ReportWire

Tag: Detroit Police Department

  • 1 dead, 1 injured, restaurant closed after car crash in Detroit’s east side

    [ad_1]

    A woman died, a man is in critical condition and Avenue Grill on Gratiot Avenue is closed until further notice after a car crash around 2:30 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 6.

    After two cars got in a crash— one driven by the woman, the other by the man— the woman’s car struck the outside of a business’s building, Detroit Police Department spokesperson Sgt. Daron Zhou said.

    In a story on it’s Facebook page, Avenue Grill said the the resturant will be closed until further notice.

    “Due to an unfortunate car accident that occured outside our restuarant and caused significant damage, Avenue Grill has taken a massive hit,” according to the post.

    More: Dearborn officer suspended after mishandling man’s concerns before alleged attack

    People looking to support Avenue Grill as the restaurant undergoes reparations can keep the business in their prayers and stay connected via social media, such as Facebook and Instagram, for updates on reopening, according to a statement by Avenue Grill sent to the Free Press.

    “We are heartbroken over what happened this morning, and our prayers are with everyone involved in the crash,” according to the business. “We are grateful for the outpouring of support from the community.”

    The victims’s ages and places of residence are unknown as of Saturday afternoon, Zhou said.

    More: Man gets 15-50 years in prison in 2021 crash death after stealing Jeep, fleeing cops

    Detroit Police Department Fatal Squad is investigating the incident, Zhou said.

    Contact Natalie Davies at ndavies@freepress.com.

    This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit’s Avenue Grill closed after car crash into building kills 1

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Highland Park teen charged with hate crime, murder of transgender woman in Detroit

    [ad_1]

    Detroit Police Department

    Malique Javon Fails was charged with murdering a transgender woman in Detroit.

    An 18-year-old Highland Park man was charged with homicide and a hate crime Monday in connection with the brutal death of a transgender woman of color whose body was found behind a laundromat in Detroit.

    Malique Javon Fails is accused of fatally assaulting Christina Hayes, 28, of Taylor, on June 21 before robbing her of cash and a cellphone. Police said her body was discovered later that day in an alley on the 17600 block of Woodward.

    Hayes suffered severe injuries to her face and neck, police said.

    A Detroit police investigation led to Fails’s arrest Friday. He was arraigned Monday in 36th District Court on charges of felony murder, larceny from a person, and a hate crime based on gender identity bias. He was ordered held without bond.

    “This case represents a continuing pattern of vicious attacks and murders on trans women of color,” Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said Monday. “Every single citizen of Wayne County has the right to lead their lives and be safe. We will bring the alleged murderer of Christina Hayes to justice.”

    A probable cause hearing is scheduled for Aug. 26, and a preliminary examination is set for Sept. 2.

    If convicted, Fails faces up to life in prison.

    Nationwide, violence against transgender and gender-expansive people remains alarmingly high. In 2024, at least 32 of those individuals were murdered across the U.S., according to data compiled by the Human Rights Campaign. A study of 229 fatal incidents found that Black transgender women accounted for roughly 78% of all transgender women murdered in the U.S.

    In February, Tahiry Broom, a 29-year-old Black transgender woman, was shot and killed in Detroit. In June 2023, Ashia Davis, another Black transgender woman from Detroit, was shot to death in a hotel. In 2018, Kelly Stough, a Black trans woman, was murdered in Detroit. The killer, former pastor Albert Weathers, later pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

    In 2015, then-Detroit Police James Craig pledged to crack down on crimes against LGBTQ+ people, saying many hate crimes go unreported.

    “People in the LGBT community often don’t report crimes because there traditionally has not been a strong relationship with police,” Craig said. “We want to change that.”

    Craig later appointed Officer Danielle Woods to serve as the department’s LGBTQ+ liaison. She still holds the position.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • Powerful Hathaway family accused of helping Royal Oak relative get a felony charge dropped

    [ad_1]

    Steve Neavling

    The Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office is inside the new Wayne County Criminal Justice Center in Detroit.

    A Detroit man says his ex-partner falsely accused him of molesting their daughter and alleges her powerful, politically connected family helped her get a felony charge dismissed for filing a false police report.

    The ex-partner, Taylor Clark, is the granddaughter of retired Wayne County Circuit Judge Michael Hathaway, whose cousin Richard Hathaway is the chief assistant at the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office. Clark lives with Michael Hathaway in a luxury apartment in Royal Oak, according to court records. She has resided with the former judge since she was 15, according to her ex-partner, who asked not to be identified because of the severity of the allegations that Clark leveled against him.

    On Thursday, after Metro Times asked about the Hathaways’s connection to the case, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said through a spokesperson that she had been unaware of the allegations and will recuse her office from the case.

    Worthy “immediately ordered that the paperwork be filed for WCPO to be conflicted out,” spokeswoman Maria Miller said. “We will not handle the case because it falls within our conflict-of-interest policy and to avoid any appearance of impropriety.”

    After a Detroit police investigation into the molestation allegations found evidence that Clark was lying, the prosecutor’s office authorized an arrest warrant and a felony charge against her, according to records. The charge is punishable by up to four years in prison.

    But a few days later, Clark sent her former partner a message, which was obtained by Metro Times, that insists the charge is “going nowhere lol.” A day later, she said in a message to him, “Grandfather asked. He knows the prosecutor.”

    Four days later, Assistant Prosecutor Lisa Halushka informed the ex-partner that a group of prosecutors rescinded the charge after determining there wasn’t enough evidence to proceed. The former partner says both Halushka and Detroit police initially told him there was strong evidence to support the charges. After the case was dropped, he says the Detroit detective who investigated the case told him she has “never seen a prosecutor rescind the charges.”

    “She saw the warrant request and said it was pretty strong,” he says.

    Metro Times couldn’t immediately reach the detective for comment.

    The former partner claims the charge was clearly dropped because of political favoritism. The Hathaway family has deep roots in Michigan’s judicial system. At least six current and retired Wayne County Circuit judges share the Hathaway name, including former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Diane Hathaway, who served time in federal prison for bank fraud.”

    Richard Hathaway, who previously served as a Wayne County Circuit judge and Wayne County treasurer, is the second-ranking official in the prosecutor’s office and has authority over assistant prosecutors.

    Although Clark wrote in a message that her grandfather “knows the prosecutor,” she adamantly denies Michael Hathaway intervened in the case.

    “That’s a lie. It’s crazy,” Clark tells Metro Times. “My grandfather can’t get charges dropped against anyone. And he’s not the type of person who would do that.”

    Clark insists she only mentioned her grandfather because she asked him questions about the legal process.

    On July 17, Clark’s former partner called on the prosecutor’s office to recuse itself, citing the conflict of interest involving the Hathaways and Clark.

    “It is my hope now that you have become aware of these new circumstances that your office will recuse itself from this case and refer this matter to the Michigan State Attorney General Office or another County Prosecutor’s Office so that there is no hint of imparity and that justice may be served,” the ex partner wrote in an email to two prosecutors.

    Thirteen minutes later, one of the prosecutors told him that she “will forward your email to our Public Integrity Unit.”

    Despite the emails, Miller said Worthy was not aware of the allegations.

    “Today is the first time that Prosecutor Worthy was made aware of the connection to our Chief Assistant Richard Hathaway through his relationship to his cousin Judge Michael Hathaway,” Miller said.

    But now that Worthy is aware of the potential conflict, Miller said the prosecutor’s office will no longer handle the case.

    “We are currently waiting for DPD to resubmit the warrant request,” she said. “When we have that we will proceed with the paperwork for WCPO to be disqualified. The office that is appointed to the case will decide the matter.”

    Miller said the case got off to a wrong start, leading to the dismissal of the charge.

    “The case came into the General Warrants Unit when it should have gone to the Special Victim’s Unit,” Miller said. “It was issued by a General Warrant Unit assistant prosecutor. Several days after that happened, it was sent to supervisors who determined it should be in SVU. When the case was reviewed by a supervisor in SVU, it was determined that there was insufficient evidence to sustain the charges, and it was denied and returned to DPD with a request for further investigation.”

    Michael Hathaway was accused of intervening in another case involving his granddaughter in September 2020. During a hearing involving parenting issues with Clark’s former partner in Oakland County Circuit Court’s Family Division, Judge Kameshia D. Gant found Clark in contempt and fined her. Michael Hathaway threatened to report Gant to the Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission, saying she was too tough on his granddaughter, Gant said during another hearing and in a complaint to the chief judge, according to Clark’s former partner.

    Metro Times couldn’t immediately reach Gant for comment.

