• Arizona cops frame lady to cover-up hit-and-run by drunken Cop

    From Scottsdale Citizen@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 16 14:04:29 2021
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, alt.true-crime

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my- name-woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police https://www.ibtimes.com/woman-accused-hit-run-reportedly-vindicated- police-open-internal-affairs-3273489 https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-arizona-driver-yessenia- garcia-cleared-20210810-axd67en5ojefpjdmp6zdssuz3a-story.html https://patch.com/arizona/scottsdale/hit-run-false-arrest-wish-grante https://www.azfamily.com/news/suspected-dui-driver-accused-of-hitting- assault-suspect-running-from-scene-in-scottsdale/article_54a79d58-9ebf- 11ea-8f8e-07fe64f8a7e4.html https://www.vice.com/en/article/n7b5pm/police-arizona-yessenia-garcia- lawsuit-hit-and-run

    First read the press reports above which are mostly accurate but very incomplete.

    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured
    out the why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves
    why the perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the
    windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused,
    not only showing how her car's windscreen was really damaged but also
    that the car was never out of cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye-witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her
    even though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.

    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or
    they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal
    Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago,
    14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend
    of mine works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't
    feel that exposed by recounting this.


    What Really Happened

    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a
    jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling
    911 or even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his
    cellphone while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son
    of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked
    in the vicinity of the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to
    immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car
    chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady
    in her mid-thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the
    scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got
    captured on private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of
    the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to
    get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to
    report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would
    have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got
    located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if
    it was enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes
    after she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover-
    up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my
    friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still
    serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything
    about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief
    of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be
    another cover-up of the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but
    Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them,
    maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe
    qualified immunity lets crooked cops get away with these multiple
    violations?

    Can some reader fill them in, please. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scottsdale Citizen@21:1/5 to All on Wed Aug 18 00:30:02 2021
    XPost: alt.sci.criminology, alt.true-crime, alt.prisons
    XPost: us.legal

    What reporter Dave Biscobing apparently doesn't know is that at least one cop on the scene, not saying it was Sgt Steel, knew AT THAT TIME that Yessenia was innocent and that the hit-and-run perp was an off-duty officer who was drunk.

    Scroll to bottom for my original email which gives the detail.



    Gregory Carr wrote on 2021-08-17 10:33:26 UTC at https://narkive.com/OwnphRBO....

    ABC15 LOCAL NEWS INVESTIGATIONS

    'I want to clear my name': Woman speaks out after being falsely accused by Scottsdale police

    While detained, scared, and crying, Scottsdale police officers repeatedly called her a liar and ignored clear video evidence of her innocence before handcuffing Garcia for a hit-and-run she didn’t commit.

    Posted at 10:15 AM, Aug 09, 2021 and last updated 10:35 PM, Aug 09, 2021

    SCOTTSDALE — For more than 45 minutes in custody, nothing Yessenia Garcia said or did mattered.

    While detained, scared, and crying, Scottsdale police officers repeatedly called her a liar and overlooked clear video evidence of her innocence before handcuffing Garcia for a hit-and-run she didn’t commit.

    But Garcia said the reality didn’t fully set in until she heard the “click”
    and felt the metal on her wrists.

    “Exactly when he told me to put my hands behind my back, and that’s when everything went black,” she said. “I just kind of heard [the officer]. It was kind of like an echo. I was kind of in shock, and I just kind of dropped down.”

    It happened the night of May 24, 2020 in Scottsdale’s Old Town district.

    Making the arrest worse, Garcia was forced to strip at the police station, had her blood forcibly drawn, and her mugshot was splashed across the internet the following day.

    Garcia’s tearful and shocked booking photo is still on several news outlet’s websites.

    More than a year later, she’s decided to tell her story publicly.

    Garcia filed a lawsuit earlier this year but has decided to voluntarily
    dismiss the complaint. Many attorneys tell her overcoming qualified immunity will be too difficult in the case to make it financially viable.

    So why did she sit down with ABC15 to share her story?

    “To clear my name,” Garcia said during an interview. “[To let people know:] don’t believe everything, um, you have no idea what the person in that mugshot really just went through.”

    Following ABC15’s questions for this report, Scottsdale Police Chief Jeff Walther opened an internal affairs investigation into what happened.

    TWO CRIMES, ONE SUSPECT

    Garcia and her then-boyfriend met up to have a drink with some friends.

    Around 8:45 p.m., the two parked her car on East Shoeman Lane. The street is just off of Scottsdale Road, which is the downtown’s main drag.

    Garcia and friends then want to two nearby bars, HiFi and Casa Amigos, where they would stay for the next two-and-a-half hours.

    Her car was parked near a corporate office building with a surveillance camera that panned continuously back and forth.

    At 10:02 p.m., the camera captures a random man jump on her hood twice and
    then stomp on the passenger side of her windshield.

    Garcia and her boyfriend returned to the car around 11:15 p.m. and discovered the smashed windshield, according to video and records.

    They then flagged down nearby bicycle officers to report what happened.

    What Garcia and her boyfriend didn’t know was that a half-hour earlier the
    same officers had responded to a hit-and-run pedestrian crash near 7300 E. 6th Avenue.

    The two locations are just 0.3 miles apart. So when officers saw the damage to Garcia's car, case closed.

    Here’s the first thing an officer says to her.

    --
    OFFICER: Listen up. We already know what’s going on.
    GARCIA: Okay.
    OFFICER: This could be serious thing if you lie about it.
    GARCIA: Okay?
    OFFICER: You need to be honest.
    --

    The officer reads Garcia her Miranda rights. A supervisor, Sgt. Ben Steel,
    then walks over.

    --
    STEEL: Your car was just involved in a hit-and-run collision where a
    pedestrian was hit. [Garcia is seen making a shocked face] And don’t make
    faces like you don’t know what I’m talking about.
    GARCIA: I swear to God. I don’t know.
    STEEL: Listen to me, leaving the scene of an injury accident is a felony.

