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Tag: warren

  • Experts say Warren police broke the law in brutal beating of mentally ill man – Detroit Metro Times

    Civil rights attorneys, former law enforcement officials, and mental health experts tell Metro Times that the Warren Police Department’s handling of 26-year-old Christopher Gibson was not only unnecessary but, according to several experts, it was illegal and should have led to charges.

    Gibson was “brutally battered, tasered and threatened with a barking K-9” while in custody in December 2022, according to a lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Michigan. The suit says Gibson, who has schizophrenia, was denied psychiatric help even after his mother pleaded with police to take him to a hospital. Instead, they arrested him and locked him in a cell, where body-cam footage shows officers pepper-spraying, hooding, and repeatedly tasering him as he screamed for help. He was later hospitalized with heart and kidney damage.

    Despite the severity of the allegations, Macomb County Prosecutor Pete Lucido, whose office would be responsible for criminal charges, has not taken any action. It’s unclear if Warren police even forwarded an investigation to the prosecutor’s office. 

    “I looked at our database. I do not have any information related to the incident you reference,” Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office spokesperson Esther E. Wolfe, tells Metro Times. “Therefore, we do not have any comment on the matter.” 

    Warren police declined to comment and wouldn’t even say if the department trains officers in handling people with mental health crises. 

    “At the recommendation of attorneys for the City, no additional statement or response is available,” Warren Police Lt. John Gajewski told Metro Times in a written statement.

    Civil rights attorney Amir Makled, who has represented numerous victims of police violence, says the video evidence and accounts in the ACLU lawsuit leave no doubt about what happened.

    “I hope the officers are charged because the excessive force was a clear violation of civil rights, and it’s excessive force, and it’s totally illegal,” Makled tells Metro Times

    Makled adds that crisis intervention teams (CIT), which are designed to prevent violent encounters between police and people experiencing mental health crises, are critical to deescalating tensions and ensuring that a person struggling with mental illness is properly treated. CITs typically pair mental health professionals with specially trained officers. 

    “It’s most important to have a crisis intervention team of officers who have a really good understanding of mental illness so they can calm the person down,” Makled says. “In this case, there was zero de-escalation done. It was almost done maliciously with an intent to harm this young man who was going through a mental-health episode.”

    Makled also says the incident reflects a deeper, systemic problem within Warren’s police culture.

    “It’s almost as if the culture of the Warren Police Department has been to be aggressive and abusive, and that’s inappropriate and illegal,” he says. “The city of Warren and those police officers had a choice. They could have tried to help this individual. It was clear these officers were trying to hurt this individual.”

    Former Detroit Police officer and attorney David Robinson, who spent 13 years inside the department before becoming a civil rights lawyer, says Warren’s actions were “definitely excessive.”

    “They went from 0 to 100,” Robinson says. “There was never any real effort to speak calmly to this guy and try to convince him that they weren’t a threat. They had guns and uniforms. Their voices were stern and insulting.”

    He says the incident “was a calamity of indifference, and it was ignorance on the part of the police. It was a lack of training and a lack of sensitivity.”

    “We saw the full force brought down on this guy,” Robinson adds. “Had there been some distinction in the use of force on people with mental illnesses, we would have had a different outcome. Gibson perceives them as a threat, but they don’t perceive him as anything but a target. There’s no discretion.”

    Gibson’s mother, Awanda Gibson, said she begged police to take her son to a hospital, not jail.

    “Had they just listened and handled the situation better, we wouldn’t be here now,” she said in a video released by the ACLU. “They need mental-health experts to respond to these types of situations. It’s gonna keep happening over and over again unless the Warren Police Department changes.”

    Instead, she says, officers refused to tell her where her son was. It wasn’t until three days later that she found out he was in the hospital.

    Detroit-based public safety expert Darrick D. Muhammad, a former police chief and author of Reform the American Police – Eliminate Slave Catching Tactics, says Gibson’s case is part of a nationwide failure to reform policing around mental health encounters.

    “That was disturbing but not surprising,” Muhammad says of the Warren police video. “Police often lack the training and resources to effectively respond to mental health crises, creating heightened risks for those in distress and added strain on law enforcement. Although Crisis Intervention Training aims to improve officer response, it is not universally implemented and cannot match the expertise of mental health professionals. Consequently, many crises result in individuals being denied appropriate care or facing harmful outcomes, such as arrest and the continued criminalization of mental illness.”

    Muhammad questions why a police dog was even brought into the cell.

