20 years when he suddenly departed in August. His old bosses may have locked him out, but Sonny D insisted on having the last word. That same month, DiCrecchio sent out his long email to members of the market's board of directors, the subject of which was listed as "My apology to all."

In the email, DiCrecchio expressed regrets over "mistakes" he admitted to making "over money," but  put some of that blame on his bosses, for chronically underpaying him.

"The very first thing and most important thing I would like to say to everyone is that I AM DEEPLY SORRY FOR MY ACTIONS," DiCrecchio wrote. "The regrets I have run so deep that I cannot put it into words. I am so sorry to disappoint so many."

The problem, DiCrecchio said, was that because he wasn't compensated adequately, he was always short on money.

"All the guts and determination I had to stand up to politicians, bureaucrats, attorneys and outright bullies in the system to represent you for 20 years was endless," DiCrecchio wrote his bosses. "But I never had the guts and determination to ask you all for the compensation I deserved for the job I was doing."

In his email, DiCrecchio asked board members to "please look deep into your hearts and conscience and ask, 'Did we treat and compensate Sonny fairly?'"

"I am not asking anyone to say I had the right or to feel in anyway I deserved to do what I did," he wrote.

"I just ask you to put the good I did on the other side of the scale and not to just judge me on the wrongs," he wrote. "GOD help everyone if they had to be judged on only the wrongs or mistakes they made in life, and [were] never given an ounce of credit for ANYTHING they did that was good."

A STAND-UP GUY

It was a sentiment that DiCrecchio previously expressed on the witness stand back in 2009 when he testified on Fumo's behalf at the former senator's sentencing. It was a ballsy decision by DiCrecchio. At the time, most people that Fumo thought were his friends, such as current Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney, were running away from from the former senator as fast as they could.

But Sonny D was headed the opposite way.

"I never actually knew the senator as a social friend, but I will say that after the trial was over, I befriended him," DiCrecchio told the judge. "And I honestly did it because I looked at the whole process and I just thought that was unfair," DiCrecchio said about the five-month long trial of Fumo.

"And I just wanted to say that I, you know, I felt, from a man, if you open any of us and just tell it bad, that it's, you know, God knows where we're going to go," DiCrecchio said. "So I just thought that it was my duty to come and say what I needed to say."

The day he showed up to testify, DiCrecchio told the judge how, at the request of Fumo, he had launched a salvage operation down at the market manned by volunteers who sorted through discarded produce to make donations to Philabundance, the Philadelphia food bank that feeds the homeless.

The salvage program that DiCrecchio set up, at Fumo's request, resulted in the wholesale produce market donating to Philabundance three million pounds of produce a year to feed the homeless, DiCrecchio told the startled judge, who gasped, "Three million?"

"Three million pounds a year, yes," DiCrecchio repeated.

Eight years later, writing to his bosses at the food distribution center, DiCrecchio once again argued that the good that men do often gets overlooked, especially when they screw up, only this time he was talking about himself.

"I did not molest kids, sell drugs, scheme with people to deceive you, kill anyone," DiCrecchio wrote his former bosses. "I was asked by the government to set up board members so they could investigate them for taking cash from their own businesses, so I could save my ass. I told them I would not do that if my life depended on it."

WHERE THE MONEY WENT

In the email to his bosses, DiCrecchio talked about all the charitable events he had sponsored over the years.

"I used my own money and the market's money to help hundreds of people in need, kids with cancer, people losing their houses (some of them your own employees)," he wrote He said he also helped to get "some of the stockholders' kids into colleges, charter schools . . ."

Meanwhile, when it came to his personal life, DiCrecchio wrote, he was always short on cash. He had to pay for a summer rental home "after I lost my family's money on a bad house deal and did not have the heart or guts to tell them we could not afford it."

But he was always a hardworking employee, DiCrecchio wrote. So hardworking that during his 20 years at the market, he only took three vacations, twice to Disney World, once to St. John's Island.

"My job was 24/7 and I loved my job!!!," DiCrecchio wrote. He talked about his accomplishments that saved the market money, such as a trash contract that cost $1 million a year, until "I brought in another company for $600,000."

"I was never given a raise or rewarded in any way except for ridicule because now stockholders had to pay for offices they got for free, had to pay for their trash instead of dumping it on the ground," DiCrecchio wrote. As part of his duties, DiCrecchio wrote, he did the market's refrigeration, welding and power washing from 2002 to 2011 "for nothing."