    STEEL: This isn’t my first day. I know you were driving. I know you’re worried about it because you were drinking.
    GARCIA: You can ask the HiFi security guard.
    STEEL: Then how does your car have damage on it?
    GARCIA: I have no idea.
    STEEL: Listen to me, if you keep saying you didn’t, we’re going to do DNA tests.
    GARCIA: Yes absolutely yes.
    STEEL: And it’s going to show you were in the driver’s seat.
    --

    Body camera videos shows Garcia’s boyfriend also got the same treatment.

    Officers repeatedly refused to check out the couple’s story, review receipts from the bars, or pull surveillance video from them.

    --
    STEEL: I’m not going to listen to you because you’re lying to me.

    BOYFRIEND: I came to [this smashed car], that’s why I went and got an officer over there on the bike.
    STEEL: The problem is as you left, you got in a collision, you panicked and came back over here.
    BOYFRIEND: No we did not. No we did not. You’re not pinning it on us.
    STEEL: You’re not listening to me.

    BOYFRIEND: Let me show you the transactions.
    STEEL: I don’t need to see the transactions.
    BOYFRIEND: Why because it validates my truth?
    STEEL: No because there’s evidence you can’t dispute. Someone’s body hit the windshield. No. I’m not going to argue with you man.
    --

    ALLEGATIONS OF MADE-UP EVIDENCE

    Sgt. Steel and other officers claimed they saw glass on on Garcia’s black
    shirt and used that claim as part of the probable cause for her arrest.

    Garcia said that’s completely false.

    “No, not at all,” she said.

    At the scene, Garcia’s boyfriend also pushed back on the allegation, shaking his head as Sgt. Steel doubled down on the claim.

    --
    STEEL: She has glass on her clothing. Like an explosion of glass.

    STEEL: I already know she was driving. I’m not stupid. We have witnesses and
    we have cameras.
    --

    Officers did review surveillance video from a building overlooking Garcia’s parking spot.

    ABC15 obtained a copy of the video.

    It shows the random man stomping on Garcia’s windshield and causing visible damage then be seen on the camera. The footage also shows her car never moves from the time of the stomp to Garcia arriving to find the damage more than a hour later.

    With the camera’s pan, Garcia’s car is never out of view for more than 40 seconds.

    However, in his police report, Officer Nicolas Fay wrote, “video review was inconclusive to show if the vehicle had left and come back or remained there the entire time based on the constant pan of the camera.”

    Body camera video shows Fay asking a security guard to pull up specific
    moments of video to compare to the time of the hit-and-run.

    “The call came in at 10:48, so if we could go back to like 10:40,” Fay instructs the guard.

    The body camera video obtained by ABC15 cuts out before it shows what Fay is shown by the guard.

    According to time-stamps on the body camera video, it appears that Fay was watching the footage with the guard before Garcia is handcuffed and
    transported back to the station.

    She was arrested on two counts of DUI and failure to stop at the scene of an accident causing injury or death.

    Garcia understands why she was an initial suspect given the damage to her car and the nearby hit-and-run.

    What she doesn’t understand is why officers were unwilling to take time to weigh the exculpatory evidence that was already available to them.

    “I couldn’t believe it,” Garcia said. “I had cooperated. I had done everything that they asked me to do. The fact they wouldn’t just check the cameras.”

    OTHER ISSUES

    Following her arrest, Garcia was brought to a Scottsdale police station.

    Because police at the scene claimed there was glass on her shirt, she had to strip off her clothes in front of two female officers.

    “That was pretty embarrassing and humiliating,” Garcia said. “That was the first thing. And then they walked me out and sat me in a chair with straps [to take my blood].”

    Police got a warrant to draw Garcia’s blood for the alleged DUIs.

    When she asked to see the warrant before placing the needle inside her arm, Officer Ben Roberson refused.

    “After we’re done. I don’t have time to waste with you reading documents. I’ve served you. That’s all I need to do,” Roberson told Garcia with a handful of detention officers surrounded her chair. “If you don’t put your arm out,
    you’re going to be strapped down, we don’t want that. Put your arm out, so we don’t have to tie you down like an animal.”

    She was compliant throughout the process, body camera videos shows.

    Garcia was released shortly later.

    Several days following her arrest, she hired defense attorney Ryan Tait.

    Tait tracked down his own copy of the surveillance video and sent police a time-stamped guide. He said Sgt. Steel emailed him back and said the
    department would no longer pursue the charges.

    But by that time, the damage was already done.

    Local and national media had reported on Garcia’s arrest and prominently displayed the mugshot of her crying. One article ran in the New York Daily News.

    Despite what happened, Garcia said in a strange way she feels “lucky.” If she had not parked in a spot in view of a surveillance camera, she wonders if she would still be facing charges or already be convicted.

    “My heart goes out to all the people who aren’t as able to be as lucky as I am,” Garcia said. “That’s a hard thought.”

    SCOTTSDALE RESPONSE

    ABC15 reached out to a Scottsdale police spokesperson with questions about the incident, specifically regarding the surveillance video and alleged glass officers claimed was on Garcia’s shirt.

    In a round of initial responses, the department said the case against Garcia wasn’t pursued because the hit-and-run victim declined prosecution and not because she was actually innocent.

    After ABC15 sent a clip of surveillance video showing the man stomp on
    Garcia’s windshield, the department sent the following statement:

    “Thank you for bringing that portion of the video to our attention. Obviously this underscores the fact that the case was never filed. The officers made probable cause decisions based on the totality of the evidence they had at the time of the investigation. This video does bring up questions that need to be answered. This incident occurred 14 months ago, however, our new Chief Jeff Walther takes these matters very seriously and has asked for a formal internal affairs investigation to fully review the incident.”

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my-name- woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police shows the video of a young, White man damaging Garcia's vehicle. Hope Internal Affairs does its job too bad Garcia dropped the lawsuit. Lawyer Tait did his job and earned his pay. Why did the woman who turned out to be
    not guilty have her face plastered on websites out of state including the New York Post?