    “Why was a K-9 police dog brought to this apparent mental-health crisis?” he asks. “Dogs, once trained by slave patrols to track and viciously maul runaway enslaved people, embody a brutal legacy of control and dehumanization. Today, echoes of those tactics persist, as some modern policing practices continue to mirror the slave patrol system, binding America to the lingering chains of slavery.”

    Amy Watson, a Wayne State University social-work professor who has spent decades researching police encounters with people with serious mental illness, didn’t speak on this case but emphasizes the need for alternative interventions. 

    “Generally, what we want officers to do is take an approach that uses time and distance and gives the person time to de-escalate,” Watson explains. “It’s about really slowing things down and getting some information. If they have information that a person is experiencing a mental-health crisis, that is an indicator that it’s something that needs to be addressed.”

    She says officers must recognize that someone in psychosis may not process commands quickly or they may react out of fear.

    “If officers recognize or have information that someone is experiencing psychosis or a mental-health crisis, they should understand that the person might not respond quickly to commands or instructions,” Watson says. “You need to allow the person time to process the information you’re giving them. If someone is really agitated, they don’t process information as quickly, and if they’re experiencing feelings of paranoia, they may react out of fear. We try to get officers to help the person feel safer.”

    Watson says cities need non-police alternatives, like mobile crisis teams with proper training, to respond to calls involving mental illness. 

    “If someone calls 911, they should be able to be transferred to a place that is trained in mental health,” she says.

    In Wayne County, the Detroit Wayne Integrated Health Network (DWIHN) operates one of Michigan’s most widely recognized CIT programs. Since 2019, DWIHN has trained more than 1,000 public safety personnel, including 799 officers, 61 executive staff, and 140 dispatchers across 12 agencies. Warren, located in Macomb County, has no comparable countywide program.

    DWIHN emphasizes that their model depends on close collaboration between law enforcement and mental health professionals to prevent crises from turning deadly and to connect people to mental health care. 

    Experts say these violent incidents go beyond a single department. Muhammad points to the state dismantling its public mental health system decades ago. Former Gov. John Engler closed more than a dozen psychiatric hospitals in 1997, saying that treatment should return to communities. But he failed to provide sufficient funding or infrastructure to replace the hospitals. 

    “The burden has shifted to encounters with law enforcement,” Muhammad wrote in his book.

    Makled says the Warren officers’ actions demand criminal charges, not just a lawsuit.

    “This case was really bad,” he said. “The officers acted as if they were above the law. And so far, the prosecutor’s office has done nothing. That’s unacceptable.”


    Steve Neavling

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  • Michigan Muslim group pushes hate crime investigation after Warren mosque vandalized

    A Muslim civil rights group is calling for an investigation into a possible hate crime after a Warren mosque and nearby construction equipment were vandalized over the weekend. 

    The Michigan chapter of Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MI) is also offering a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible. 

    The Islamic Organization of North America (IONA), the first mosque established in Warren, reported broken windows, wall damage, and graffiti inside the mosque and on equipment used for its expansion project. 

    The vandalism occurred sometime between late Saturday night and early Sunday morning, according to CAIR-MI. 

    Mosque officials have notified the Warren Police Department. 

    “We call on anyone who witnessed this vandalism or was told about this criminal act to immediately contact the Warren Police Department,” CAIR-MI Executive Director Dawud Walid said in a statement Tuesday. “There is no valid justification for anyone to vandalize private property, especially a house of worship.”

    Walid, who also serves as a prayer leader at IONA, said the mosque has been repeatedly vandalized and threatened since opening decades ago. 

    CAIR-MI said it wants authorities to investigate whether the vandalism was motivated by hate. 

    Earlier this year, CAIR’s Minnesota chapter called for a similar probe after a fire damaged a mosque in Bloomington


    Steve Neavling is an award-winning investigative journalist who operated Motor City Muckraker, an online news site devoted to exposing abuses of power and holding public officials accountable. Neavling…
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  • Macomb County judge tosses marijuana charges, ruling legalization law trumps school-zone statute

    A Macomb County judge has dismissed marijuana possession charges against two former Fitzgerald Public Schools officials, ruling that the state’s cannabis legalization law takes precedence over an older statute that made it a crime to have marijuana within 1,000 feet of a school.

    The decision by 37th District Court Judge John M. Chmura in Warren is a significant win for cannabis users. For years, prosecutors have used drug free zones to add charges in cases involving marijuana use near schools.