"You never received a bill or paid me or specialty refrigeration for millions of dollars of services rendered," he wrote. "I gave you my refrigeration & welding businesses to start the new market. Every tool, lift truck, and trained my people to basically run your market instead of hiring a company for $600K a year," he wrote, adding, "Did I receive a raise for 15 years?"

The answer, he wrote, was no. How about a Christmas bonus?

"No," he wrote, "I didn't even get a thank you card or a cheap plaque from you when we opened the market, just complaints."

"However, I did not do anything out of malice," he wrote. "I just worked 24/7 all along with deep depression I suffered from. I just ask that you tell the real story in it's entirety, not like I am just some thief."

Instead of a Robin Hood. In his long email to his bosses, Sonny sounded bitter about how they had treated him.

"Now I am erased and kicked to the curb like I never existed, barred from a market that your kids and grandkids will enjoy for many years and make good livings," he wrote. "My life is destroyed because of my mistakes, over money that does not breathe. You could easily total what you feel I owe and let me work it off instead of kicking me out like I am the scum of the earth that never existed."

"There is so much more of this story you do not know of," he wrote. "Your money and mine has helped so many unfortunate people, kids with cancer get experimental treatments, final trips to Disney when make a wish foundation could not, helped people stay in businesses etc."

"You all must think I have money stashed away, you are so wrong," he wrote. "I give my own money away as I used the market's money as well. I have no attorney because I cannot afford one. I have no pension plan, no savings, nothing. I did not take money to line my pockets I did it to help family, friends, strangers, and yes, no denying my biggest screw up of all was renting the Shore house because I didn’t have the guts to tell my family no."

"Please do not just look at one side of the story," he wrote. "Please remember the good and hard work I did. I dedicated 20 years of my life and mind to you all, I endured death threats to my family during our Teamsters strikes, and the stories go on and on. No one is perfect especially me."

"I am asking for your forgiveness, and for you to not make me spend the rest of my life in jail over MONEY," he wrote. "And I am pleading that you spare the entire staff at the market, they are hard working honest people. They had a bad boss. That is their only fault."

Sonny D even offered to cooperate with the forensic accountant trying to figure out how much money was lost.

"I have every piece of paper you need to back up donations etc.," he wrote. "I agreed to help your forensic accountant find everything to save you $500K in services; instead I have been barred from the market I built."
  
"Please see through the smoke of this fire and find it in your hearts to not kick me further to the ground then I am," he wrote. "I have a family and granddaughters that do not deserve the hatred that is resonating out of the market towards me right now."

"I am so very sorry for what I have done," he wrote, but he added, "please put the good on the scale and not just the bad. You all know in your hearts that I am not all bad!!!!"

The email was signed, "A broken soul, Sonny DiCrecchio."

"The Salt Of The Earth"

Today, Sonny D may be looked upon as "some thief," but in his heyday he was regarded as a big-hearted humanitarian. A Mummer recalled that when a member of his string band died broke, it was Sonny D who stepped up to pay for the Mummer's funeral as well as a funeral luncheon.

"He's the salt of the earth," the Mummer said about DiCrecchio.

In January, when the Eagles were going to the Super Bowl, one of their youngest fans was in big trouble. Ten-year-old cancer survivor Kanen Wear, of Cape May Courthouse, N.J., had been cancer-free for the previous four years. But while the Eagles were having their greatest season, Kanen was stricken with a relapse of Ewing sarcoma, a rare form of cancer that effects bones and soft tissue.

Kanen, a fifth-grader who had to drop out of school, was feeling "very isolated and sad," his mother told a reporter. He was a patient at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, where he was undergoing more surgery, chemotherapy and radiation.

It was Kanen's wish to watch the Eagles in the Super Bowl. That's when Sonny D stepped up with the money to send Karen and his parents to Minneapolis, where Kanen saw the Eagles win the world championship.

Sonny D's Holiday Party started small in 2008 when Sonny and a bunch of volunteers took a select group of 20 kids from Stenton Manor out to buy presents for themselves and their family. Then, Sonny D called Elder Rob Harrison, the executive director of the faith-based shelter, and told him, "We have to take 'em all."

He meant all 135 kids at the shelter.

"He was serious, he was pretty adamant," Harrison said. On the youtube video, Harrison recalled his emotional reaction to what Sonny had to say.

"I kind of broke down," Harrison said. "Nobody has ever thought of those children like that."

Harrison said his wife wondered why he was crying.