    In a text message from January, Clark said Michael Hathaway was getting involved in a custody dispute with her daughter’s father.

    “My grandfather who is a judge is on his ass to get things turned around,” she wrote.

    In a statement after her interview with Metro Times, Clark said that her former partner has an ax to grind.

    “We are currently involved in a long-standing custody battle, and his recent actions seem driven by resentment, not truth,” Clark said.

    She added, “This is not a matter of justice or concern for the truth–it’s about revenge.”

    Metro Times was unable to reach Richard and Michael Hathaway.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • Prosecutor Worthy requests funds to investigate cases handled by detective featured in Metro Times series

    Prosecutor Worthy requests funds to investigate cases handled by detective featured in Metro Times series

    [ad_1]

    click to enlarge

    AP Photo/Paul Sancya

    Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy is under fire for failing to investigate cases handled by retired Detroit Detective Barbara Simon.

    A little more than a month after Metro Times published a two-part series exposing a former Detroit detective who used illegal tactics to elicit false confessions and witness statements, both prosecutors and police oversight officials pledged to take action Thursday.

    Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy plans to expand a unit dedicated to exonerating innocent people, and the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners is investigating complaints that Detective Barbara Simon engaged in a pattern of criminal wrongdoing.

    On Thursday, Worthy requested an increase in funding for her Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU), which is tasked with freeing innocent people from prison, after she told county officials that news reports suggested that Simon “may have tainted many cases.”

    “My view is, if you’re running an office, you should never be afraid to look at old convictions to make sure they were done the right way,” Worthy said.

    Wayne County Executive Warren Evans, a former Detroit police chief, is proposing the increase in CIU funding in his budget that still needs approval from the Wayne County Board of Commissioners.

    Worthy said she was getting hammered in the media for declining to comment on investigating Simon’s cases. She said she wanted to wait until Evans supported the increase in funding for the CIU.

    “I wanted to make sure that funding was approved by you and that will give me an opportunity to hire someone to focus on those cases,” Worthy said.

    Worthy launched the CIU in 2018 to review old cases to determine if people were wrongfully convicted. But the unit is understaffed and overwhelmed with cases, according to Valerie Newman, head of the CIU.

    Since the CIU was created, she said, prosecutors have received 2,311 requests to review cases. Of those cases, the CIU reviewed 1,177.

    The CIU’s work has resulted in 38 inmates either being exonerated or their cases being dismissed. A disproportionate number of those cases occurred in 2020, the year Worthy was running for reelection.

    By contrast, only three cases were dismissed since January 2023.

    None of the CIU’s cases involved defendants who accused Simon of misconduct, leaving potentially innocent people with very little recourse.

    “Currently, there is a backlog of requests for conviction review that the CIU is working through,” Newman told Metro Times last month. “The CIU strives to handle all claims with care and attention as it works through its backlog.”

    Also on Thursday, four members of the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners spoke in favor of an investigation into Simon, who was known as “the closer” in the 1990s and early 2000s because of her knack for gaining confessions and witness statements. Her methods of confining young Black men to small rooms at police headquarters for hours without a warrant, making false promises, and lying about evidence that didn’t exist led to the false imprisonment of at least five men. Many more innocent people are still behind bars because of Simon, activists and defense attorneys say.

    Mark Craighead, who was exonerated after spending more than seven years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit and has led the effort to investigate Simon’s cases, says he’s relieved that authorities are beginning to take action. But he’s skeptical of Worthy’s office handling the investigations, saying prosecutors tried to keep him and three other exonerees in prison for years before it became abundantly clear they were innocent.

    Craighead, another exoneree, and family members of inmates who say they were convicted because of Simon’s misconduct protested outside of Worthy’s office on Aug. 28, calling for an independent counsel to investigate Simon’s cases and demanding a meeting with Worthy.

    “We still want to meet with Worthy,” Craighead tells Metro Times. “And we want an independent investigation, not an in-house investigation. We don’t trust her office.”

    Craighead called the CIU’s proposed budget expansion “a good step, but it’s not the right step,” he says, to address the hundreds of cases that Simon handled during her career.

    On Wednesday, Craighead filed a criminal complaint against Simon with the Board of Police Commissioners. He alleges Simon repeatedly engaged in criminal conduct by committing perjury, illegally detaining suspects for long periods without a warrant, and assaulting and threatening witnesses.

    Some commissioners are asking the police department to investigate Simon’s actions while she was a detective and determine if anyone else was complicit in her misconduct.

    But Commissioner Linda Bernard said more needs to be done and called for creating a task force to investigate Simon. She said the task force could include Detroit’s Office of Inspector General, the Michigan State Police, the Michigan Attorney General’s Office, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    “I don’t think that what we’re suggesting is enough, quite frankly,” Bernard said. “I do not think this is something that is a casual situation. There are major civil rights issues that have been raised in this matter.”

    During the meeting, Commissioner Chairman Darryl Woods suggested that the board get into contact with the prosecutor’s office and the Michigan Innocence Clinic, which previously helped exonerate four people convicted as a result of Simon’s investigations.

    In an interview with Metro Times on Friday, Woods reiterated his support for urging the proper agencies to investigate cases handled by Simon, who has been sued four times for wrongful convictions.

    “Communicating with the right entities that have the authority to look at the cases and make the decisions about them is the best thing we can do,” Woods says. “This situation is not lost on us.”

    Woods has a reason to be suspicious of improper investigations. He spent nearly 29 years in prison for a murder he says he didn’t commit. In 2019, Woods was released from prison after former Gov. Rick Snyder commuted his sentence. A trial judge determined that witnesses in Woods’s case may have committed perjury.

    “I understand the pain of the wrongfully convicted,” Woods says.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • Pressure mounts on Wayne County prosecutor to investigative detective’s misconduct cases featured in Metro Times series

    Pressure mounts on Wayne County prosecutor to investigative detective’s misconduct cases featured in Metro Times series

    [ad_1]

    The Detroit Police Department said it’s “fully committed to cooperating” with prosecutors to review cases handled by a former police detective who terrorized young Black men for nearly two decades.

    The former detective, Barbara Simon, was featured in a two-part series in Metro Times that revealed she had confined young suspects and witnesses to small rooms at police headquarters for hours without a warrant. She elicited false confessions and witness statements that were later recanted.

    So far, four men have been exonerated for murders they didn’t commit, and a fifth was released from jail after DNA showed he wasn’t the killer.

    Attorneys for the Michigan Innocence Clinic, which handled the cases, say many more people are likely imprisoned for murders they didn’t commit because of Simon’s investigative misconduct.

    “If true, the allegations against retired Detective Simon are concerning,” Detroit police spokesperson Dayna Clark told Metro Times in a statement. “The Department is fully committed to cooperating with the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office’s Conviction Integrity Unit, which is empowered to examine the legitimacy of convictions.”

    However, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, who is running unopposed for reelection this year, wasn’t as enthusiastic.

    “It would be irresponsible of me to respond at this time without gathering more information,” Worthy said in a statement. 

    In the series, Metro Times found multiple people still imprisoned who say Simon either coerced them into making false confessions or were convicted based on statements from witnesses who were threatened. Defense attorneys, activists, and private investigators say evidence is strong that more Black men are behind bars after getting interrogated by Simon.

    Only a prosecutor or judge has the authority to reexamine cases involving potentially innocent people. In each of the exoneration cases involving Simon, Worthy’s office tried to prevent the men from getting free, despite overwhelming evidence that they were innocent.

    Worthy launched the Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU) in 2018 to review old cases to determine if people were wrongfully convicted. Since then, 38 inmates were either exonerated or their cases were dismissed as a result of the CIU. A disproportionate number of those cases – 13 – occurred in 2020, the year Worthy was running against a reform-oriented opponent.

    But this year, Worthy is running unopposed, and the CIU has only been involved in getting new trials for two men. Valerie Newman, head of the CIU, acknowledged the unit is understaffed, though she said there were plans to hire more attorneys.

    None of the cases that the CIU intervened in involved Simon, who worked closely with Worthy’s office in the 1990s and early 2000s.

    Simon, who was known as “the closer” because of her knack for gaining confessions and witness statements, was a detective in the 1990s and early 2000s, when the U.S. Department of Justice found that homicide detectives trampled on the constitutional rights of suspects and witnesses for decades to get confessions. According to the DOJ, the department had a history of subjecting suspects and witnesses to false arrests, illegal detentions, and abusive interrogations. Despite what was at stake, the detectives weren’t properly trained, and bad cops were rarely disciplined, the DOJ concluded.

