
for BigTrial.net
Everybody agrees that on the morning of Sept. 30, 2016, the police caught Kenneth D. Dixon, 20, of West Philadelphia, inside a Bank of America branch at 23rd and Oregon in South Philadelphia.
Since Dixon was arrested inside the bank at 7:38 a.m., at a time when the bank was closed, it's safe to assume that Dixon let himself in.
The cops thought Dixon was guilty of burglary. That's because they were notified by bank security before they arrived at the scene of the crime that a suspect had been captured on a video camera "attempting to gain access to the vault” and “tampering’ with an ATM machine, according to police records.
But when the cops tried to get the D.A.'s office to approve an affidavit of probable cause, so that Dixon could be charged with burglary, the district attorney's office turned them down later that day, citing "incomplete discovery” and “insufficient evidence."
As Deputy District Attorney Michael Barry explained in an interview last week, the cops didn't personally witness Dixon trying to break into the vault or tampering with the ATM. They only witnessed that Dixon was inside the bank at a time when it was closed, so that the cops could only prove that Dixon was guilty of trespassing.
What happened next with the bank job is a bizarre tale of how criminal justice in Philadelphia is carried out under the reign of our now admittedly corrupt District Attorney Seth Williams. This is a guy who would be doing everyone in the city a favor by finishing the job he started on Friday, when he announced he wouldn't seek a third term in a May 16th Democratic primary, by resigning from office today.
As Deputy District Attorney Michael Barry explained in an interview last week, the cops didn't personally witness Dixon trying to break into the vault or tampering with the ATM. They only witnessed that Dixon was inside the bank at a time when it was closed, so that the cops could only prove that Dixon was guilty of trespassing.
What happened next with the bank job is a bizarre tale of how criminal justice in Philadelphia is carried out under the reign of our now admittedly corrupt District Attorney Seth Williams. This is a guy who would be doing everyone in the city a favor by finishing the job he started on Friday, when he announced he wouldn't seek a third term in a May 16th Democratic primary, by resigning from office today.
When the D.A.'s office said it wouldn't charge Dixon, Assistant District Attorney Amanda Hedrick wrote on a form known as a “record of declination” that the bank video wouldn’t be available for three more days. And besides the cops, there were no other witnesses to the crime, she wrote.
Hedrick instructed the cops to "please obtain statements from responding officers/bank employees" and any other witnesses prior to resubmitting their paperwork to obtain an affidavit of probable cause.
To a bystander, the district attorney's office here seems to be behaving like a defense attorney at a pretrial hearing, arguing to the judge why his guy deserves bail. You have to wonder when the cops have a would-be bank robber in custody, a guy they caught red-handed inside the bank, why the D.A.'s office is acting as an adversary here.
No wonder the Fraternal Order of Police went on the radio in recent weeks advertising, “Attention, help wanted immediately in the city of Philadelphia . . . Philadelphia needs an honest open and fair district attorney to lead the city immediately,” someone who is willing to “work openly and fairly with the Philadelphia police department and the community.”
Here's what happened next. Three days later, on Oct. 3, 2016, this reporter mentioned the bank job in a blog post that was highly critical of the DA's office.
In that Oct. 3 post, I was writing about the D.A.'s lame attempts to explain away their decision to overturn the convictions of more than 800 drug dealers. The two in question that I was writing about, a couple of convicted drug dealers named Mohammed and the Fatboy, were caught red-handed with 225 pounds of marijuana worth more than $2 million. Here's what I wrote:
Relations between the police force and the D.A.'s office are so bad these days, [FOP President John] McNesby said, "You have to have an act of Congress to get someone arrested." Every day, McNesby says, he hears complaints from detectives that "They're not approving arrest warrants" at the D.A.'s office unless you have an "airtight, 100 percent case."
To underscore what McNesby is talking about, this weekend, according to a knowledgable law enforcement source, a couple of cops caught a suspect red-handed inside a Bank of America branch at 23rd and Oregon after the suspect had broken in. The bank had surveillance photos of the guy trying to open the vault.
But the district attorney's office declined to prosecute the case because there was no video of the break-in and the officers were the only witnesses.
That's how bad things are in Philadelphia, under the administration of D.A. Seth Williams. Maybe drug dealing isn't the only crime legalized by the district attorney's office. Bank robbery could be next.
Meanwhile, McNesby says about the D.A.'s office's recent holiday for drug dealers, "You just let 800 people hit the lottery."
Four days after I wrote that blog post, on Oct. 7, 2016, the D.A.'s Office promptly reversed course and arrested Dixon on charges of burglary, defiant trespass and theft.
I asked Cameron Kline, the spokesperson for the D.A., if the publicity had anything to do with the D.A. arresting Dixon.
His response, written in an email: "About Dixon, the short answer is that 'publicity' had nothing to do with the decision to charge. PPD [Philadelphia Police Department] did the work and we charged it. "
But as far as the cops were concerned, there's no happy ending to the story of the bank job.
Hedrick instructed the cops to "please obtain statements from responding officers/bank employees" and any other witnesses prior to resubmitting their paperwork to obtain an affidavit of probable cause.
To a bystander, the district attorney's office here seems to be behaving like a defense attorney at a pretrial hearing, arguing to the judge why his guy deserves bail. You have to wonder when the cops have a would-be bank robber in custody, a guy they caught red-handed inside the bank, why the D.A.'s office is acting as an adversary here.