"You've got to meet this guy," Harrison recalled telling his wife. "There's something about him."

On the video, Sonny's wife agreed.

"My husband would give you the shirt off his back and then he'll take you to the store and buy the rest of the wardrobe," she said. "That's how he is."

But when the feds announce Sonny's arrest, that's not how they plan to portray him.

                               *                            *                                  *

On March 11th, the U.S. Attorney's Office put out this press release:

Former President of Philadelphia Wholesale Produce Market Charged with Stealing $7.8 Million from His Employer

PHILADELPHIA – Acting United States Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that Caesar DiCrecchio, 60, of Voorhees, NJ, was charged by Information with two counts of wire fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, one count of money laundering conspiracy, one count of aggravated identity theft, and four counts of tax evasion, all of which allegedly caused more than $7.8 million in losses to the Philadelphia Wholesale Produce Market in South Philadelphia.

Separately, Thomas Del Borrello, 42 of Sewell, NJ, was also charged by Information with eight counts of aggravated false filing of a currency transaction report and one count of aggravated failure to file a currency transaction report.

The Information alleges that DiCrecchio, the former President and CEO of the Produce Market, exercised control over every aspect of the Market, including expenditure of funds, and was required to report on the Market’s finances to its Board of Directors. 

The defendant defrauded the Market by using company funds to pay $1.9 million in rent on his Stone Harbor, New Jersey shore house; converting into cash $1.1 million in checks drawn on the Market’s bank account and using the cash for his own benefit; causing $1.7 million in checks to be issued from the Market operating account payable to his friends or relatives; causing the Market to pay for the defendant’s personal credit card expenditures; converting $320,000 in checks that were payable to the Market and cashing them for his own benefit; skimming $2.6 million in cash from the pay gate at the Market’s parking lot, which he used to pay Market employees ‘under the table’ while keeping a substantial portion for his own use; and using Market funds to provide a $180,000 loan to a Market vendor, which the vendor repaid directly to DiCrecchio. 

The defendant concealed these expenditures in the Market’s books and records by directing that these payments be reflected as legitimate business expenditures, for example: notated as maintenance, snow removal, insurance, legal fees and other false expenditure entries.

The Information also alleges that DiCrecchio committed aggravated identity theft by cashing checks at a currency exchange using the name of an unwitting victim as the payee. Further, it is also alleged that the defendant conspired to engage in money laundering by agreeing with two unnamed individuals to conduct repeated money laundering transactions by converting Market funds into money orders at a currency exchange so that he could pay the rent at his shore house. In total, DiCrecchio laundered approximately $319,736 by purchasing money orders at the currency exchange using Market funds.

According to the second Information, Del Borrello was a supervisor at United Check Cashing on South Broad Street in Philadelphia and was responsible for compliance with regulations governing cash transactions, including the preparation and filing of Currency Transaction Reports (CTRs). DiCrecchio regularly caused groups of checks to be delivered to, and cashed at, United Check Cashing. 

These checks were each made out for less than $10,000, but when cashed as a group generated in excess of $10,000 in United States currency. For these cash transactions in excess of $10,000, regulations require the currency exchange to file a CTR, recording the identity of the person who presented the transaction. Del Borrello allegedly caused the filing of false CTRs which hid DiCrecchio’s identity, or caused United Check Cashing to fail to file a CTR altogether. 

On some occasions, DiCrecchio directed Del Borrello, or others at United Check Cashing, to convert the proceeds of the checks into separate money orders which were used to pay the monthly rent for DiCrecchio’s Stone Harbor house.

Lastly, the Information alleges that DiCrecchio willfully attempted to evade federal income tax over several years, by failing to report more than $2.1 million in income for tax years 2014 through 2017. DiCrecchio failed to report as income the proceeds of his fraud on the Market, as well as a car allowance, a pension allowance, and consulting income that he received from the Market.

“Complexity will not hide crime from law enforcement,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Williams. “Further, and as alleged here, ‘nickel and dime’ theft – skimming small amounts here and there over many years – is just as illegal as stealing one large lump sum. The charges announced today reflect our Office’s commitment to uncovering and prosecuting complicated financial frauds.”

“Willfully evading one’s tax liability is a violation of federal tax law,” said IRS Criminal Investigation Special Agent in Charge Thomas Fattorusso. “Mr. DiCrecchio stands accused of evading taxes on millions of dollars’ worth of income, while Mr. Del Borrello is alleged to have, among other things, caused the filing of false CTRs which hid Mr. DiCrecchio’s identity and permitted his fraud to continue. Rest assured that IRS Special Agents are fully trained to investigate numerous types of tax and related financial crimes, and are constantly working to uncover crimes such as those charged in these cases.”