    In 2003, to avoid a massive civil rights lawsuit claiming suspects and witnesses endured false arrests, unlawful detentions, fabricated confessions, excessive force, and unconstitutional conditions of confinement, the Detroit Police Department agreed to DOJ oversight in 2003. Because of the harsh interrogation tactics, DPD agreed in 2006 to videotape interrogations of all suspects in crimes that carry a maximum penalty of life in prison.

    After 13 years of federal government scrutiny, the DOJ finally ended its oversight, but only after DPD agreed to sweeping changes in a consent decree to overhaul its arrest, interrogation, and detention policies. Detectives could no longer round up witnesses and force them to answer questions at police precincts and headquarters.

    At no point since those findings have prosecutors or police tried to reexamine the cases during that troubling period.

    And, it’s unclear why Worthy is not pursuing those cases. Other cities, including New York and Chicago, have conducted wholesale investigations of corrupt detectives, leading to numerous exonerations.

    In response to the Metro Times series, the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners called on the police department to conduct a thorough investigation of all of Simon’s cases. Detroit Police Deputy Chief Tiffany Stewart responded that it’s ultimately the CIU’s responsibility to review the cases.

    Worthy told Metro Times on Monday, “With all due respect, DC Stewart is not in a position to task the CIU with work.”

    Mark Craighead, who was exonerated in 2022 after spending more than seven years in prison for a murder he didn’t commit, says Worthy has a moral responsibility to review Simon’s cases.

    “I think it’s important for both the police department and prosecutors to work together to get this done,” Craighead tells Metro Times. “Those entities have the capability to right the wrongs, and the police can’t do it alone. They have to get the prosecutors involved.”

    In June 2000, without a warrant, Simon confined Craighead to a small room at police headquarters for hours, denying him access to an attorney, phone call, food, or water, he said in a lawsuit against the city. When he refused to speak, he was forced to spend the night in a vermin-infested jail cell.

    The next morning, Simon claimed she had evidence tying Craighead to the murder, which turned out to be untrue, and she coerced him into falsely confessing to accidentally shooting his friend during a fight, according to his lawsuit. The false confession was contradicted by forensic evidence, which showed his friend was shot four times in the back execution-style from a distance of at least two feet.

    Phone records later showed Craighead was nowhere near his friend when he was murdered.

    Craighead says he’s disappointed with Worthy.

    “She’s unwilling to budge, and that’s a problem,” he says. “For the young guys in prison, they need this. The evidence is indisputable that they are innocent. Why can’t the prosecutor see this? She’s unwilling to.”

    Craighead and the Metro Times series were featured in a nearly 90-minute episode this week on ML Soul of Detroit, a podcast by Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter M.L. Elrick.

    Detroit police say they have cleaned up the homicide division when they signed an agreement with the Department of Justice in the early 2000s.

    “Many of the issues underlying the practices of concern were addressed by the city in the course of its two consent judgements,” Clark says.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • Metro Times two-part series on Detroit detective featured on popular podcast ML Soul of Detroit

    Metro Times two-part series on Detroit detective featured on popular podcast ML Soul of Detroit

    [ad_1]

    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    Mark Craighead, who was exonerated of murder in 2022, is interviewed on the podcast ML Soul of Detroit.

    Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter M.L. Elrick’s popular podcast is shining a spotlight on “The Closer,” Metro Times’s two-part series about a Detroit detective who terrorized young Black men and elicited false confessions and witness statements for two decades.

    The nearly 90-minute episode on ML Soul of Detroit explores the series with Mark Craighead, who was exonerated in 2022 after spending more than seven years in prison for a murder he didn’t commit.

    In the 1990s and early 2000s, detective Barbara Simon was known as “the closer” because of her knack for gaining confessions and witness statements. Her method of confining young Black men to small rooms at police headquarters for hours without a warrant, making false promises, and lying about evidence that didn’t exist led to the false imprisonment of at least five men.

    Many more innocent people are still behind bars because of her tactics, activists and lawyers say.

    On the podcast, Craighead described Simon’s interrogation of him as “unbearable.” He was locked in a small room for hours without access to an attorney. When he refused to incriminate himself, he was held in a vermin-infested jail cell.

    “I was tired, dirty. I had a migraine,” Craighead said. “Everything was going wrong. I was terrified.”

    The podcast provides new details about Craighead’s case and Simon’s handling of suspects and witnesses.

    Craighead also described how difficult it was to get out of prison, despite having evidence that he didn’t murder his friend.

    “I had to pick myself up spiritually, and I had to pick myself up physically because it’s a challenge. All these movies you see about prison, it’s pretty much true,” Craighead explained. “It’s a fight for the fittest.”

    After the series was published, neither the Detroit Police Department nor the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office has shown a willingness to investigate the cases of men who are still in prison after they said they falsely confessed because Simon had used illegal, terrorizing tactics during the interrogations.

    Craighead was among four Black men who have been exonerated after evidence showed they didn’t commit murder. In each of those cases, Simon was accused of investigative misconduct. A fifth man was freed from jail after DNA evidence showed he couldn’t have committed the crime.

    All five men have sued the city.

    Despite dozens of other inmates saying they too are innocent, judges and prosecutors have kept them in prison.

    In response to the Metro Times series last week, Detroit police commissioners called on the department to conduct a comprehensive investigation of all the cases handled by Simon. But police declined, saying that task belongs the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office. Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy responded that she doesn’t have enough information to investigate the cases.

    “This is just a nightmare for everybody,” Elrick said on the podcast. “First of all, Detroit police don’t have enough resources, and now you’re asking them to reinvestigate cases and investigate their own. It’s going to undermine confidence in the Detroit Police Department. It’s going to undermine confidence in the prosecutor’s office. It’s going to lead to lawsuits. … There really is no incentive whatsoever for the people who need to clean this mess up to clean it up — except for it’s the right thing to do. And that’s the problem.”

    Elrick, a longtime investigative reporter, shared the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting with fellow Detroit Free Press reporter Jim Schaefer in 2009. The Pulitzer committee praised them for uncovering “a pattern of lies by Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick that included denial of a sexual relationship with his female chief of staff, prompting an investigation of perjury that eventually led to jail terms for the two officials.”

    ML Soul of Detroit airs weekly on Tuesday. More information is available at mlsoulofdetroit.com.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • A Detroit detective terrorized young men into making false confessions. Some are still behind bars.

    A Detroit detective terrorized young men into making false confessions. Some are still behind bars.

    [ad_1]

    Part one of a series about wrongful convictions in Detroit.

    The day Mark Craighead lost his freedom for a murder he couldn’t have committed, he just wanted to come home and get some rest. He was tired and hungry.

    But when he arrived at his home in Detroit on that warm, sunny evening in June 2000, two detectives were waiting on his porch and demanded he come downtown for questioning about his friend’s murder three years earlier.

    Chole Pruett, 26, was found fatally shot inside his apartment in Detroit. His 1996 Chevy Tahoe was set ablaze behind an elementary school in Redford Township.

    Craighead had to work at 5 a.m. the following day at a Chrysler plant. But the detectives, despite not having an arrest warrant, insisted he had no choice.

    Craighead, who had no criminal record and coached youth football, had already been interviewed twice by Detroit police, and each time they were satisfied with his answers. But this time was different.

    Waiting at police headquarters downtown was Detective Barbara Simon, an aggressive interrogator who spent years waging psychological warfare on young Black men accused of murder. In the 1990s and early 2000s, she engaged in investigative misconduct, illegally held suspects without a warrant, denied them access to an attorney or phone call, threatened them, and made false promises of leniency, judges and prosecutors would later determine. Suspects who refused to talk without an attorney were confined to jail cells infested with cockroaches, rats, and other vermin.

    Her tactics led to false confessions and fabricated witness statements.

    As Craighead rode in the rear of a squad car wearing shorts and a tank top, he had no idea what he was up against. He wasn’t allowed to call an attorney or make a phone call, according to affidavits and a subsequent lawsuit.

    When they arrived at police headquarters at 1300 Beaubien, Craighead says he was confined for hours to a four-foot by four-foot locked room with a desk and steel grates on the window.

    He was left alone with a growing migraine headache and nothing to eat or drink. When he pounded on the door and demanded to be let out, Simon told him to “sit down and shut up,” Craighead says.

    Without a lawyer present, Craighead had no plans to answer questions.

    But Simon, who was known as “the closer” for obtaining confessions, had another plan that worked with countless other suspects: Frighten him and wear him down.