    But Chmura said the Michigan Regulation and Taxation of Marihuana Act (MRTMA), the 2018 law that legalized cannabis for adult use, is clear that it overrides any conflicting statute. The judge refused to enforce the 1,000-foot rule and dismissed marijuana charges against former Fitzgerald Superintendent Hollie Lyn Stange and former food services director Amanda Gail Carroll.

    The ruling on Thursday closes the case against Carroll. But Stange still faces a misdemeanor charge of possessing a weapon in a weapons-free zone. Police alleged they found a handgun in Stange’s car after allegedly spotting her smoking weed near Fitzgerald High School in December.

    Chmura upheld the gun charge, siding with prosecutors that police acted in good faith when they searched her vehicle.

    Stange is scheduled to return to court on Oct. 16 for a pretrial hearing.

    Macomb County Prosecutor Peter J. Lucido, a Republican, blasted the ruling and said his office may appeal.

    “It is deeply concerning that, in legalizing marijuana, the legislature also eliminated the safeguard that prohibited its use near school zones,” Lucido said in a statement Monday. “Perhaps that was not their intent, but it is the effect. We should not encourage the use of drugs — even legal ones — near our schools or around children. The legislature should revisit both MRTMA and the Health Code and amend MRTMA to restore the 1,000-foot rule, ensuring that this important protection is once again part of the law.”

    Stange and Carroll were arrested Dec. 20 after police claimed they saw the women smoking weed in a vehicle near the high school. Both were later pulled over in separate traffic stops, and police said they found a handgun in Stange’s car.

    Drunken driving charges filed against both women were previously dismissed.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Warren police block release of records showing alleged brutality of man in crisis

    City of Warren, via ACLU of Michigan

    Warren police confront a man having a mental health emergency, leading to him being hospitalized with injuries to his heart and kidneys.

    The Warren Police Department is refusing to release public records to Metro Times, including video footage that shows cops allegedly beating a man with a mental health emergency.

    Christopher Gibson, 26, was “brutally battered, tasered and threatened with a barking K-9” by Warren cops while detained in December 2022, according to a recent lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Michigan. He ended up in the hospital with damage to his heart and kidneys.

    Ironically, an attorney for Warren claimed in the city’s denial that releasing the records would somehow harm Gibson because he “did not authorize release of his protected or private information to any third-party,” calling the information “an invasion of privacy.”

    “Your demand for copies of everything obtained by Mr. Gibson’ attorneys is therefore improper,” city attorney Raechel M. Badalamenti wrote to Metro Times on Wednesday.

    Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) laws are very clear: Public agencies are required to disclose records that document official actions by government employees, regardless of whether the subject of the records authorizes their release.

    Badalamenti also insisted that law enforcement personnel records are exempt, a claim that has been repeatedly contradicted by Michigan courts. In general, routine information, such as disciplinary records, complaints, use-of-force reports, and internal affairs findings, are considered public because they reflect how government employees perform their official duties.

    Notably, Badalamenti’s firm Kirk, Huth, Lange & Badalamenti, PLC is representing the city in the lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Michigan.

    Hoping to learn more about the allegations against the officers accused of assaulting Gibson, Metro Times sent a request to Warren police on Aug. 18 that sought the same records turned over to the ACLU of Michigan under a FOIA request. But Badalamenti appeared to suggest that some of those records were received through discovery in the lawsuit, not a FOIA request.

    “As you may know, there is ongoing litigation regarding the subject-matter of this request,” Badalamenti wrote to Metro Times. “In this regard, you are not entitled to the same documents and tangible things requested by the American Civil Liberties Union as this organization represents the Plaintiff in that ongoing case. Documents available to an attorney, in discovery or with a client release, are not necessarily available under the Freedom of Information Act (the “Act”).”

    Badalamenti’s argument is moot because Metro Times only asked for documents that were already turned over to the ACLU under a FOIA request.

    Metro Times plans to appeal the denial. In the meantime, Warren police are exposing the city to a potential lawsuit for refusing to release the records.

    According to the ACLU’s lawsuit, Gibson was diagnosed with schizophrenia and was experiencing a mental health emergency. His mother asked police to take him to a psychiatric hospital, but instead, cops arrested him and locked him in a jail cell.

    While in police custody, Gibson repeatedly told the officers he was struggling with mental issues and was clearly disoriented and confused. An officer responded, “You’re mental, that’s fine. You can still follow directions,” according to the ACLU of Michigan.