“This investigation is a perfect example of a collaborative effort between state and federal agencies,” said Sgt. Brandon Corby, Commander, Eastern Organized Crime Task Force, Pennsylvania State Police. “DiCrecchio and Del Borrello utilized their positions to further their personal wealth and defraud the Wholesale Produce Market of millions of dollars. The Pennsylvania State Police along with our federal partners are committed to eradicating this type of criminal behavior and hold those engaged in such activities accountable for their actions.”

DiCrecchio faces a maximum sentence of 102 years in prison, a three-year period of supervised release, and a fine of $2,500,000. Del Borrello faces a maximum sentence of 90 years in prison, a three-year period of supervised release, and a fine of $4,500,000.

The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Organized Crime Task Force, the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation, and the Pennsylvania State Police, and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Michael T. Donovan.

An indictment, information, or criminal complaint is an accusation. A defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Can Philly Beat Out Chicago As America's Murder Capital?

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Mayor Jim Kenney should make a bet with Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

Kenney could offer a couple of Philly cheesesteaks to Chicago's mayor, who could counter with a couple of Chicago hot dogs.

The bet: which city will deserve bragging rights this year for being America's murder capital? 

The exact murder count in Chicago depends on who's doing the math. Today, the Chicago Tribune reported that as of March 15th, Chicago has 107 murders so far this year, leading the nation, while the rival Chicago Sun-Times put the total body count for that same day at 109.

The national runner-up for most murders committed in America -- the city of Brotherly Love. As of March 15th, according to the official tally kept by the Philadelphia Police Department, Philly has hit 102 murders so far this year. That's despite Chicago having more than 5 1/2 times our population. 

It's a competition that Mayor Kenney probably doesn't want to talk about, much less win. So today on Twitter, instead of discussing the record murder rate, Mayor Jim "MaskUp/LockDown" Kenney instead marked the one-year anniversary of Philadelphia's "first restrictions on non-essential activity," which as Kenney defines it, includes restaurants, bars, churches and schools. 

"Philly, we want to pause with you today to reflect and look to the future," Kenney wrote about the 3,200 lives lost to COVID-19. He didn't mention when, if ever, does he plan to give up his emergency powers and end his unconstitutional lockdown. 

Naturally, critics flocked to the mayor's Twitter account.

"How will you be celebrating this milestone," Bill Anthony Rosier asked, above a photo of the Philadelphia Police Department's official body count. "Amazing job!"

"How many kids will get shot today, Jimbo," chimed in Nick@PhillyRepub90.

More than a few cops also noticed that while Kenney took the time to reflect on the people who died of COVID, a few days earlier, he apparently forgot that March 13th was the one-year anniversary of the murder of Corporal James O'Connor.

O'Connor was shot to death while attempting to serve an arrest warrant for murder on a gun-toting, drug-dealing gang member who got multiple passes out of jail from District Attorney Larry Krasner.

That's one thing Philadelphia and Chicago have in common along with their sky-high murder rates -- their top prosecutors, D.A. Krasner and Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx, were both elected thanks to a total cash outlay from George Soros of nearly $4 million.

Meanwhile, on Twitter today, D.A. Krasner, the great reformer, was touting his Worker Protection Unit, and inviting workers around the city to report to the D.A.'s office any alleged crimes against employees.

"All workers deserve to have their rights and dignity protected," Krasner tweeted. "And employers need to understand . . . that the [D.A.'s office Worker Protection Unit takes crimes against workers very seriously."

"I would like to report the 100 murders that have occurred under your utterly failed watch," responded TheWeekDay," before posting "#Vega2020."

And over at the Philadelphia Police Department, the Special Projects Unit was announcing a sneaker give-away on March 23rd, from 2 to 6 p.m.

"I look forward to seeing you, family, friends and community members 'strolling in your new kicks,'" wrote Staff Inspector Jacqueline L. Bailey Davis in an email to all police personnel.

Philadelphia, which had 499 murders last year, is up 29% over that rate this year. That puts the city on a record pace for nearly 644 murders in 2021.

Chicago had 774 murders last year, but this year, but Philadelphia is giving them a run for their money. In January, Chicago had 51 murders while Philadelphia was right behind with 50 murders, an all-time record for January.