    When Craighead sat face to face with Simon, he repeatedly refused to answer questions. Simon claimed she had evidence linking him to the murder. Police took him to different rooms and left him alone for hours.

    After 1 a.m., more than seven hours after he was taken into custody without a warrant, a lawyer, or a phone call, Simon told Craighead he would be released and still make it to work for his 5 a.m. shift if he agreed to take a polygraph. If he didn’t, he would remain in custody, Simon told him, according to court records.

    Knowing the fallibility of polygraphs, Craighead took a risk and agreed. He just wanted to go home. Simon escorted him to another building, where he was strapped into a polygraph machine.

    “She gave me no choice,” Craighead said, according to the affidavit. “I would lose my job.”

    After about an hour of questions, Simon told Craighead he failed the polygraph, a conclusion that was later contradicted by another test. Falsely claiming the polygraph was admissible in court, Simon leaned in and said, “Your wife is going to find a new husband and your kids are going to call somebody else daddy if you don’t tell me what you did because you’re going to jail for the rest of your life without parole,” Craighead recalled in a deposition.

    After he refused to confess to a murder that evidence would later show he didn’t commit, Simon placed Craighead in handcuffs and fingerprinted him. When asked if he could go home as promised, Craighead says Simon laughed at him.

    After 4 a.m., Craighead was placed in a cold jail cell with no blanket or pillow. The only place to sit was a wooden bench with screws poking out. Mice and cockroaches scurried about, he says.

    At least he had a chance to use a restroom for the first time since he arrived more than eight hours earlier.

    “I was kind of scared and terrified,” Craighead recalled in a deposition.

    At 11 a.m., a detective escorted Craighead back to the tiny interrogation room where he had sat for hours alone the night before. The officer rebuffed Craighead’s request for an attorney, phone call, and medicine for his migraine, he says.

    Simon walked in and also denied his requests, according to Craighhead.

    “We got you,” Craighead recalled Simon telling him. “We know that you shot Chole, and we can prove it.”

    As Craighead would later find out, the police had no evidence linking him to the murder.

    To Craighead’s surprise, Simon presented him with a detailed narrative about what went down on the night of Pruett’s murder in July 1997: He and Craighead got into a fight. Pruett pulled out a gun, and the pair struggled for control of it. The gun went off. Pruett died.

    The alleged confession, which Simon handwrote, was contradicted by forensic evidence, which showed Pruett was shot four times in the back execution-style from a distance of at least two feet.

    In her interview with Craighead, Simon insisted the shooting was an “accident” and said, “You don’t seem like the kind of person that would kill or rob your best friend, so you must have had a reason,” according to court records.

    Simon handed him the “confession.” If he signed it, she promised the first-degree murder charges would be reduced, and he could go home, Craighhead recalled.

    Broken down, scared, and disoriented, Craighead signed the paper — a decision that would cost him seven years in prison.

    “I signed it to avoid going to prison for the rest of my life,” Craighead said during a deposition.

    He had two children, ages 2 and 4.

    Although Craighead and his attorney argued the confession was fabricated and coerced and that his rights were violated, a judge allowed prosecutors to use the written statement as the primary evidence against him, and he was convicted of manslaughter in 2002.

    As the jury read the verdict, Craighead broke down in tears.

    “I was crying,” he recalls. “I got hoodwinked. I hadn’t seen the light of day since they arrested me on my porch. It was traumatic.”

    He wouldn’t be a free man until 2009, and it would take another 12 years until he was exonerated.

    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    Suspects and witnesses were rounded up and interrogated at the then-headquarters of the Detroit Police Department at 1300 Beaubien in downtown. The building was used by DPD until 2013.

    Locked up and lied to

    Craighead is among four Black men who have been exonerated of murder convictions after their attorneys showed that Simon, who is also Black, used deceptive and coercive interrogation techniques. A fifth Black man, who falsely confessed after being unlawfully imprisoned, was freed before his murder trial because DNA evidence showed he wasn’t the killer.

    All five sued Simon and the city, and three of them have been settled so far at a cost to taxpayers of more than $16 million.

    The two other lawsuits, including one by Craighead, are still wending their way through federal court and likely will cost the city millions more. Because the city is self-insured, Detroit must cover the costs of settlements and attorneys, diverting crucial resources away from essential public services.

    Simon worked in the Homicide Division for about 20 years before she retired in 2010. Shortly after, then-Attorney General Mike Cox hired Simon as an investigator. She retired in August 2021.

    A six-month Metro Times investigation, which included a review of thousands of pages of court documents and dozens of interviews with exonerees, inmates, defense attorneys, interrogation experts, private investigators, and law enforcement officials, paints a troubling picture of Simon and the prosecutors, police leaders, and judges who could have stopped her. Simon used aggressive, illegal, and sometimes violent interrogation techniques on suspects and witnesses, according to affidavits, court transcripts, and multiple lawsuits.

    Here’s what we found, according to those documents:

    • Suspects were routinely locked in small rooms for hours if they refused to talk and were denied access to attorneys and a phone call. In each of the cases, Simon had no arrest warrants to legally confine the suspects and witnesses.

    • Simon falsely promised suspects, some of whom were teenagers, that they could go home if they signed confessions that she wrote.

    • Simon illegally presented herself as a prosecutor who had authorization to file charges and falsely promised leniency if suspects signed statements admitting guilt.

    • In one case, Simon called a suspect a racial slur and told him any jury in America would convict him of killing a white woman.

    • While testifying at trial and during depositions, Simon often claimed she couldn’t recall basic information about the interrogations.

    • She threatened to frame witnesses for murder or other crimes if they didn’t incriminate suspects who turned out to be innocent. Those witnesses later recanted.

    Although the exonerations have shown that Simon resorted to psychological torment to elicit false confessions and fabricated witness statements, countless other suspects who were interrogated by the detective are still behind bars. During her career, Simon said she interrogated “hundreds” of suspects.

    Metro Times tracked down eight other inmates who emphatically claim they were falsely convicted because of Simon’s interrogation tactics. Many of them were teenagers when they were convicted.

    Attorneys and private investigators who have worked on the Simon cases believe many more innocent people are behind bars because of the detective’s interrogation tactics.

    “There certainly are still innocent people in prison because of Simon,” David Moran, co-founder and a lead counsel at the Michigan Innocence Clinic, tells Metro Times. “There are likely a bunch.”

    No accountability or justice

    Despite what defense attorneys say was a clear and alarming pattern of Simon resorting to abusive, illegal, and deceptive tactics to get guilty verdicts, the exonerees and those still in prison have faced stiff resistance from judges and the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office. Time and time again, judges turned down appeals, and prosecutors fought to keep the men in prison, despite later admitting some of the defendants were innocent.

    “The prosecutors will file an appeal, and they drag it through the appellate court for two to four years,” Steve Crane, a private investigator who helped get three innocent prisoners released, tells Metro Times. “They don’t want to accept a loss at any cost. It’s disgusting, and it’s frustrating.”

    Those still in prison say they’re withering away behind bars because judges and prosecutors won’t consider their cases.

    Their stories are strikingly similar to those who were exonerated. For up to eight hours, they were forced to undergo aggressive interrogations or were placed in a locked room without a warrant, food, or phone calls. They were falsely — and illegally — promised freedom if they confessed. And they were told there was undeniable evidence that would lead to their convictions, a claim they would later find out was untrue.

    In each of the cases, Simon was one of the lead investigators. And she wasn’t just any detective. When Detroit police had trouble getting witnesses or suspects to talk, they often depended on Simon, who had an unusual — and many would say suspicious — record of obtaining confessions, albeit ones that had been repeatedly recanted or contradicted.

    Defense attorneys have repeatedly said Simon had a history of ignoring or withholding evidence that suggested a suspect was innocent. She also falsely testified during murder trials. In one case, Simon testified that the defendant fatally stabbed the victim, which lined up with what turned out to be a coerced, false confession. The autopsy revealed the victim was beaten to death.

    The stories behind the convictions are symptomatic of a dark, troubling, and often lawless time for Detroit’s homicide division. During a multiple-year investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice that began in December 2000, federal investigators found that homicide detectives trampled on the constitutional rights of suspects and witnesses for decades to get confessions. According to the DOJ, the department had a history of subjecting suspects and witnesses to false arrests, illegal detentions, and abusive interrogations. Despite what was at stake, the detectives weren’t properly trained, and bad cops were rarely disciplined, the DOJ concluded.