    Video obtained by the ACLU shows Gibson clearly agitated and unwell when he was in a jail cell. Rather than get Gibson psychiatric help, as he and his mother requested, officers forced their way into his cell, pepper-sprayed him, covered his head with a mesh fabric hood, and tasered him while he was pinned to the ground, causing serious injuries to his body.

    “I have a mental illness going on,” Gibson yelled out as officers approached him.

    After cops wrestled him to the ground, a confused Gibson screamed, “They are killing me, literally! Judge! Judge!”

    Police then forced him into an elevator, which malfunctioned, causing Gibson more confusion. When the elevator opened, cops carried him out as he screamed.

    At no point during these confrontations did Warren police use mental health professionals or get Gibson psychiatric help.

    Asked about the way police handled the situation, Lt. John Gajewski declined to answer any of Metro Times’s questions.

    “At the recommendation of attorneys for the City, no additional statement or response is available,” Gajewski told us in an email.

    His mother said police refused to give her any information, and it wasn’t until three days later that she found out he was in the hospital with severe injuries.

    This is not the first time Badalamenti and Warren cops were accused of withholding public records. In March 2024, the Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement Standards (MCOLES) told Metro Times it was investigating a 2018 email that appears to show Badalamenti attempting to hide public records. In an August 2018 email, Badalamenti offered to keep in her office “the entire original file” involving an internal affairs investigation into a deputy police commissioner accused of punching a suspect that was in custody. By doing so, the deputy commissioner would have had an easier time finding another job at a police department following a 2017 law intended to crack down on wandering cops, or officers who move from department to department amid allegations of misconduct. The law requires police to reveal those records to state officials if the documents are related to an officer leaving the department.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Cannabis vape cartridges recalled for banned chemical were sold in 75 dispensaries in Michigan

    Courtesy of Cannabis Regulatory Agency

    Warren-based House Brands Distro is recalling its Top Smoke Go Kartz Runtz vape cartridges.

    State regulators and a Warren-based company are recalling a batch of vape cartridges that contain a banned chemical and were sold at 75 dispensaries across Michigan, regulators announced Monday.

    The recall applies to Top Smoke Go Kartz Runtz cartridges produced on Feb. 25 by IVP Holding, also known as House Brands Distro.

    The Cannabis Regulatory Agency said the dispensaries that carried the vape have posted recall notices, urging customers to return their product to the location where it was purchased or dispose of it safely.

    Many of the dispensaries are in metro Detroit.

    The CRA did not disclose what chemical was found but indicated it “should not be consumed.” Metro Times could not reach IVP Holding for comment.

    Consumers who experience health problems after using the vape are advised to contact their health care provider and report the reaction to the CRA.

    Licensed cannabis businesses are required to report adverse reactions within one business day.

    The vape cartridge recall is part of the CRA’s ongoing effort to ensure unsafe cannabis products are removed from circulation.

    Last week, the CRA announced a recall of 5,765 vape cartridges sold by Exclusive Brands. Regulators discovered the cartridges contained Medium Chain Triglyceride (MCT) oil, which may cause respiratory problems.

    On Aug. 12, the CRA announced another recall of 26,000 vape cartridges after finding MCT oil. The flavors were from Motor City Cannacarts and RIPZ.

    Detroit-based Better Made Snack Foods Inc. sued IVP Holding in U.S. District Court last year, alleging the cannabis company “knowingly and willfully” put a label on its products that closely resembles the Better Made potato logo, which has been in use for decades.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Warren Democrat aims to unseat scandal-plagued Macomb County Prosecutor Lucido

    Warren Democrat aims to unseat scandal-plagued Macomb County Prosecutor Lucido

    Christina Hines is fed up with the never-ending scandals from the Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office, and she’s determined to do something about it.

    The Warren Democrat, who spent nearly a decade as a professional prosecutor in Wayne and Washtenaw counties, is aiming to unseat Macomb County Prosecutor Peter Lucido in the general election in November.

    The Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office has been marred by scandals since 2020, when Eric Smith resigned as prosecutor after being charged with 10 criminal counts alleging he embezzled money and committed misconduct in office.

    Then came Lucido, a Trump-supporting Republican and former state lawmaker who has been a polarizing presence since taking office in 2021. In his first term, Lucido has been accused of violating election laws, sexually harassing employees, firing a whistleblower, signing off on a “shady backroom deal” with a child abuser, surrounding himself with sexual abusers, and failing to alert the public about high-profile charges against two Warren cops.