    ====

    ORIGINAL WHISTLEBLOW August 14, 2021

    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured out the why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves why the perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the windscreen and
    ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused, not only showing how her car's windscreen was really damaged but also that the car was never out of cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye- witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her even though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.

    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or else they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago, 14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend of mine works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk
    (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't feel that exposed by recounting this.


    What Actually Happened

    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling 911 or even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked in the vicinity of the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady in her mid- thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the scene of the hit
    and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got captured on private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to report
    windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would have any
    loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got located, seized
    and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if it was enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes after she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover-up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything about
    him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be another cover-up of the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them, maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets crooked cops get away with these multiple violations?

    Can some reader of this fill them in. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers. I'm
    in Phoenix.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jimmyw836@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Scottsdale Citizen on Sat Aug 28 15:00:50 2021
    On Tuesday, August 17, 2021 at 6:35:03 PM UTC-4, Scottsdale Citizen wrote:
    What reporter Dave Biscobing apparently doesn't know is that at least one cop
    on the scene, not saying it was Sgt Steel, knew AT THAT TIME that Yessenia was
    innocent and that the hit-and-run perp was an off-duty officer who was drunk.

    Scroll to bottom for my original email which gives the detail.



    Gregory Carr wrote on 2021-08-17 10:33:26 UTC at https://narkive.com/OwnphRBO....

    ABC15 LOCAL NEWS INVESTIGATIONS

    'I want to clear my name': Woman speaks out after being falsely accused by Scottsdale police

    While detained, scared, and crying, Scottsdale police officers repeatedly called her a liar and ignored clear video evidence of her innocence before handcuffing Garcia for a hit-and-run she didn’t commit.

    Posted at 10:15 AM, Aug 09, 2021 and last updated 10:35 PM, Aug 09, 2021

    SCOTTSDALE — For more than 45 minutes in custody, nothing Yessenia Garcia said
    or did mattered.

    While detained, scared, and crying, Scottsdale police officers repeatedly called her a liar and overlooked clear video evidence of her innocence before
    handcuffing Garcia for a hit-and-run she didn’t commit.

    But Garcia said the reality didn’t fully set in until she heard the “click”
    and felt the metal on her wrists.

    “Exactly when he told me to put my hands behind my back, and that’s when everything went black,” she said. “I just kind of heard [the officer]. It was
    kind of like an echo. I was kind of in shock, and I just kind of dropped down.”

    It happened the night of May 24, 2020 in Scottsdale’s Old Town district.

    Making the arrest worse, Garcia was forced to strip at the police station, had
    her blood forcibly drawn, and her mugshot was splashed across the internet the
    following day.

    Garcia’s tearful and shocked booking photo is still on several news outlet’s
    websites.

    More than a year later, she’s decided to tell her story publicly.

    Garcia filed a lawsuit earlier this year but has decided to voluntarily dismiss the complaint. Many attorneys tell her overcoming qualified immunity will be too difficult in the case to make it financially viable.

    So why did she sit down with ABC15 to share her story?

    “To clear my name,” Garcia said during an interview. “[To let people know:]
    don’t believe everything, um, you have no idea what the person in that mugshot
    really just went through.”

    Following ABC15’s questions for this report, Scottsdale Police Chief Jeff Walther opened an internal affairs investigation into what happened.

    TWO CRIMES, ONE SUSPECT

    Garcia and her then-boyfriend met up to have a drink with some friends.

    Around 8:45 p.m., the two parked her car on East Shoeman Lane. The street is just off of Scottsdale Road, which is the downtown’s main drag.

    Garcia and friends then want to two nearby bars, HiFi and Casa Amigos, where they would stay for the next two-and-a-half hours.

    Her car was parked near a corporate office building with a surveillance camera
    that panned continuously back and forth.

    At 10:02 p.m., the camera captures a random man jump on her hood twice and then stomp on the passenger side of her windshield.

    Garcia and her boyfriend returned to the car around 11:15 p.m. and discovered
    the smashed windshield, according to video and records.

    They then flagged down nearby bicycle officers to report what happened.

    What Garcia and her boyfriend didn’t know was that a half-hour earlier the same officers had responded to a hit-and-run pedestrian crash near 7300 E. 6th
    Avenue.

    The two locations are just 0.3 miles apart. So when officers saw the damage to
    Garcia's car, case closed.

    Here’s the first thing an officer says to her.

    --
    OFFICER: Listen up. We already know what’s going on.
    GARCIA: Okay.
    OFFICER: This could be serious thing if you lie about it.
    GARCIA: Okay?
    OFFICER: You need to be honest.
    --

    The officer reads Garcia her Miranda rights. A supervisor, Sgt. Ben Steel, then walks over.

    --
    STEEL: Your car was just involved in a hit-and-run collision where a pedestrian was hit. [Garcia is seen making a shocked face] And don’t make faces like you don’t know what I’m talking about.
    GARCIA: I swear to God. I don’t know.
    STEEL: Listen to me, leaving the scene of an injury accident is a felony. —
    STEEL: This isn’t my first day. I know you were driving. I know you’re worried
    about it because you were drinking.
    GARCIA: You can ask the HiFi security guard.
    STEEL: Then how does your car have damage on it?
    GARCIA: I have no idea.
    STEEL: Listen to me, if you keep saying you didn’t, we’re going to do DNA
    tests.
    GARCIA: Yes absolutely yes.
    STEEL: And it’s going to show you were in the driver’s seat.
    --

    Body camera videos shows Garcia’s boyfriend also got the same treatment.

    Officers repeatedly refused to check out the couple’s story, review receipts
    from the bars, or pull surveillance video from them.