    In 2003, to avoid a massive civil rights lawsuit claiming suspects and witnesses endured false arrests, unlawful detentions, fabricated confessions, excessive force, and unconstitutional conditions of confinement, the Detroit Police Department agreed to DOJ oversight in 2003. Because of the harsh interrogation tactics, DPD agreed in 2006 to videotape interrogations of all suspects in crimes that carry a maximum penalty of life in prison.

    After 13 years of federal government scrutiny, the DOJ finally ended its oversight, but only after DPD agreed to sweeping changes in a consent decree to overhaul its arrest, interrogation, and detention policies. Detectives could no longer round up witnesses and force them to answer questions at police precincts and headquarters.

    By then, the damage done during that time is impossible to measure. But what’s clear is that lives were destroyed, and many more innocent people are likely behind bars for crimes they didn’t commit, attorneys and private investigators say.

    At no point since then have prosecutors or police tried to reexamine the cases during this troubling time.

    “The Detroit Homicide Division was a trainwreck. It was completely out of control in the 1990s and early 2000s,” Moran says. “You have a police department that for a decade or more was rogue. There’s no other way to describe it. It’s undeniable.”

    In 1997, three years before the DOJ’s investigation, the head of DPD’s Homicide Division, Joan Ghougoian, was accused of illegally obtaining murder confessions by falsely promising suspects they could go home. Monica Childs, a homicide detective at the time, blew the whistle on Ghougoian and was reassigned to another department. Childs alleged in a lawsuit against the department that Ghougoian attacked, cursed, bullied, and ignored her when she tried to prevent illegally obtained murder confessions from being used.

    At the time, Simon was working in the Homicide Division.

    Although she is by no means the only Detroit homicide detective to be accused of eliciting false confessions and witness statements during that time, the volume of allegations and the resulting exonerations make Simon stand out in a department plagued by accusations of misconduct.

    Despite the attention the whistleblower lawsuit and DOJ investigation brought to the police department, Simon continued to illegally obtain confessions, according to lawsuits, affidavits, and depositions.

    ‘A stupid [n-word]’

    On Mother’s Day in 1999, Lisa Kindred was getting inside her family van with her three children when a lone gunman rushed up and shot her in the chest on Bewick Street on the city’s east side. To save her children, the 35-year-old Roseville woman drove away and pulled into a gas station to ask for help. She fell out of the car and was later pronounced dead at a hospital. Her children huddled in the back seat, screaming and crying.

    The children, ages 1o days to 8 years old, were uninjured.

    Within hours, police rounded up two alleged witnesses, both of whom were heavily intoxicated on drugs and alcohol, according to a lawsuit that was later filed. One was a 16-year-old who was illiterate and dropped out of high school. The other had mental health issues and heard voices.

    Both interrogations “turned to physical abuse,” and Simon and another cop choked one of the alleged witnesses, according to court records. One of the interrogations lasted six hours, and Simon allegedly threatened to frame two suspects or they’d be implicated in the murder, according to court records. She wrote up the statements and told them to sign the papers.

    Afraid they’d be charged, the pair signed the statements, leading to the arrests of Justly Johnson, 24, and Kendrick Scott, 20, on the day of the shooting.

    During an interrogation, Simon called Johnson a racial slur and told him any jury in America would convict him of killing a white woman, according to Johnson. Simon added that she was under pressure from then-Mayor Dennis Archer to close the case and didn’t care if he was innocent, according to one of Johnson’s affidavits.

    He said Simon didn’t investigate his alibis and she responded that “it didn’t matter because the mayor was her boss and her boss was on them and they were going to charge me with the murder whether I was innocent or not.”

    Johnson, who had a baby on the way, said he “begged” Simon “not to do this to me.”

    “Ms. Simon then asked me how far I had gone in school,” Johnson recalled. “I told her I had gone through 1oth grade. She then called me a ‘stupid [n-word]’ and repeated that I needed to confess to this crime that I did not do.”

    click to enlarge Kendrick Scott. - Michigan Department of Corrections

    Michigan Department of Corrections

    Kendrick Scott.

    Simon repeated the slur and that a jury was going to convict a Black man of killing a white woman, even if he didn’t commit the crime.

    “At that point I broke down in tears, begged investigator Simon for my life and continued to protest my innocence,” Johnson said. “Investigator Simon then stormed out of the room.”

    In January 2000, Johnson was convicted of murder, assault with intent to commit robbery, and felony use of a firearm. He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    Scott was convicted of the same charges in May 2000 and was also sentenced to life without parole.

    Johnson and Scott never gave up on getting out of prison and proving their innocence.

    In 2009, Scott Lewis, an investigative reporter in Detroit, began reviewing the case. Two years later, he sent a letter to the victim’s son, Charmous Skinner Jr., who at the time of the shooting was 8 years old. He was in the front seat when his mother was shot and said he’d never forget the shooter’s face. He described the gunman as being in his mid-30s with a heavy beard and very large nose, neither of which matched the description of Johnson or Scott. He also said the shooter was alone.

    Lewis contacted the Michigan Innocence Clinic, which had recently taken on the case. Law students and a supervising attorney from the clinic interviewed Skinner and showed him photographs of Johnson and Scott. Neither of them was the gunman, he said. Skinner said he was “a hundred percent” positive.

    Even though Skinner had seen the killer, police never interviewed him.

    Despite the new evidence, the clinic couldn’t get a judge to look at the case.

    Wayne County Circuit Judge Prentis Edwards denied a motion for relief from judgment in 2011, without even holding a hearing. In 2013, Wayne County Circuit Judge James Callahan also denied the motion without a hearing, and the Michigan Court of Appeals declined to grant the defense permission to appeal.

    Finally, in 2014, the Michigan Supreme Court ordered the cases to be remanded to circuit court for a joint hearing to determine whether Scott and Johnson were entitled to a new trial.

    During the hearing, one of the alleged witnesses said he had falsely implicated Johnson and Scott and that police “whooped” him during the interrogation. A cousin of the other alleged witness, who died in 2008, said her cousin admitted to her that he lied to investigators because he was afraid of being charged.

    “At that point I broke down in tears, begged investigator Simon for my life and continued to protest my innocence,” Johnson said. “Investigator Simon then stormed out of the room.”

    tweet this

    Defense attorneys also provided reports that showed the victim’s husband, Will Kindred, had been involved in “a series of violent domestic incidents” with his wife. At one point, he even threatened to kill her whole family, according to the records. On at least two occasions, police confiscated .22-caliber weapons from the husband after two of the alleged domestic violence incidents.

    The weapon used in the murder was a .22-caliber gun.

    Nevertheless, the judge denied a motion for a new trial in August 2015, concluding that Kindred was likely murdered as part of a planned contract killing that involved Scott and Johnson.

    After the Michigan Court of Appeals upheld the ruling, the Michigan Supreme Court finally ordered new trials for Johnson and Scott in July 2018.

    On Nov. 28, 2018, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office dismissed the charges, and Scott and Johnson were free men for the first time in 18 years.

    Johnson and Scott filed separate lawsuits in U.S. District Court against Simon and another Detroit cop, Catherine Adams, claiming they coerced two witnesses into falsely implicating them in the murder and engaged in “deliberate and knowing fabrication of evidence.”

    In November 2022, the city of Detroit settled the lawsuits, agreeing to pay Johnson and Scott $8 million each.

    Johnson’s attorney, Wolfgang Mueller, says lawsuits and media exposure are the most effective ways to prevent police departments and prosecutors from putting innocent people in prison.

    “Publicity and lawsuits help improve the system,” Mueller tells Metro Times. “You have to hit people in the pocketbook. It’s when they get hit in the pocketbook that they make changes. When this stuff comes out of the dark, then change can be made. We as a society won’t tolerate it if we know about it. It’s just that for so long people didn’t know about it.”

    Coercive tactics

    In February 2000, Nathan Peterson found himself face to face with Simon, accused of fatally shooting a man. Moments earlier, he says, he was riding in the rear of a police car with a cameraman.

    Like the others, Peterson, who was 23 at the time, says he was isolated in a room for hours before Simon began threatening him.

    “During the interrogation, she was using this cameraman as a tool to try to threaten to expose me to the media as a murderer,” he tells Metro Times. “She says if I didn’t agree to what she said, she was going to embarrass me and portray me as a murderer. … I was thinking of my family. I didn’t want my mom to get embarrassed.”

    Simon claimed she had plenty of evidence against him to get a jury to convict him, threatened to take away his son, and promised to set him free if he confessed, he says.

    “She presented herself as a prosecutor,” Peterson says. “She said she was willing to help me if I helped myself. She said if I agree to sign a statement, I could go home and face lesser charges. She had already convinced me that she had already arrested me and charged me with murder.”