    Hines, a 34-year-old native of Macomb County and a Wayne State University Law School graduate, finally decided to run against Lucido after his Facebook and Twitter accounts quoted Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, just days after Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January 2023.

    Her husband is Black, and their three children are biracial.

    “It was truly a lightbulb moment for me,” Hines tells Metro Times. “I realized I needed to run to protect my kids and everyone else’s kids. I walked into my kitchen and told my husband, ‘I’m ready to do this.’ And he said, ‘I’ve been waiting to hear that.’”

    Since graduating from law school in 2014, Hines has wasted no time making an impact. So far, she has spent most of her legal career advocating for victims of crime and putting predators behind bars.

    After starting her work as a prosecutor in the Wayne County Prosecutor’s General Trials Unit, which prosecutes felonies like armed robbery, home invasions, and homicide, Hines handled crimes involving sexual assault and child abuse.

    At the Washtenaw County Prosecutor’s Office, she was promoted to chief of the Special Victims Unit Division, which focuses on sexual assault, child sexual abuse, and child pornography cases, and chief of the Appeals Division. She led the county’s Sexual Assault Kit Initiative (SAKI) and started a restorative justice program.

    Her early success led to her being recognized as a Notable Women in Law by Crain’s Detroit Business, a 30 in Their 30s by D Business, and a Future Leader by the Detroit Regional Chamber.

    Hines attributes her early accomplishments to her commitment to protecting victims of crimes, especially children and women. It’s what inspired her to pursue a career in law.

    “I didn’t know exactly what field of law I wanted to practice, but I wanted to advocate for women and children,” Hines says. “I had already known over a dozen women who had been sexually assaulted.”

    Hines distinguished herself from Lucido, saying he’s a career politician who’s driven by self-interest and is a magnet for controversy.

    “The prosecutor’s office needs to have integrity, and you need a professional prosecutor there, not just a politician,” Hines says. “There are a lot of people across the county who are sick of what has happened in that office under Lucido and Smith. Macomb County is really special. There are a lot of amazing things we can do here, but it requires people solving problems together.”

    During Lucido’s first term, the prosecutor’s office has had a 50% turnover rate, and an unprecedented number of criminal cases are ending in plea agreements, according to Hines.

    “Everything is being resolved by plea deals,” Hines says. “That has very negative consequences. There are wrongful convictions that result from plea deals, and there are people who are a danger to the community who are getting very lenient offers.”

    Hines also emphasizes the importance of rehabilitation and addressing the root causes of crime. Punitive measures alone don’t reduce crime, she says.

    “I see public safety as making sure we have good jobs, affordable housing, child care, education, and public transit,” Hines says. “We can do better. If we as a society were dedicated to funding child care so that mothers who are trying to work could actually take their child to a safe place that is affordable, that in and of itself would reduce child sexual abuse by the thousands a year.”

    Hines also emphasizes the importance of educating the public and building partnerships. For example, she says, prosecutors need to do a better job combating sextortion, a form of cybercrime that is rapidly on the rise.

    “In Washtenaw and Wayne counties, I really focused on keeping kids safe online,” she says. “We worked with teachers and administrators and local law enforcement. We have to keep spreading information to help people understand that this is really serious, and if you give your kids access to social media without making sure you are still talking to them and protecting them, there can be terrible, terrible consequences. We need to be better about getting information out there because it’s only going to get worse.”

    Before deciding to run, Hines wondered if she was too young to serve as a county prosecutor, but she was inspired to make the leap after being encouraged by Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel and state Rep. Donavan McKinney, both of whom were elected at young ages.

    “They told me that being young was not a good reason not to run,” Hines says.

    A lot of high-profile elected leaders are supporting her. Hines has received dozens of endorsements from elected officials, from Attorney General Dana Nessel to Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy.

    Defeating Lucido won’t be easy. He’s a prolific fundraiser and relies on wealthy donors, Hines says. She’s taking a grassroots approach to her campaign, and in the past month, she says she’s knocked on 2,000 doors.

    “I love it; it’s my favorite part of the campaign,” she says about door knocking. “I’m getting people’s perspective, and I’m meeting people I would never have met without this experience. It’s powerful, and it’s a blessing for me to do this. I wish I could do it all day, every day.”

    The most common concern among residents, she says, is protecting children.

    “This is a critically important race,” Hines says. “The county prosecutor is the highest law enforcement official in any county. They have the ability to determine who gets charged, what they get charged with, and they have a great deal of power and influence on sentencing and how people are held accountable.”

    But to be successful, she says, the prosecutor needs to have integrity.