No wonder the Fraternal Order of Police went on the radio in recent weeks advertising, “Attention, help wanted immediately in the city of Philadelphia . . . Philadelphia needs an honest open and fair district attorney to lead the city immediately,” someone who is willing to “work openly and fairly with the Philadelphia police department and the community.”
Here's what happened next. Three days later, on Oct. 3, 2016, this reporter mentioned the bank job in a blog post that was highly critical of the DA's office.
In that Oct. 3 post, I was writing about the D.A.'s lame attempts to explain away their decision to overturn the convictions of more than 800 drug dealers. The two in question that I was writing about, a couple of convicted drug dealers named Mohammed and the Fatboy, were caught red-handed with 225 pounds of marijuana worth more than $2 million. Here's what I wrote:
Relations between the police force and the D.A.'s office are so bad these days, [FOP President John] McNesby said, "You have to have an act of Congress to get someone arrested." Every day, McNesby says, he hears complaints from detectives that "They're not approving arrest warrants" at the D.A.'s office unless you have an "airtight, 100 percent case."
To underscore what McNesby is talking about, this weekend, according to a knowledgable law enforcement source, a couple of cops caught a suspect red-handed inside a Bank of America branch at 23rd and Oregon after the suspect had broken in. The bank had surveillance photos of the guy trying to open the vault.
But the district attorney's office declined to prosecute the case because there was no video of the break-in and the officers were the only witnesses.
That's how bad things are in Philadelphia, under the administration of D.A. Seth Williams. Maybe drug dealing isn't the only crime legalized by the district attorney's office. Bank robbery could be next.
Meanwhile, McNesby says about the D.A.'s office's recent holiday for drug dealers, "You just let 800 people hit the lottery."
Four days after I wrote that blog post, on Oct. 7, 2016, the D.A.'s Office promptly reversed course and arrested Dixon on charges of burglary, defiant trespass and theft.
I asked Cameron Kline, the spokesperson for the D.A., if the publicity had anything to do with the D.A. arresting Dixon.
His response, written in an email: "About Dixon, the short answer is that 'publicity' had nothing to do with the decision to charge. PPD [Philadelphia Police Department] did the work and we charged it. "
But as far as the cops were concerned, there's no happy ending to the story of the bank job.
When the case went to court on Jan. 7, prosecutors from the D.A.'s office dropped the burglary charge. Dixon pleaded guilty to a couple of misdemeanors, defiant trespassing and theft, and wound up getting placed on probation for two years.
Bank robbery and drug dealing aren't the only crimes that Seth Williams has decriminalized during his reign as D.A. Every day, according to their own statistics, the D.A.'s office declines to charge almost four crimes a day.
Many of those crimes involve domestic violence and so called "stranger robberies" where the victim doesn't know the perpetrator.
Over the next couple of days, I'm going to report on some of those cases where the D.A.'s office has declined to charge suspects. To make a long story short, you can get shot or stabbed in Philadelphia, and the cops can know who did the deed, but this D.A. won't file charges.
Or you can know who robbed you, and in some cases, actually lead the cops to the guy who robbed you, so the cops can find some of the stuff he took from you.
And this D.A.'s office won't file charges.
In the course of reporting a story I wrote for Newsweek last week about Seth Williams, I spoke to a criminologist with Philadelphia ties told me that he’s baffled by what’s going on between the cops and the D.A.
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Sean Patrick Griffin, a former Philadelphia cop who is an author, as well as a professor and department head of Criminal Justice at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C.
Bank robbery and drug dealing aren't the only crimes that Seth Williams has decriminalized during his reign as D.A. Every day, according to their own statistics, the D.A.'s office declines to charge almost four crimes a day.
Many of those crimes involve domestic violence and so called "stranger robberies" where the victim doesn't know the perpetrator.
Over the next couple of days, I'm going to report on some of those cases where the D.A.'s office has declined to charge suspects. To make a long story short, you can get shot or stabbed in Philadelphia, and the cops can know who did the deed, but this D.A. won't file charges.
Or you can know who robbed you, and in some cases, actually lead the cops to the guy who robbed you, so the cops can find some of the stuff he took from you.
And this D.A.'s office won't file charges.
In the course of reporting a story I wrote for Newsweek last week about Seth Williams, I spoke to a criminologist with Philadelphia ties told me that he’s baffled by what’s going on between the cops and the D.A.
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Sean Patrick Griffin, a former Philadelphia cop who is an author, as well as a professor and department head of Criminal Justice at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C.
“As a former police officer studying policing for a living I don’t ever recall hearing of a prosecutor’s office . . . at war with the police department because they’re not taking cases,” he said. “I just find this whole situation unbelievable.”
What's really unbelievable is that the D.A., who went before the media on Friday and admitted he was corrupt, and was taking money and gifts from people all over town, is still in office as the city's top prosecutor.
Hey Seth, time to do everybody a favor and resign in disgrace.
What's really unbelievable is that the D.A., who went before the media on Friday and admitted he was corrupt, and was taking money and gifts from people all over town, is still in office as the city's top prosecutor.
Hey Seth, time to do everybody a favor and resign in disgrace.