    During an interrogation, police are barred from making promises about charges since those decisions fall under the prosecutor’s authority.

    “I was ready to get out of there, and I was willing to do anything,” he recalls.

    Peterson says Simon wrote the statement and told him to sign it. According to the statement, Peterson wrestled the victim with a gun and shot him in the back twice.

    Peterson was charged with murder and immediately incarcerated.

    His first trial ended in a hung jury in July 2001.

    click to enlarge Nathan Peterson. - Michigan Department of Corrections

    Michigan Department of Corrections

    Nathan Peterson.

    Peterson says police and prosecutors changed the narrative of the shooting during the second trial, and he was convicted.

    “My thing with Simon, she knew I didn’t do what she said I did,” Peterson says.

    At a hearing before the trial, Simon initially denied there was a cameraman but changed her story when Peterson’s attorney said they had a witness. They tried to get a copy of the video footage but never got it.

    Under oath, Simon insisted she didn’t use any form of persuasion to get Peterson to sign the confession. Simon also insisted she couldn’t recall any details of the interrogation, a claim she repeatedly made under oath in other cases.

    Peterson says he doesn’t believe Simon thought he was guilty.

    “Their only concern was just closing the case,” he says. “That’s all she was concerned about. They weren’t concerned whether I was innocent or not. They virtually kidnapped me off the street and did what they wanted with me.”

    Peterson remains in prison and has been unable to convince courts or prosecutors to review his case.

    The Reid technique

    James L. Trainum, a former longtime homicide detective in Washington, D.C., and an expert and consultant on interrogations and confessions, says Simon’s tactics were psychologically coercive and could easily lead to false confessions.

    He says Simon uses a controversial method of interrogation known to create false confessions. Called the “Reid technique,” the method is aimed at increasing suspects’ anxiety by creating a high-pressure environment, such as confining them to a room for hours and saying they are going to spend the rest of their lives in prison. The interrogator then presents evidence — real or invented — to suggest that police already have proof of the suspects’ guilt. The technique was developed by former Chicago cop and polygraph expert John E. Reid in the 1950s.

    To elicit a confession, the interrogator provides explanations that frame the suspect’s actions as justifiable or excusable, even though the interrogator knows the statement will lead to charges. A prime example is getting suspects to say they killed someone by accident.

    The idea is to make the suspect believe that confessing is the easiest way out.

    The problem is, experts say, the technique is inherently manipulative and can foster confirmation bias in investigators and overwhelm suspects to such a degree that they believe lying is better than telling the truth.

    Years of research and numerous exonerations have demonstrated that the Reid technique can easily result in false confessions.

    “The suspects are presented with a situation where they feel like they are going to get screwed,” Trainum tells Metro Times. “They are being guaranteed that they are going to be convicted by an authority figure. Then they start talking about leniency and say the judge will like it much better if they confess. They’ll say, ‘If you take responsibility, they are going to go much lighter on you.’ It’s a forced choice.”

    Trainum adds, “What the interrogation process is doing is limiting your options. They are able to lie to you about the evidence. All of that puts you in a vice.”

    The method has been banned in several European countries. In Canada, Provincial Court Judge Mike Dinkel ruled in 2012 that “stripped of its bare essentials, the Reid technique is a guilt-presumptive, confrontational, psychologically manipulative procedure whose purpose is to extract a confession.”

    One of the largest police consulting firms in the U.S., Wicklander-Zulawski & Associates, announced in 2017 that it stopped training detectives in the Reid technique, which it had taught since 1984. The technique was being misused and prompting false confessions, the firm said.

    “Confrontation is not an effective way of getting truthful information,” Wicklander-Zulawski & Associates President and CEO Shane Sturman said at the time. “Rather than primarily seeking a confession, it’s an important goal for investigators to find the truth ethically through a respectful, non-confrontational approach.”

    In 2021, Illinois and Oregon barred police from lying to minors. The U.S. House is considering a bill that would render statements made during interrogations inadmissible if a court determines the officer deliberately used deceptive tactics, such as fabricating evidence or making unauthorized promises of leniency.

    To reduce false confessions, Trainum says the U.S. needs to abolish the Reid technique.

    Of the more than 3,550 exonerations nationwide, about 13% involved false confessions, according to the National Registry of Exonerations. The most famous case is known as the Central Park Five. It involved five Black and Latino teenagers wrongfully convicted of raping a jogger in New York City’s Central Park in 1989, only to be exonerated in 2002 after another individual confessed and DNA evidence confirmed his guilt.

    More than half of those exonerated are Black. In fact, innocent Black people are seven times more likely to be wrongfully convicted of murder than innocent white people, a reflection of the persistent biases in the criminal justice system, according to a 2022 report from the registry.

    To juries, confessions are highly incriminating and they alone can lead to convictions, Trainum and other experts say.

    “A false confession trumps all other evidence, and it still does in a lot of cases because people say, ‘I wouldn’t have confessed, so I don’t see why they would have,’” Trainum says. “Even today when it comes to exonerations, you can have DNA evidence and people will still fight it and say they confessed.”

    Trainum believes false confessions are more common than statistics suggest because they “are the hardest cases to get exonerated.”

    Another problem, he says, is that police departments in the U.S. don’t tend to invest enough in training detectives to interrogate suspects, leaving the accused in unqualified hands.

    In a deposition in Craighead’s lawsuit in January 2023, Simon said she went to “several classes” to learn how to take witness statements and remembered “maybe once going to an outside seminar” on interrogations. She admitted she never received training by the Michigan State Police or the FBI, two agencies that typically provide courses on interrogations.

    She also said she couldn’t remember ever talking with prosecutors about the constitutional rights of suspects.

    Nevertheless, she estimated she conducted “hundreds” of interrogations during her roughly 20 years in the Homicide Division.

    Lawsuits filed against Simon also pointed out that she failed to ensure the confessions were factual. Had she bothered to verify the statements from the exonerees and others, some of the confessions would have been thrown out and could have prevented innocent people from going to prison, according to the lawsuits.

    The confessions also omitted basic information that would verify whether the suspect was truthful about committing a crime. While questioning Craighead, for example, Simon didn’t bother to ask basic questions, like what kind of gun he used, when he arrived at the murder scene, and which part of the victim’s body he shot.

    Since it turned out that Craighead wasn’t the shooter, he wouldn’t have been able to answer the questions truthfully.

    When asked by Craighead’s attorney Mueller whether she “thought it’d be important” to ask him about the type of gun he used, Simon called the question “stupid.”

    Undeterred, Mueller asked, “Does it sound reasonable to you, that a detective investigating a homicide, and there’s a gun, would want to know what kind of gun?”

    “Yes. Yes,” Simon responded.

    Michigan has safeguards in place that are intended to protect defendants who were coerced into giving false confessions. In what is called a “Walker hearing,” judges are responsible for determining the voluntariness and admissibility of a defendant’s confession before the trial. It is a crucial safeguard meant to ensure that any confession used in court was made without coercion, undue influence, or violation of the defendant’s rights.

    However, judges have been reluctant to throw out confessions, even when there is compelling evidence that the confessions were not voluntary. That’s because judges are quick to side with prosecutors and police, even when detectives like Simon have demonstrated a pattern of eliciting false confessions and violating defendants’ constitutional rights, legal experts and defense attorneys say.

    ‘It’s akin to slavery’

    In 1996, a year before Craighead’s friend was murdered, Lamarr Monson was accused of fatally stabbing a runaway 12-year-old girl at a drug house on Detroit’s west side. Like Craighead, Monson had no criminal record, was interrogated for hours by Simon, and was denied access to a phone and a lawyer, according to court records.

    Monson, who was 24 at the time, was convicted of murder and sentenced to 30 to 50 years in prison based on a false confession that was later contradicted by evidence that should have been presented at his trial.

    Monson had a 6-year-old daughter at the time. She would be an adult by the time he was exonerated.

    “When you are innocent of a crime and put in prison, it’s the same emotional feeling of being kidnapped and taken from your family,” Monson tells Metro Times. “It’s akin to slavery.”

    After more than 20 years behind bars, Monson was finally exonerated in August 2017, in large part because Wayne County prosecutors believed the “confession” was coerced. Simon was also accused of providing prosecutors with false information about crucial physical evidence and withholding inculpatory evidence.

    At the trial, Simon testified that the girl, Christina Brown, died from multiple stab wounds, a claim that fit the narrative in the false confession but contradicted the autopsy that found the victim died of blunt force trauma to the skull and brain. Simon later said her false testimony was an “honest mistake.”