    --
    STEEL: I’m not going to listen to you because you’re lying to me.
    —
    BOYFRIEND: I came to [this smashed car], that’s why I went and got an officer
    over there on the bike.
    STEEL: The problem is as you left, you got in a collision, you panicked and came back over here.
    BOYFRIEND: No we did not. No we did not. You’re not pinning it on us. STEEL: You’re not listening to me.
    —
    BOYFRIEND: Let me show you the transactions.
    STEEL: I don’t need to see the transactions.
    BOYFRIEND: Why because it validates my truth?
    STEEL: No because there’s evidence you can’t dispute. Someone’s body hit the
    windshield. No. I’m not going to argue with you man.
    --

    ALLEGATIONS OF MADE-UP EVIDENCE

    Sgt. Steel and other officers claimed they saw glass on on Garcia’s black shirt and used that claim as part of the probable cause for her arrest.

    Garcia said that’s completely false.

    “No, not at all,” she said.

    At the scene, Garcia’s boyfriend also pushed back on the allegation, shaking
    his head as Sgt. Steel doubled down on the claim.

    --
    STEEL: She has glass on her clothing. Like an explosion of glass.
    —
    STEEL: I already know she was driving. I’m not stupid. We have witnesses and
    we have cameras.
    --

    Officers did review surveillance video from a building overlooking Garcia’s
    parking spot.

    ABC15 obtained a copy of the video.

    It shows the random man stomping on Garcia’s windshield and causing visible
    damage then be seen on the camera. The footage also shows her car never moves
    from the time of the stomp to Garcia arriving to find the damage more than a hour later.

    With the camera’s pan, Garcia’s car is never out of view for more than 40
    seconds.

    However, in his police report, Officer Nicolas Fay wrote, “video review was
    inconclusive to show if the vehicle had left and come back or remained there the entire time based on the constant pan of the camera.”

    Body camera video shows Fay asking a security guard to pull up specific moments of video to compare to the time of the hit-and-run.

    “The call came in at 10:48, so if we could go back to like 10:40,” Fay instructs the guard.

    The body camera video obtained by ABC15 cuts out before it shows what Fay is shown by the guard.

    According to time-stamps on the body camera video, it appears that Fay was watching the footage with the guard before Garcia is handcuffed and transported back to the station.

    She was arrested on two counts of DUI and failure to stop at the scene of an accident causing injury or death.

    Garcia understands why she was an initial suspect given the damage to her car
    and the nearby hit-and-run.

    What she doesn’t understand is why officers were unwilling to take time to weigh the exculpatory evidence that was already available to them.

    “I couldn’t believe it,” Garcia said. “I had cooperated. I had done everything
    that they asked me to do. The fact they wouldn’t just check the cameras.”

    OTHER ISSUES

    Following her arrest, Garcia was brought to a Scottsdale police station.

    Because police at the scene claimed there was glass on her shirt, she had to strip off her clothes in front of two female officers.

    “That was pretty embarrassing and humiliating,” Garcia said. “That was the
    first thing. And then they walked me out and sat me in a chair with straps [to
    take my blood].”

    Police got a warrant to draw Garcia’s blood for the alleged DUIs.

    When she asked to see the warrant before placing the needle inside her arm, Officer Ben Roberson refused.

    “After we’re done. I don’t have time to waste with you reading documents. I’ve
    served you. That’s all I need to do,” Roberson told Garcia with a handful of
    detention officers surrounded her chair. “If you don’t put your arm out, you’re going to be strapped down, we don’t want that. Put your arm out, so we
    don’t have to tie you down like an animal.”

    She was compliant throughout the process, body camera videos shows.

    Garcia was released shortly later.

    Several days following her arrest, she hired defense attorney Ryan Tait.

    Tait tracked down his own copy of the surveillance video and sent police a time-stamped guide. He said Sgt. Steel emailed him back and said the department would no longer pursue the charges.

    But by that time, the damage was already done.

    Local and national media had reported on Garcia’s arrest and prominently displayed the mugshot of her crying. One article ran in the New York Daily News.

    Despite what happened, Garcia said in a strange way she feels “lucky.” If she
    had not parked in a spot in view of a surveillance camera, she wonders if she
    would still be facing charges or already be convicted.

    “My heart goes out to all the people who aren’t as able to be as lucky as I
    am,” Garcia said. “That’s a hard thought.”

    SCOTTSDALE RESPONSE

    ABC15 reached out to a Scottsdale police spokesperson with questions about the
    incident, specifically regarding the surveillance video and alleged glass officers claimed was on Garcia’s shirt.

    In a round of initial responses, the department said the case against Garcia wasn’t pursued because the hit-and-run victim declined prosecution and not because she was actually innocent.

    After ABC15 sent a clip of surveillance video showing the man stomp on Garcia’s windshield, the department sent the following statement:

    “Thank you for bringing that portion of the video to our attention. Obviously
    this underscores the fact that the case was never filed. The officers made probable cause decisions based on the totality of the evidence they had at the
    time of the investigation. This video does bring up questions that need to be
    answered. This incident occurred 14 months ago, however, our new Chief Jeff Walther takes these matters very seriously and has asked for a formal internal
    affairs investigation to fully review the incident.”

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my-name-
    woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police shows the video of a young, White man damaging Garcia's vehicle. Hope Internal Affairs does its job too bad Garcia dropped the lawsuit. Lawyer Tait did his job and earned his pay. Why did the woman who turned out to be
    not guilty have her face plastered on websites out of state including the New
    York Post?


    ====

    ORIGINAL WHISTLEBLOW August 14, 2021
    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured out the
    why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves why the
    perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused, not only showing how
    her car's windscreen was really damaged but also that the car was never out of
    cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye- witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her even
    though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.
    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or else they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago, 14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend of mine
    works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't feel that exposed
    by recounting this.
    What Actually Happened
    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling 911 or
    even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone
    while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked in the vicinity of
    the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady in her mid-
    thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got captured on
    private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if it was
    enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes after
    she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover-up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be another cover-up of
    the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them, maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets
    crooked cops get away with these multiple violations?
    Can some reader of this fill them in. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers. I'm in Phoenix.