    More information about Hines and her platform is available at christinahinesformacomb.com.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Warren officials upset with light penalties against ex-Mayor Fouts for violating state law

    Warren officials upset with light penalties against ex-Mayor Fouts for violating state law

    click to enlarge

    City of Warren

    Former Warren Mayor Jim Fouts was fined and ordered to reimburse the city for using city resources for political purposes.

    Former Warren Mayor Jim Fouts was ordered to reimburse taxpayers and pay a fine for endorsing political candidates on the city’s tax-funded television channel during his last State of the City address in June 2023.

    But city officials aren’t happy with a penalty that they say amounts to a little more than a slap on the wrist.

    Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson’s office reached a conciliation agreement with Fouts that orders the former mayor to reimburse the city $750 and to pay the state a $750 fine. In exchange, state election officials won’t pursue charges against Fouts.

    It’s the second time Fouts’s administration used the State of the City address for political purposes.

    Warren City Council received a copy of the agreement Monday, and officials were dissatisfied.

    “These fines are not a deterrent to Jim Fouts,” Council Secretary Mindy Moore said Tuesday. “He is a repeat offender. We need tougher laws against politicians that misuse public resources.”

    Moore added, “I am disappointed that the Secretary of State did not seek more penalties. He gets to pay a fine and move on for something that has landed others in jail.”

    Violations of the Michigan Campaign Finance Act are punishable by up to 90 days in jail. Repeat offenders can face even more jail time.

    State law bars public officials from using public resources, like a tax-funded television station, for political purposes.

    During his State of the City address in June 2023, which was aired live on the city’s television station, TV Warren, and replayed twice a day for nearly two weeks, Fouts endorsed a slate of candidates and blasted his political opponents. He spent the last 12 minutes of his speech encouraging residents to vote for his choice of candidates for city council, clerk, and mayor.

    City employees for the Warren Communications Department worked to broadcast, record, and stream the speech. They used city-owned cameras and a production truck and drew up graphics of the endorsements.

    It wasn’t the first time Fouts’s administation was fined by the Secretary of State’s Office for politicizing the State of the City. In 2018, state election officials determined that Fouts and Public Service Director Richard Sabaugh violated the Michigan Campaign Finance Act when the then-mayor turned the 2016 State of the City address into a fundraiser for a political action committee connected to Fouts.

    In a conciliation agreement in July 2018, Sabaugh was ordered to pay a fine of $761.90.

    In an email to Warren City Council, Secretary of State legal analyst James Biehl said the most recent reimbursement to the city was determined by the length of time Fouts endorsed candidates.

    “The City of Warren provided us with an estimated cost for the State of the City address of $3,919.66 and the department reviewed the video and assessed a penalty based on the time used by Mr. Fouts for political activities,” Biehl wrote in the email.

    Councilman Jonathan Lafferty said state officials never reached out to the council about the estimate and pointed out that the address was replayed twice a day for nearly two weeks, amounting to numerous days of taxpayer-funded political advertising. And that’s not to mention the misuse of city resources.

    “Communications with the Secretary of State were withheld from councilmembers,” Lafferty said. “No estimate was ever provided for Council to consider before the state entered into a settlement. This was intentional. Fouts tried to keep this quiet so he could appear as if he did nothing wrong.”

    Steve Neavling

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  • Metro Detroit’s first pickleball-only complex opens in Warren

    Metro Detroit’s first pickleball-only complex opens in Warren

    You could call it a pickleball paradise.

    Bash Pickleball Club in Warren opened what is the first pickleball-only facility in metro Detroit last week, offering 10 professional-grade courts under bright lighting, a pro shop, locker rooms, lounge areas, a coffee station with beverages and snacks, and a party room for large gatherings.

    Located at 6881 Chicago Rd., the 30,000-square-foot club features open-play, tournaments, coaching for all levels, free lessons for beginners, court reservations, mixers, and skill-based events.

    The pro shop is impressive, with dozens of paddles from eight companies, balls, grips, backpacks and apparel.

    Pickleball, which is a fun and dynamic hybrid of tennis, ping-pong, and badminton, is the fastest-growing sport in America and attracts players of all ages.

    Bash Pickleball Club co-owner Sam Brikho says he and his brother Kevin Brikho decided to open a pickleball complex after falling in love with the game last summer at Borden Park in Rochester Hills. Like many outdoor courts in metro Detroit, they were often full, with people waiting to play.