    “For her to sit there and create false narratives to convict someone of a crime, you have to be a wicked person,” Monson says. “She was destroying lives. She was sabotaging justice and has willingly done this regularly.”

    Monson still vividly recalls the afternoon of Jan. 20, 1996, the day he walked into an abandoned apartment where he had sold drugs and found Brown sprawled out on the bathroom floor, lying in a pool of blood and gasping for breath. Her head was swollen.

    “She raised her hands and tried to say my name,” Monson recalls. “I told her I was going to get help. I was banging on doors, trying to call 911. I went to my sister’s house [two blocks away] and told the operator there was a girl in need of medical attention.”

    Monson says he sprinted back to the bathroom, covered Brown in a blanket, and propped her up so she wouldn’t choke on her blood. He also began chest compressions.

    Brown was later pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

    Two other people at the apartment did nothing to help, Monson says.

    Police ordered Monson and the two others to get into a squad car, where they were taken to police headquarters.

    Simon denied Monson his right to use a phone or contact an attorney and questioned him for more than four hours, according to court records. Simon told him he could call his parents if he signed a statement that claimed he had sex with Brown, an allegation he vehemently denies and says Simon fabricated to “dirty me up” and “make me look like a monster.”

    Monson was forced to spend the night in jail and barely slept. The next morning, without having anything to eat, he was promised he could call his parents and go home if he signed a confession, according to his lawsuit.

    Like in Craighead’s case, Monson was told he would spend the rest of his life in prison unless he signed a statement that claimed the killing was accidental and that he got into a physical confrontation with the victim. According to the alleged confession, Monson accidentally stabbed Brown in the neck with a knife she had been holding.

    Never mind that Brown actually died of blunt force trauma, presumably from being beaten with the top of a toilet tank.

    Police either failed to get fingerprints from the knife and the toilet lid or they never disclosed the findings. If they had, they would have discovered that the fingerprints didn’t belong to Monson and in fact belonged to Robert “Raymond” Lewis, who was also at the house and questioned by police.

    In 2012, Lewis’s ex-girlfriend told police that Lewis bought drugs from Brown on the morning she was killed and that he returned “covered in blood.” He said he “had to kill that bitch” because she had scratched him, according to his ex-girlfriend.

    Police didn’t focus on Lewis at the time because he had incriminated Monson.

    It would take another five years after that statement for Monson to be exonerated, in no small part because the prosecutor’s office continued to insist he was guilty.

    While he was in jail, Monson’s family spent $10,000 on an attorney who brought him no closer to getting him free. Without any money left, Monson taught himself how to file his own motions and appeals. He wanted to get fingerprints from the weapons used in the murder, but each court rebuffed him.

    Nearly 15 years after he was sentenced to prison, Monson had all but given up. He felt demoralized and helpless.

    “God blessed this circumstance,” Monson says. “I took my hands off this and said, ‘I did all I can.’”

    Finally, in about 2011, the Michigan Innocence Clinic agreed to take Monson’s case and began the arduous task of fighting to get the weapons fingerprinted. At each step, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office defended the handling of the case and argued Monson was guilty.

    Then in September 2016, a state court ordered police to analyze the top of the toilet tank, a basic step that should have been taken 19 years earlier. The results were eye-opening: Two of the fingerprints belonged to Lewis, and none of them matched Monson’s. The knife later went missing, making it impossible to analyze during the appeals process.

    It was also discovered that police failed to analyze fingerprint and blood samples from the victim’s clothing, the knife, and male clothing on the floor.

    With the new evidence and an affidavit from Lewis’s girlfriend, a court finally granted Monson’s motion for a new trial on Jan. 30, 2017.

    Rather than trying to convince a jury that Monson was guilty in the face of the new evidence, the prosecutor’s office dismissed the case on Aug. 25, 2017, and Monson was exonerated and finally became a free man.

    In a statement at the time, the prosecutor’s office indicated that Monson’s confession may have been coerced.

    “Due to the destruction of evidence, issues surrounding the way the police obtained Monson’s confession and the passage of time, we are unable to re-try this case,” Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said. “For similar reasons we are not able to charge anyone else in connection with the murder of Christina.”

    Worthy also admonished the police department for failing to keep evidence that could exonerate an innocent person.

    “The failure of the DPD to retain critical evidence potentially threatens the very foundation of the criminal justice system and the faith placed in it by the people we protect,” Worthy said, adding that she and others met with then-DPD Chief James Craig to raise the issue of the destruction of evidence in capital cases. The meeting resulted in Craig agreeing to a joint workgroup to develop an evidence retention policy.

    Despite evidence that Lewis may be the real killer, he was never charged. Two investigators for the prosecutor’s office traveled to Pittsburgh to interview him, and he admitted he lived in the same apartment as the victim and bought drugs from her. But, according to the prosecutor’s office, he was “in poor physical health and denied any involvement in the death of Christina Brown.”

    In February 2018, Monson filed a lawsuit against the city and Simon, along with several other officers. The case is still in court and headed for a trial in October.

    “Now the chickens are coming home to roost,” Monson says.

    All these years later, Monson is still in disbelief.

    “I still can’t believe this happened,” Monson says. “They will willingly frame an innocent person and will not accept any responsibility for doing so. It’s a slap in the face.”

    Monson says it stings even more that a Black woman played a major role in his wrongful imprisonment.

    “For a Black woman to not understand your plight as a Black man, and for her to be in a position to make things fair for you, she picked the side that abuses you and takes advantage of you, instead of seeking out the truth,” Monson says. “It’s incomprehensible that a Black woman would go to that extent to lock a young Black man in prison.”

    In a written statement, DPD declined to comment on Simon’s tactics but said it “expects every member to follow the rules and regulations of the Department.”

    Since the 1990s and early 2000s, DPD said it “has implemented measures including video recording of interrogations, audits and inspections to ensure members are acting in accordance with policy and that there is supervisory review.”

    A spokesman added, “We have high standards for every member of our Department, especially those who have sworn to protect, serve and respect the constitutional rights of all.”

    This story continues next week in part two.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • Two Detroit cops used excessive force when they killed a Black man in 2018, jury finds

    Two Detroit cops used excessive force when they killed a Black man in 2018, jury finds

    [ad_1]

    A jury has awarded $1.5 million to the family of a Black Detroit man killed by two cops on the city’s west side in October 2018.

    The jury on Tuesday found that Detroit cops Tyler Nagy and Raul Martinez used excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment when they fatally shot Lamont Johnson on the 14000 block of Tireman.

    Johnson’s family sued the officers and police department in October 2020, alleging gross negligence, wrongful death, and violations of Johnson’s civil and constitutional rights. Some of those claims were later dismissed.

    During the trial, the department’s own police procedures expert said he reviewed video of the shooting and did not see Johnson reach for a gun because the film was too dark.

    Police were called to the area at 9 p.m. on Oct. 28, 2018, on a report that Johnson was intoxicated and armed with a handgun. On a dark street, officers found Johnson standing next to his bike, shined a flashlight in his eyes and shouted, “Hands!”

    Less than three seconds later, both officers opened fire on Johnson, who had a handgun in his waistband.

    Mark E. Boegehold, an attorney for Johnson’s family, argued that Johnson didn’t have time to reach for the gun.

    “We alleged that a reasonable police officer would not have shot him because we didn’t see any movement from Lamont, and there wasn’t enough time for him to reach for a gun – 2.5 seconds is not enough time,” Boegehold tells Metro Times. “What they think they saw was not what happened. That’s what we presented to the jury.”

    The officers weren’t accused of intentionally executing Johnson.

    The cops said they believed Johnson was reaching for the handgun in his waistband and thought their lives were in danger, so they fired.

    The officers are still on the force, and the shooting prompted the Detroit Police Officers Association union to award them “District Officers of the Year,” claiming Johnson “removed his .32-caliber pistol from his waistband and started to raise it.”

    Nagy was promoted to sergeant in December 2022, and the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners unanimously approved the promotion.

    In a statement to Metro Times, DPD defended the officers.

    “A comprehensive internal investigation into officers’ actions revealed no policy violations,” DPD said. “Accordingly, the officers continue to work for the DPD. While the Department respects the jurors’ work in this matter, we ultimately disagree with their findings. It is our understanding that the City of Detroit will be appealing this decision.”

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • DPD defends controversial ShotSpotter system after leak reveals Detroit locations

    DPD defends controversial ShotSpotter system after leak reveals Detroit locations

    [ad_1]

    The Detroit Police Department is standing by its controversial ShotSpotter gunshot detection system following a leak revealing the locations of its sensors in cities across the U.S.