    I do *not* believe this disturbing conspiracy to frame an innocent person by law-enforcement
    officers, in order to cover for a slimy brother cop, will be entitled to qualified immunity. I would
    even bet on it, if it were legal to bet on it. I have read case after case involving qualified immunity,
    and this utterly detestable series of felonies by cops in conspiracy with one another will not meet
    the QI test, believe me. Yessenia should find a knowledgeable civil rights attorney and sue!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jimmyw836@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Scottsdale Citizen on Sat Aug 28 15:23:32 2021
    On Tuesday, August 17, 2021 at 6:35:03 PM UTC-4, Scottsdale Citizen wrote:
    What reporter Dave Biscobing apparently doesn't know is that at least one cop
    on the scene, not saying it was Sgt Steel, knew AT THAT TIME that Yessenia was
    innocent and that the hit-and-run perp was an off-duty officer who was drunk.

    Scroll to bottom for my original email which gives the detail.



    Gregory Carr wrote on 2021-08-17 10:33:26 UTC at https://narkive.com/OwnphRBO....

    ABC15 LOCAL NEWS INVESTIGATIONS

    'I want to clear my name': Woman speaks out after being falsely accused by Scottsdale police

    While detained, scared, and crying, Scottsdale police officers repeatedly called her a liar and ignored clear video evidence of her innocence before handcuffing Garcia for a hit-and-run she didn’t commit.

    Posted at 10:15 AM, Aug 09, 2021 and last updated 10:35 PM, Aug 09, 2021

    SCOTTSDALE — For more than 45 minutes in custody, nothing Yessenia Garcia said
    or did mattered.

    While detained, scared, and crying, Scottsdale police officers repeatedly called her a liar and overlooked clear video evidence of her innocence before
    handcuffing Garcia for a hit-and-run she didn’t commit.

    But Garcia said the reality didn’t fully set in until she heard the “click”
    and felt the metal on her wrists.

    “Exactly when he told me to put my hands behind my back, and that’s when everything went black,” she said. “I just kind of heard [the officer]. It was
    kind of like an echo. I was kind of in shock, and I just kind of dropped down.”

    It happened the night of May 24, 2020 in Scottsdale’s Old Town district.

    Making the arrest worse, Garcia was forced to strip at the police station, had
    her blood forcibly drawn, and her mugshot was splashed across the internet the
    following day.

    Garcia’s tearful and shocked booking photo is still on several news outlet’s
    websites.

    More than a year later, she’s decided to tell her story publicly.

    Garcia filed a lawsuit earlier this year but has decided to voluntarily dismiss the complaint. Many attorneys tell her overcoming qualified immunity will be too difficult in the case to make it financially viable.

    So why did she sit down with ABC15 to share her story?

    “To clear my name,” Garcia said during an interview. “[To let people know:]
    don’t believe everything, um, you have no idea what the person in that mugshot
    really just went through.”

    Following ABC15’s questions for this report, Scottsdale Police Chief Jeff Walther opened an internal affairs investigation into what happened.

    TWO CRIMES, ONE SUSPECT

    Garcia and her then-boyfriend met up to have a drink with some friends.

    Around 8:45 p.m., the two parked her car on East Shoeman Lane. The street is just off of Scottsdale Road, which is the downtown’s main drag.

    Garcia and friends then want to two nearby bars, HiFi and Casa Amigos, where they would stay for the next two-and-a-half hours.

    Her car was parked near a corporate office building with a surveillance camera
    that panned continuously back and forth.

    At 10:02 p.m., the camera captures a random man jump on her hood twice and then stomp on the passenger side of her windshield.

    Garcia and her boyfriend returned to the car around 11:15 p.m. and discovered
    the smashed windshield, according to video and records.

    They then flagged down nearby bicycle officers to report what happened.

    What Garcia and her boyfriend didn’t know was that a half-hour earlier the same officers had responded to a hit-and-run pedestrian crash near 7300 E. 6th
    Avenue.

    The two locations are just 0.3 miles apart. So when officers saw the damage to
    Garcia's car, case closed.

    Here’s the first thing an officer says to her.

    --
    OFFICER: Listen up. We already know what’s going on.
    GARCIA: Okay.
    OFFICER: This could be serious thing if you lie about it.
    GARCIA: Okay?
    OFFICER: You need to be honest.
    --

    The officer reads Garcia her Miranda rights. A supervisor, Sgt. Ben Steel, then walks over.

    --
    STEEL: Your car was just involved in a hit-and-run collision where a pedestrian was hit. [Garcia is seen making a shocked face] And don’t make faces like you don’t know what I’m talking about.
    GARCIA: I swear to God. I don’t know.
    STEEL: Listen to me, leaving the scene of an injury accident is a felony. —
    STEEL: This isn’t my first day. I know you were driving. I know you’re worried
    about it because you were drinking.
    GARCIA: You can ask the HiFi security guard.
    STEEL: Then how does your car have damage on it?
    GARCIA: I have no idea.
    STEEL: Listen to me, if you keep saying you didn’t, we’re going to do DNA
    tests.
    GARCIA: Yes absolutely yes.
    STEEL: And it’s going to show you were in the driver’s seat.
    --

    Body camera videos shows Garcia’s boyfriend also got the same treatment.

    Officers repeatedly refused to check out the couple’s story, review receipts
    from the bars, or pull surveillance video from them.

    --
    STEEL: I’m not going to listen to you because you’re lying to me.
    —
    BOYFRIEND: I came to [this smashed car], that’s why I went and got an officer
    over there on the bike.
    STEEL: The problem is as you left, you got in a collision, you panicked and came back over here.
    BOYFRIEND: No we did not. No we did not. You’re not pinning it on us. STEEL: You’re not listening to me.
    —
    BOYFRIEND: Let me show you the transactions.
    STEEL: I don’t need to see the transactions.
    BOYFRIEND: Why because it validates my truth?
    STEEL: No because there’s evidence you can’t dispute. Someone’s body hit the
    windshield. No. I’m not going to argue with you man.
    --

    ALLEGATIONS OF MADE-UP EVIDENCE

    Sgt. Steel and other officers claimed they saw glass on on Garcia’s black shirt and used that claim as part of the probable cause for her arrest.