    “I would go almost every day after work, and more and more people would show up,” Brikho tells Metro Times. “All eight courts would be full. I could see that there was a demand for it, and I asked the players where they would play [when the weather got colder], and they all said there really aren’t many places.”

    Brikho also said people were looking for organized play so they could compete with others at comparable skill levels.

    The Brikho brothers say it wasn’t easy finding a large facility to lease because owners were hesitant to work with a start-up company. But then they found their current location, which was originally a former General Motors Plant that later served as a sports storage facility, peanut shop, tennis facility, and volleyball club.

    “The landlord here was a pickleball guy, and he wanted it for the community, so he was willing to work with us,” Brikho says.

    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    Bash Pickleball Club has dozens of paddles from eight companies, balls, grips, backpacks and apparel.

    Over the weekend, the club featured its first mixer, a popular event at indoor pickleball facilities that allow players to compete against new people and develop new skills. About 100 people turned out for drinks, food, music, and raffle prizes, including two paddles, a backpack, and a private lesson.

    “It was such a good turnout,” Brikho says.

    The club is open to everyone. Memberships range from $397 to $697 a year. Although paid memberships aren’t required, they provide discounts, advanced bookings to reserve courts, and free entry into open-play. Until May 15, the club is offering 15-month memberships for the price of 12 months.

    The club offers three open-play sessions each day from Monday through Friday, and two sessions each on Saturday and Sunday. The cost for open-play without a membership is $12.

    Lessons are available for players looking to strengthen their skills. Head coach Dr. Nick Hernandez, a licensed pharmacist who is taking a break from his profession to pursue his pickleball passions, is a friendly, skilled player who won gold medals in singles, mixed doubles, and men’s doubles at the Royal Oak Classic Pickleball Tournament last year.

    If all goes as planned, the club will expand, with an additional 24,000 square feet available for another six to eight courts. The goal is to build a championship court to lure sanctioned pickleball tournaments to Warren.

    “The tournaments are phenomenal,” Hernandez says. “The atmosphere is great. Some of them can get about 1,000 to 2,000 players.”

    Brikho says pickleball has become very popular because it brings people together and is easy to learn, but is incredibly difficult to master.

    “It’s a very social sport,” Brikho says. “It can be competitive or it can be very friendly. It’s great for all ages. Anyone can learn to play in a couple of hours. Every day there are new people coming in. We make them feel comfortable.”

    During a recent open-play, players of various skill levels were there, and they were cordial and welcomed new competitors, making it a fun way to interact with new people.

    For newbies, the club offers free lessons to teach the basics of pickleball. The club offers paddles for those who don’t have one.

    Once beginners start playing, Brikho knows many of them are going to catch the pickleball craze and return.

    click to enlarge A lounge area with a TV that plays constant pickleball matches at Bash Pickleball Club. - Bash Pickleball Club

    Bash Pickleball Club

    A lounge area with a TV that plays constant pickleball matches at Bash Pickleball Club.

    Metro Detroit has a few indoor pickleball facilities, but they also share space with other sports. One of premier facilities in the area is Court4, a combo tennis-pickleball complex in Detroit that is inside a large, well-lit dome.

    In Pontiac, more than a dozen indoor pickleball courts are available for open play and reservations at UWM Sport Complex, which also hosts a variety of other sports.

    The closest pickleball-only facility to metro Detroit is Ann Arbor’s Wolverine Pickleball, which has beer on tap, 12 indoor courts, and large ceilings with bright lighting.

    Steve Neavling

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  • State agency probes Warren Police Department’s alleged offer to hide misconduct investigation

    State agency probes Warren Police Department’s alleged offer to hide misconduct investigation

    Former Warren Police Chief William Dwyer is accused of offering to hide an internal affairs investigation.

    This is part of an ongoing series about “wandering cops” in Michigan.

    A state agency is investigating the Warren Police Department over an email that suggests the city offered to hide the details of an internal affairs investigation if a top-ranking official agreed to resign.

    The email, obtained by Metro Times, raises serious questions about the police department’s willingness to follow a 2017 law intended to crack down on wandering cops, or officers who move from department to department amid allegations of misconduct.

    In August 2018, less than a year after the new law went into effect, city attorney Raechel M. Badalamenti said the police department would not finish its investigation and offered to keep “the entire original file” in her law office if then-Deputy Police Commissioner Matt Nichols resigned.

    By doing so, Nichols would have an easier time finding another job at a police department, even though he was accused of punching a suspect who was in custody. By moving the report to a law office and declining to finish the investigation, police departments considering hiring Nichols would not be privy to the information.