In racking up 499 murders last year Philadelphia had the highest homicide total since 1990, the height of the crack epidemic, when 500 people were murdered.

And if it wasn't for the slow pace of the Montgomery County Coroner's Office, Philadelphia would have surely tied the all-time record for murders last year.

On Nov. 7, 2020, Philadelphia police found Benjamin Brown, 43, lying on the highway at 3100 Custer Street. Brown, who had facial lacerations and stab wounds, was transported to Abington Hospital, where he died from his wounds on Nov. 26, 2020.

A post-mortem examination by the Montgomery County Coroner's office found the cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head and a stab wound to the left thigh.

Brown would have been Homicide No. 500 for 2020 but the Montgomery County Coroner didn't issue a final death certificate until Feb. 5th of this year. On Feb. 23rd, the Montgomery County coroner formally notified the Philadelphia Police Department's Homicide Unit about Brown's death.

Kelley Cofrancisco, a spokesperson for Montgomery County, explained that 8 to 12 weeks is standard for reporting "a pending to final cause of death."

"In this case, the coroner issued a pending death certificate so they could gather the information regarding the assault," Cofrandisco said. "More importantly, they [the coroner's office] had to connect the death to the assault by means of autopsy, histological examination (microscope slides) and neuropathology examination (brain and central nervous system)."

At the Philadelphia Police Department's Homicide Unit, Captain Jason Smith said that Brown's death has already been included in this year's homicide total, not last year's.

"It's classified [as a homicide] when it's received" according to FBI guidelines, Captain Smith said. "There is no going back in time. When we get it [the report of a homicide] we assign it, and we investigate it," Smith said about Brown's death. 

That's the way they always do it in homicide, Smith said. In 2020, a total of 13 of those 499 homicides reported last year actually occurred in previous years. 

I asked Captain Smith about how Chicago reports homicides. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, their homicide rate is higher because the newspaper includes homicides committed on expressways and killings in self-defense.

 The Chicago Tribune, however, apparently doesn't count either category in their official homicide totals.

Captain Smith explained how the Philly P.D. does it.

Any homicide committed within the city's limits, including all highways and interstates, are included in the city's homicide totals, Smith said. But Philadelphia doesn't include killings in self-defense in their homicide totals.

Inmate Who Just Made Bail Assassinated On Prison Grounds

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

It continues to be open season for murder in Philadelphia as an accused criminal who just got out of jail early this morning was gunned down on the grounds of the Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility in Holmesburg.  

At 1:59 a.m., Rodney Hargrove, 20, of West Oak Lane, was waiting at a bus stop across the street from the prison for a ride home, when he was forced to run away from an assassin riding in a black sedan. 

Hargrove, who had just gotten out of jail on $20,000 bail, ran back to the prison grounds but the assassin was able to follow Hargrove in his car past a security guard and a checkpoint with an automatic arm. Sources say the guard might have been asleep.

Cops summoned to the prison over reports of gun shots found Hargrove lying on the ground and non-responsive from multiple bullet wounds. Medics who arrived at the scene pronounced him dead at 2:07 a.m. Police recovered 9 mm fired cartridge casings, two live 9 mm caliber rounds, and one .380 fired cartridge casing.

Police said the assassin fled south on State Road in that black sedan. 

Hargrove had two prior arrests. On March 10th, he was arrested for receiving stolen property, carrying unlicensed firearms, fleeing or attempting to elude police, and carrying a loaded weapon. 

His preliminary hearing was scheduled for March 26th, but he's not going to make it.

On March 11th, Hargrove's bail was set at $200,000 monetary, meaning he had to put up $20,000 yesterday to get out of jail. 

Hargrove's previous arrest was on Jan. 23, 2020, for an alleged carjacking. Hargrove was charged with receiving stolen property, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, and driving without a license. 

Philadelphia Prisons Commissioner Blanche Carney told NBC10 that Hargrove had been released for about 45 minutes before he was gunned down.

Hargrove goes into the books as Homicide Victim No. 105 for this year, a pace 32% higher than last year, when the city had 499 murders; the highest total in 30 years, since the peak of the crack cocaine epidemic.

At this rate, Philadelphia, which is second in murders nationally behind only Chicago, will set an all-time high record this year of 658 murders.

It's quite a tribute to the progressive leadership of Mayor Jim Kenney, D.A. "Let-Em Loose" Larry Krasner, and Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw.

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