    Garcia said that’s completely false.

    “No, not at all,” she said.

    At the scene, Garcia’s boyfriend also pushed back on the allegation, shaking
    his head as Sgt. Steel doubled down on the claim.

    --
    STEEL: She has glass on her clothing. Like an explosion of glass.
    —
    STEEL: I already know she was driving. I’m not stupid. We have witnesses and
    we have cameras.
    --

    Officers did review surveillance video from a building overlooking Garcia’s
    parking spot.

    ABC15 obtained a copy of the video.

    It shows the random man stomping on Garcia’s windshield and causing visible
    damage then be seen on the camera. The footage also shows her car never moves
    from the time of the stomp to Garcia arriving to find the damage more than a hour later.

    With the camera’s pan, Garcia’s car is never out of view for more than 40
    seconds.

    However, in his police report, Officer Nicolas Fay wrote, “video review was
    inconclusive to show if the vehicle had left and come back or remained there the entire time based on the constant pan of the camera.”

    Body camera video shows Fay asking a security guard to pull up specific moments of video to compare to the time of the hit-and-run.

    “The call came in at 10:48, so if we could go back to like 10:40,” Fay instructs the guard.

    The body camera video obtained by ABC15 cuts out before it shows what Fay is shown by the guard.

    According to time-stamps on the body camera video, it appears that Fay was watching the footage with the guard before Garcia is handcuffed and transported back to the station.

    She was arrested on two counts of DUI and failure to stop at the scene of an accident causing injury or death.

    Garcia understands why she was an initial suspect given the damage to her car
    and the nearby hit-and-run.

    What she doesn’t understand is why officers were unwilling to take time to weigh the exculpatory evidence that was already available to them.

    “I couldn’t believe it,” Garcia said. “I had cooperated. I had done everything
    that they asked me to do. The fact they wouldn’t just check the cameras.”

    OTHER ISSUES

    Following her arrest, Garcia was brought to a Scottsdale police station.

    Because police at the scene claimed there was glass on her shirt, she had to strip off her clothes in front of two female officers.

    “That was pretty embarrassing and humiliating,” Garcia said. “That was the
    first thing. And then they walked me out and sat me in a chair with straps [to
    take my blood].”

    Police got a warrant to draw Garcia’s blood for the alleged DUIs.

    When she asked to see the warrant before placing the needle inside her arm, Officer Ben Roberson refused.

    “After we’re done. I don’t have time to waste with you reading documents. I’ve
    served you. That’s all I need to do,” Roberson told Garcia with a handful of
    detention officers surrounded her chair. “If you don’t put your arm out, you’re going to be strapped down, we don’t want that. Put your arm out, so we
    don’t have to tie you down like an animal.”

    She was compliant throughout the process, body camera videos shows.

    Garcia was released shortly later.

    Several days following her arrest, she hired defense attorney Ryan Tait.

    Tait tracked down his own copy of the surveillance video and sent police a time-stamped guide. He said Sgt. Steel emailed him back and said the department would no longer pursue the charges.

    But by that time, the damage was already done.

    Local and national media had reported on Garcia’s arrest and prominently displayed the mugshot of her crying. One article ran in the New York Daily News.

    Despite what happened, Garcia said in a strange way she feels “lucky.” If she
    had not parked in a spot in view of a surveillance camera, she wonders if she
    would still be facing charges or already be convicted.

    “My heart goes out to all the people who aren’t as able to be as lucky as I
    am,” Garcia said. “That’s a hard thought.”

    SCOTTSDALE RESPONSE

    ABC15 reached out to a Scottsdale police spokesperson with questions about the
    incident, specifically regarding the surveillance video and alleged glass officers claimed was on Garcia’s shirt.

    In a round of initial responses, the department said the case against Garcia wasn’t pursued because the hit-and-run victim declined prosecution and not because she was actually innocent.

    After ABC15 sent a clip of surveillance video showing the man stomp on Garcia’s windshield, the department sent the following statement:

    “Thank you for bringing that portion of the video to our attention. Obviously
    this underscores the fact that the case was never filed. The officers made probable cause decisions based on the totality of the evidence they had at the
    time of the investigation. This video does bring up questions that need to be
    answered. This incident occurred 14 months ago, however, our new Chief Jeff Walther takes these matters very seriously and has asked for a formal internal
    affairs investigation to fully review the incident.”

    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my-name-
    woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police shows the video of a young, White man damaging Garcia's vehicle. Hope Internal Affairs does its job too bad Garcia dropped the lawsuit. Lawyer Tait did his job and earned his pay. Why did the woman who turned out to be
    not guilty have her face plastered on websites out of state including the New
    York Post?


    ====

    ORIGINAL WHISTLEBLOW August 14, 2021
    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured out the
    why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves why the
    perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused, not only showing how
    her car's windscreen was really damaged but also that the car was never out of
    cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye- witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her even
    though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.
    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or else they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago, 14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend of mine
    works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't feel that exposed
    by recounting this.
    What Actually Happened
    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling 911 or
    even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone
    while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked in the vicinity of
    the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady in her mid-
    thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got captured on
    private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if it was
    enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes after
    she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover-up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be another cover-up of
    the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them, maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets
    crooked cops get away with these multiple violations?
    Can some reader of this fill them in. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers. I'm in Phoenix.

    By the way, what is the name of the sonofabitch cop who set up this series of felonies?