    Last month, WIRED magazine published a map showing the locations of 25,580 ShotSpotter sensors around the country, citing a leaked document. Activists have protested the technology due to its deployment in low-income communities of people of color, which the leaked data confirms.

    In a statement released Thursday evening, DPD defended the system — which is run by a company called SoundThinking — claiming that ShotSpotter does not discriminate. But the leaked data shows clusters of the sensors in the northeast and northwest sections of Detroit, one of the biggest majority-Black cities in the U.S.

    “To reiterate, there is no expectation of privacy in the percussion sounds of a firearm, which is what the ShotSpotter sensors are specially designed to capture,” DPD said in its statement. “This is true regardless of the race, sex, or other classification of the person firing the weapon.”

    Curiously, the department’s statement also claimed, “At this time, the Department is not aware of any release of Detroit-specific locations,” though the locations were revealed in the WIRED article and reported on by Fox 2 Detroit this week. (We asked DPD for clarification and will update this article if they respond.)

    According to the document, which WIRED says was obtained from a confidential anonymous source, the ShotSpotter sensors are hidden at elementary and high schools, government buildings, hospitals, public housing complexes, and billboards. It is not known whether the leak of sensor locations is comprehensive.

    In 2022, Detroit City Council voted to renew the city’s $1.5 million contract with ShotSpotter and then approved a $7 million expansion of the system.

    DPD and other supporters say the sensors help police solve and prevent crimes. But critics say the funds would be better spent on social services and other methods to improve safety in the communities, rather than increased police presence.

    In its statement, DPD dismissed the accusations, saying it “rejects the idea that investment in technology that provides significant public safety benefits comes at the cost of other important community programs.”

    It added, “At the same time we have been using ShotSpotter, the city has seen unprecedented investment in affordable housing, park improvements and programs to assist Detroiters in need of critical home repairs and other needs. The Department will continue to uphold its commitment of using this technology in a constitutional manner.”

    Other surveillance technology in Detroit includes the equally controversial Project Green Light, which uses facial recognition technology to identify crime suspects. But the technology is not flawless, and has resulted in the improper arrests of at least three Black people in Detroit.

    DPD’s full statement follows.

    The Detroit Police Department shares SoundThinking’s concern over the release of ShotSpotter sensors around the country. At this time, the Department is not aware of any release of Detroit-specific locations. We will continue to work with SoundThinking toward ensuring that the integrity of the ShotSpotter sensors and the information derived from them remains intact.

    Over the past 24 hours, some have used this security breach as a platform against the use of ShotSpotter technology, including allegations that the use of such sensors invades the privacy rights of Detroit residents or targets an individual by their race. To reiterate, there is no expectation of privacy in the percussion sounds of a firearm, which is what the ShotSpotter sensors are specially designed to capture. This is true regardless of the race, sex, or other classification of the person firing the weapon.

    Furthermore, the Department rejects the idea that investment in technology that provides significant public safety benefits comes at the cost of other important community programs. At the same time we have been using ShotSpotter, the city has seen unprecedented investment in affordable housing, park improvements and programs to assist Detroiters in need of critical home repairs and other needs.

    The Department will continue to uphold its commitment of using this technology in a constitutional manner.

    Subscribe to Metro Times newsletters.

    Follow us: Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter

    [ad_2]

    Lee DeVito

    Source link

  • Suspect released in murder of Detroit synagogue president Samantha Woll

    Suspect released in murder of Detroit synagogue president Samantha Woll

    [ad_1]

    Suspect in Samantha Woll murder taken into custody


    Suspect in Samantha Woll murder taken into custody

    03:18

    (CBS DETROIT) – A suspect in the murder of Detroit synagogue president Samantha Woll has been released, the suspect’s attorney confirmed Saturday. 

    An attorney for the suspect declined to comment further on the case outside of saying the suspect was released. 

    On Wednesday, Nov. 8, the Detroit Police Department said that a suspect had been taken into custody

    Authorities said the suspect was arrested in Kalamazoo. 

    Woll, 40, the president of Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue in Detroit, was found stabbed to death outside her home in Lafayette Park on Saturday, Oct. 21. 

    Woll attended a wedding the night before and returned home from the wedding at about 12:30 a.m. Police found no signs of forced entry into Woll’s residence. Investigators believe Woll was stabbed inside her home and then made her way out to her yard, where she was found. 

    In a press conference on Oct. 23, Detroit Police Chief James White said that evidence suggests the crime was not motivated by antisemitism.  

    On Wednesday, Sam Dubin of the Jewish Community Relations Council said, “We’re still mourning the loss of Sam but really celebrating the life and legacy she leaves behind.”

    Woll led the Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue since 2022 and had previously served on Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin’s team.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • A Detroit Synagogue President Was Fatally Stabbed Outside Her Home. Police Don’t Have A Motive.

    A Detroit Synagogue President Was Fatally Stabbed Outside Her Home. Police Don’t Have A Motive.

    [ad_1]

    DETROIT (AP) — A Detroit synagogue president was found stabbed to death outside her home Saturday, police said. The motive wasn’t known.

    Emergency medical personnel declared the woman, identified in a statement from Mayor Mike Duggan as Samantha Woll, dead at the scene, Cpl. Dan Donakowski said.

    “While at the scene, police officers observed a trail of blood leading officers to the victim’s residence, which is where the crime is believed to have occurred,” Donakowski said.

    Woll, 40, had led the Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue since 2022 and was a former aide to Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin and campaign staffer for Attorney General Dana Nessel, the Detroit Free Press reported.

    Police have not identified a possible motive and are investigating, the Free Press reported.

    Police found Woll around 6:30 a.m. after someone called to alert them of a person lying on the ground unresponsive, the Free Press reported.

    In a statement, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said Woll’s death was heartbreaking.

    “She was a source of light, a beacon in her community who worked hard to make Michigan a better place,” the governor said.

    Michigan State Police were assigned to support the Detroit Police Department in the investigation, Whitmer said.

    Nessel issued a statement on X, formerly Twitter, saying she was “shocked, saddened and horrified.”

    “Sam was as kind a person as I’ve ever known,” Nessel said. “She was driven by her sincere love of her community, state and country. Sam truly used her faith and activism to create a better place for everyone.”

    Slotkin also commented on X, saying she was “heartbroken at this news.”

    Duggan issued a statement saying he was “devastated” to learn of Woll’s death.

    “Sam’s loss has left a huge hole in the Detroit community,” the mayor said. “This entire city joins with her family and friends in mourning her tragic death.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Indianapolis police purchase billboard enticing better pay to lure officers from Detroit

    Indianapolis police purchase billboard enticing better pay to lure officers from Detroit

    [ad_1]

    DETROIT – The city has long faced an uphill battle to recruit and retain police officers, which is why a proposed pay raise is awaiting the city council’s approval.

    But, not even that would make the Detroit Police Department wages competitive with officers in other cities, including one that made a bold move to poach officers from Detroit.

    “I saw it,” said Detroit police Chief James White. “I know that our officers are the best in the country, and I know that they get highly recruited in-state and out-of-state.”

    The bold billboard in Detroit suggests officers could have a starting salary of $72,000. If Detroit City Council approves, pay raises for Detroit police would have a starting salary of $53,000.

    “I am not surprised,” White said. “I’m a little bit disappointed that someone would post something like that in our community, but I also know that our officers are highly recruited.

    A police union leader went to the city council urging the council to approve the pay raises, or the department would continue to lose officers.

    Read: Police union pleads to city council for promised raises in Downtown Detroit

    “From my conversations with council members, everybody believes that we are way overdue in supporting our DPD men and women,” said Detroit City Council President Mary Sheffield. “I’m looking for unanimous support coming next Tuesday.”

    “I sent letters to chiefs across the country saying, ‘Please, don’t hire our people,’” said former Detroit police Chief Ike McKinnon. “They looked at me and laughed.”

    Mckinnon says Detroit can’t compete with a $72,000 starting salary.

    “You can’t compete with someone whose making or paying $70,000 to start,” McKinnon said. “They’re making as much as some of our command officers are.”

    Shawn Ley: “Did you happen to call Indy by chance?”

    White: “We won’t get into those conversations.”

    So far, 290 Detroit police officers have left the department for other jobs.

    The mayor and Detroit’s police union agreed on a new contract on Sept. 30. But so far, those raises have yet to become a reality, and officers are leaving the force for other departments and better pay. (WDIV)

    Copyright 2022 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    Source link