4 Oakland cops face 60 charges in probe triggered by
trainee
By Matthew Yi
OF THE EXAMINER STAFF
OAKLAND — The Alameda County district attorney has filed 60
charges against four Oakland police officers accused of a
pattern of misconduct ranging from beating suspects to
planting drugs on them.
"This is a sad day," District Attorney Tom
Orloff said as he announced the charges against officers
Matthew Hornung, 28, Frank Vazquez, 43, Clarence Mabanag, 35,
and Jude Siapno, 32.
In total, the officers face 48 felony and 12 misdemeanor
charges that include conspiracy to obstruct justice,
kidnapping, assault, filing false police reports, filing
false documents which were later used in court, and arresting
without legal authority.
"In the public's mind, this action may unjustly
reflect the vast majority of men and women in the Oakland
Police Department who are professional, ethical and dedicated
public servants," Orloff said.
He praised the police department for a prompt
investigation when the charges came to light this summer.
"The department clearly demonstrated that this
conduct within the department will not be tolerated and will
be dealt with appropriately," Orloff said.
Police Chief Richard Word said his department assisted in
the district attorney's investigation and supports his
decision to file criminal charges.
"It's very difficult for his staff and it's very
difficult for the members of my department and it's difficult
for the community," Word said. "But when you have
allegations of this sort, you have to take some severe and
strong actions both administratively and criminally."
Mike Rains, an attorney for one of the officers, denied
the charges Thursday.
"I think there will be a different side to this story
when these officers have their opportunity to talk, and they
will," Rains said. "I hope that the public will not
react in a hysterical fashion to this because I do believe
there will be defenses to most of these charges if not all of
them."
Rookie blew whistle
The defendants made arrangements with authorities to turn
themselves in, Orloff said.
They were scheduled to be arraigned at 1:30 p.m. Thursday.
The investigation began several weeks ago after a rookie
officer blew the whistle on four officers who worked the
graveyard shift in West Oakland.
The rookie officer, who has not been named by authorities,
has since left the department.
The alleged incidents span from June 13 to July 2,
involving seven to eight victims, Orloff said.
Those events happened during unsupervised informal drug
operations, a police source said.
During that time, at least one of the officers was
involved in falsely arresting people, illegally detaining
people and even taking one of the alleged suspects to a
separate location to beat him, according to the prosecutor's
complaint.
Trainee admonished
On June 15, Mabanag told his trainee officer "not to be
a 'snitch' and that what occurred within the police car
stayed within the police car," according to the
complaint.
Four days later, Mabanag also told the same trainee
officer to "disregard all police training learned in the
police academy, disregard probable cause and arrest suspects
on contact without lawful reason," the document said.
The arrest cases involving alleged illegal actions by the
four officers have been either dropped or dismissed, Orloff
said.
Investigators are continuing to look at dozens of other
cases the officers were involved with in the months prior to
this summer, he said.
The officers' suspensions caused police officials to clamp
down on narcotics-related arrest operations that would
involve more than a couple of officers. Word has begun
requiring supervisor approval of written operation strategies
before any such action is taken.
The police department will continue with its own internal
investigation on the officers, police spokesman George
Phillips said.
Department under pressure
A hearing is scheduled next week before a panel, which
includes a deputy chief, captain, lieutenant and sergeant, he
said.
The panel will decide what punishments, if any, the
department would enforce on the officers, which would include
up to termination and possible additional criminal charges,
Phillips said.
The police department, which has already been pressured by
Mayor Jerry Brown to cut crime, has seen added pressure this
year mainly due to increased homicides.
At one point during the summer, the city reported a string
of a dozen unrelated slayings in two weeks, prompting Word to
crack down on street-level crimes like drug dealing and
prostitution.
Phillips said the allegations against the four officers
are isolated incidents.
"It's not widespread," he said. "But the
allegations are still pretty serious, and the effect that it
has on our public image, I think that's most damaging. We had
built up a certain level of trust from the community."

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