    Don't be afraid to publish the bastard's name. He ought to be in prison.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jimmyw836@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Scottsdale Citizen on Mon Aug 30 13:54:58 2021
    On Monday, August 16, 2021 at 8:09:27 AM UTC-4, Scottsdale Citizen wrote:
    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my- name-woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police https://www.ibtimes.com/woman-accused-hit-run-reportedly-vindicated- police-open-internal-affairs-3273489 https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-arizona-driver-yessenia- garcia-cleared-20210810-axd67en5ojefpjdmp6zdssuz3a-story.html https://patch.com/arizona/scottsdale/hit-run-false-arrest-wish-grante https://www.azfamily.com/news/suspected-dui-driver-accused-of-hitting- assault-suspect-running-from-scene-in-scottsdale/article_54a79d58-9ebf- 11ea-8f8e-07fe64f8a7e4.html https://www.vice.com/en/article/n7b5pm/police-arizona-yessenia-garcia- lawsuit-hit-and-run

    First read the press reports above which are mostly accurate but very incomplete.

    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured
    out the why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves
    why the perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the
    windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused,
    not only showing how her car's windscreen was really damaged but also
    that the car was never out of cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye-witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her
    even though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.

    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or
    they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal
    Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago,
    14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend
    of mine works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't
    feel that exposed by recounting this.


    What Really Happened

    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a
    jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling
    911 or even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son
    of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked
    in the vicinity of the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to
    immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car
    chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady
    in her mid-thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the
    scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got
    captured on private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of
    the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to
    get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to
    report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would
    have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got
    located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if
    it was enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes
    after she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover-
    up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my
    friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still
    serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything
    about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief
    of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be
    another cover-up of the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but
    Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them,
    maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets crooked cops get away with these multiple
    violations?

    Can some reader fill them in, please. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers.
    The more I read and hear about this orgy of police corruption, the more it pisses me off.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jimmyw836@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Scottsdale Citizen on Thu Sep 16 10:30:46 2021
    On Monday, August 16, 2021 at 8:09:27 AM UTC-4, Scottsdale Citizen wrote:
    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my- name-woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police https://www.ibtimes.com/woman-accused-hit-run-reportedly-vindicated- police-open-internal-affairs-3273489 https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-arizona-driver-yessenia- garcia-cleared-20210810-axd67en5ojefpjdmp6zdssuz3a-story.html https://patch.com/arizona/scottsdale/hit-run-false-arrest-wish-grante https://www.azfamily.com/news/suspected-dui-driver-accused-of-hitting- assault-suspect-running-from-scene-in-scottsdale/article_54a79d58-9ebf- 11ea-8f8e-07fe64f8a7e4.html https://www.vice.com/en/article/n7b5pm/police-arizona-yessenia-garcia- lawsuit-hit-and-run

    First read the press reports above which are mostly accurate but very incomplete.

    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured
    out the why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves
    why the perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the
    windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused,
    not only showing how her car's windscreen was really damaged but also
    that the car was never out of cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye-witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her
    even though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.

    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or
    they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal
    Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago,
    14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend
    of mine works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't
    feel that exposed by recounting this.


    What Really Happened

    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a
    jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling
    911 or even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son
    of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked
    in the vicinity of the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to
    immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car
    chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady
    in her mid-thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the
    scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got
    captured on private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of
    the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to
    get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to
    report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would
    have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got
    located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if
    it was enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes
    after she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover-
    up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my
    friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still
    serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything
    about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief
    of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be
    another cover-up of the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but
    Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them,
    maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets crooked cops get away with these multiple
    violations?

    Can some reader fill them in, please. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers.
    I called Attorney Ryan Tate and told his legal secretary about what I had read here.
    She said she would give him the links to misc.legal and this narrative.

    If he calls back I will fill his ears full. That cop "R" ought to go to prison.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jimmyw836@gmail.com@21:1/5 to jimm...@gmail.com on Fri Sep 17 10:42:52 2021
    On Thursday, September 16, 2021 at 1:30:47 PM UTC-4, jimm...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Monday, August 16, 2021 at 8:09:27 AM UTC-4, Scottsdale Citizen wrote:
    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my- name-woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police https://www.ibtimes.com/woman-accused-hit-run-reportedly-vindicated- police-open-internal-affairs-3273489 https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-arizona-driver-yessenia- garcia-cleared-20210810-axd67en5ojefpjdmp6zdssuz3a-story.html https://patch.com/arizona/scottsdale/hit-run-false-arrest-wish-grante https://www.azfamily.com/news/suspected-dui-driver-accused-of-hitting- assault-suspect-running-from-scene-in-scottsdale/article_54a79d58-9ebf- 11ea-8f8e-07fe64f8a7e4.html https://www.vice.com/en/article/n7b5pm/police-arizona-yessenia-garcia- lawsuit-hit-and-run

    First read the press reports above which are mostly accurate but very incomplete.

    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured
    out the why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves
    why the perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the
    windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused, not only showing how her car's windscreen was really damaged but also
    that the car was never out of cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye-witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her even though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.

    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal
    Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago,
    14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend
    of mine works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't feel that exposed by recounting this.


    What Really Happened

    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling
    911 or even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son
    of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked
    in the vicinity of the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to
    immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car
    chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady
    in her mid-thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the
    scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got
    captured on private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of
    the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to
    get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if
    it was enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes after she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover- up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything
    about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief
    of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be another cover-up of the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but
    Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them,
    maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets crooked cops get away with these multiple violations?

    Can some reader fill them in, please. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers.
    I called Attorney Ryan Tate and told his legal secretary about what I had read here.
    She said she would give him the links to misc.legal and this narrative.

    If he calls back I will fill his ears full. That cop "R" ought to go to prison.

    One proviso: the timepieces and timeline are not exactly logical with the narrative at the head of this thread.

    Either the timepieces are telling the truth, or they have been tampered with.

    Let's be really careful here and not make out a false case against somebody. According to the timepieces (as I have heard), the time of the damage to the Yessenia Garcia vehicle is
    inconsistent with the time of the hit-and-run accident. If the OP's narrative is correct, then the damage to
    Yessenia's vehicle would have occurred AFTER the hit-and-run, not before or contemporaneously.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jimmyw836@gmail.com@21:1/5 to jimm...@gmail.com on Fri Sep 17 11:37:17 2021
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:42:53 PM UTC-4, jimm...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Thursday, September 16, 2021 at 1:30:47 PM UTC-4, jimm...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Monday, August 16, 2021 at 8:09:27 AM UTC-4, Scottsdale Citizen wrote:
    https://www.abc15.com/news/local-news/investigations/i-want-to-clear-my- name-woman-speaks-out-after-being-falsely-accused-by-scottsdale-police https://www.ibtimes.com/woman-accused-hit-run-reportedly-vindicated- police-open-internal-affairs-3273489 https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-arizona-driver-yessenia- garcia-cleared-20210810-axd67en5ojefpjdmp6zdssuz3a-story.html https://patch.com/arizona/scottsdale/hit-run-false-arrest-wish-grante https://www.azfamily.com/news/suspected-dui-driver-accused-of-hitting- assault-suspect-running-from-scene-in-scottsdale/article_54a79d58-9ebf- 11ea-8f8e-07fe64f8a7e4.html https://www.vice.com/en/article/n7b5pm/police-arizona-yessenia-garcia- lawsuit-hit-and-run

    First read the press reports above which are mostly accurate but very incomplete.

    The victim of police corruption, Yessenia Garcia, still hasn't figured out the why of what happened to her.

    You might first think that the arresting cops were merely:

    Stupid -
    ignoring proffered proof of innocence, failing to question themselves
    why the perpetrator would be the one to approach cops about the windscreen and ignoring the cop-found CCTV which exonerated the accused, not only showing how her car's windscreen was really damaged but also that the car was never out of cctv cover for more than 40 seconds,

    and Liars -
    inventing "warm hood", "glass on dress" and "car/driver identified by eye-witnesses",

    and Bullies -
    intimidating and threatening the innocent woman and being violent to her even though she and her friend offered them no resistance only shocked surprise, exactly as wholly innocent persons would.

    But cops who are Stupid, Liars and Bullies are normal and expected.

    Here in Arizona it's a hard and fast rule they've gotta be all three or they flunk Pig School.

    This case is much worse than just that, which is why IA (Internal Affairs) didn't touch it till they were forced to a couple of days ago, 14 months too late, so the trail is all stale.

    This is what really happened in May 2020. I know this because a friend
    of mine works for Scottsdale PD and told me and others this while he was dead-drunk (!) earlier this year. Many people know the story so I don't feel that exposed by recounting this.


    What Really Happened

    Old Town, Scottsdale AZ, late on 5/24/2020. Dark. Dry, usual for AZ.

    Off-duty cop, "R", drunk-driving, has a front-end collision with a jaywalker who coincidentally was a suspect in another crime.

    R drives off without ascertaining the pedestrian's injuries or calling 911 or even stopping at all.

    R's car sustains major damage to windscreen and minor damage to hood.

    To give himself time to get the car fixed, off-duty cop "R" uses his cellphone while driving away from the scene of the crime to call the son of a friend (neither of them cops) to find a similar-looking car parked in the vicinity of the hit-and-run, but not overlooked, and to immediately damage its hood and windscreen without leaving fingerprints.

    This secondary crime gets committed within fifteen minutes, the car chosen happening to be the one owned by Yessenia Garcia, a Hispanic lady in her mid-thirties, parked in a quiet yard merely 500 yards from the scene of the hit and run but on a different block and street.

    Unknown to these criminals, the vandalism and intended framing got captured on private CCTV.

    At least one of the arresting cops knew of the framing at the time of
    the arrest and Yessenia would have been picked up as soon as tried to
    get the windscreen changed, all local repair centers would be told to report windscreen damage to Scottsdale PD. By that time, the cops would have any loose ends tied-up, and any exonerating CCTV would have got located, seized and erased.

    They already got the CCTV of the hit-and-run itself erased. No idea if
    it was enough to positively identify the car or driver.

    Yessenia however reported it to the police in person just a few minutes after she discovered what she still seems to think was only vandalism.

    This speed caught the crooked cop (or cops) off-guard. So the only cover- up that was possible was getting phone records erased or something, my friend wasn't too clear on this one.

    R, the off-duty drunk-driver who committed the hit-and-run, is still serving with SPD.

    Scottsdale has a new Chief, name of Jeff Walther, don't know anything about him but an honest competent dude is very unlikely to be made Chief of Police anywhere in Arizona! The IA investigation is certain to be another cover-up of the first botched cover-up.

    Yessenia Garcia's attorney was Mr Ryan Tait (480) 405 6767 / 6768 but Tait & Hall doesn't seem interested, someone else tried calling them, maybe they've been got at too by the cops, or they genuinely believe qualified immunity lets crooked cops get away with these multiple violations?

    Can some reader fill them in, please. Bad news for Scottsdale taxpayers.
    I called Attorney Ryan Tate and told his legal secretary about what I had read here.
    She said she would give him the links to misc.legal and this narrative.

    If he calls back I will fill his ears full. That cop "R" ought to go to prison.
    One proviso: the timepieces and timeline are not exactly logical with the narrative at the head of this thread.

    Either the timepieces are telling the truth, or they have been tampered with.

    Let's be really careful here and not make out a false case against somebody. According to the timepieces (as I have heard), the time of the damage to the Yessenia Garcia vehicle is
    inconsistent with the time of the hit-and-run accident. If the OP's narrative is correct, then the damage to
    Yessenia's vehicle would have occurred AFTER the hit-and-run, not before or contemporaneously.

    OTOH, I still believe the story as told by the "dead-drunk" cop who said Yessenia was set up to take the fall for "R."

    Get the polygraphers to do their jobs, and in addition obtain the identity of the man who jumped up on the hood and windshield of
    Yessenia's car.

    Now, Mr. OP, who is "R?" He needs to have his butt strapped up to the polygraph. Go at it like you would a murder. Find out where
    he had the damage to his car repaired.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)