    The email suggested that then-Warren Police Commissioner William Dwyer was behind the offer.

    Nichols, who claims in a subsequent federal lawsuit that he was unlawfully pushed out of the department based on sham allegations, says he didn’t accept the offer because it was illegal.

    “I didn’t want to be a participant in violating a state law,” Nichols tells Metro Times. “They were inviting me to violate the law.”

    The Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement Standards (MCOLES), the state agency responsible for regulating police, confirmed it is investigating the email. MCOLES is also investigating claims, raised by Metro Times last week, that Dwyer falsely told the agency that another officer, Robert Priest, retired in “good standing,” even though he was under investigation.

    Priest ended up getting another police job in Romeo, where he was fired after pulling over Nichols as part of a “special project” in February 2022, leading to a lawsuit.

    Nichols claims Priest was out to get him because Nichols played a role in denying Priest a promotion to the rank of lieutenant.

    Both departments failed to comply with the 2017 wandering cops law.

    Dwyer was fired after the story went to press. On the day of his termination, newly elected Warren Mayor Lori Stone said she “is separating his duties as Police Commissioner” because their “viewpoints on hiring no longer aligned.”

    Nichols’s attorney Jamil Akhtar says he released the email to show that Warren has a history of covering up for cops accused of wrongdoing.

    “I don’t want this to be swept under the rug,” Akhtar tells Metro Times.

    Nichols was eventually fired in June 2019 after refusing to take the deal, prompting a lawsuit that alleges Dwyer embellished allegations against Nichols because he wanted a different deputy commissioner.

    Macomb County prosecutors declined to charge Nichols, and the alleged victim initially denied he was assaulted.

    The case is ongoing in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

    In an interview with Metro Times, Dwyer rejects the notion that he or Badalamenti would have extended the offer, despite the email indicating otherwise.

    “I personally would never have agreed to that,” Dwyer says. “I don’t think Badalamenti would either. This is the first I’ve heard of it.”

    In the email, Badalamenti calls the arrangement Dwyer’s “agreement.”

    “Commissioner very much wants to get this investigation wrapped up one way or the other very quickly so I must stress that his agreement that I hold off on a report is a very short one,” Badalamenti says.

    Nichols contends the email, combined with the other MCOLES investigation, shows that Warren police, under the leadership of Dwyer, has demonstrated “a pattern and practice of doing things illegally.”

    The wandering cops law is important, Nichols says, because it’s intended to prevent bad officers from bouncing from department to department.

    Steve Neavling

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  • Manhunt on for homicide suspect who escaped Pennsylvania jail

    Manhunt on for homicide suspect who escaped Pennsylvania jail

    Local, state and federal law enforcement agencies are searching for a 34-year-old homicide suspect who escaped from a northwestern Pennsylvania jail late Thursday night.

    Manhunt on for escaped Pennsylvania inmate
    An undated photo of inmate Michael Charles Burham, who escaped from the Warren County Jail in Warren, Pennsylvania, on July 6, 2023. 

    Warren City Police Department


    Michael Charles Burham was discovered missing Friday morning from the Warren County Jail, the Warren City Police Department said.

    Burham was being held on arson and burglary charges, and is a suspect in a homicide investigation, police said. He is also “associated” with the carjacking and kidnapping of a local couple that occurred in May, officials said.

    Warren County spokesperson Cecile Stelter told reporters Friday that Burham “elevated himself” onto “a piece of exercise equipment,” and then used “bedsheets that he tied together” to climb down from the roof and escape.

    Michael Charles Burham was discovered missing from the Warren County Jail in northwestern Pennsylvania on Friday morning. He was last seen wearing an orange and white striped inmate jumpsuit, a denim jacket and Crocs.

    Warren City Police Department


    In a news conference Saturday afternoon, Pennsylvania State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens described him as a “self-taught survivalist with military experience.”

    Bivens said that investigators “have no reason to believe” that he “has left the general area,” adding that he could be hiding in the woods.  

    Based on his past criminal history, it is possible Burham may have procured a firearm, Bivens said, and so he is considered to be armed and dangerous.

    At the time of his escape, he was being held on $1 million bail. He was last seen wearing an orange and white striped inmate jumpsuit, a denim jacket and Crocs.

    Warren is located about 10 miles south of the New York state line, and about 20 miles south of Jamestown, New York. 

    Local, state and federal agencies are involved in the manhunt, including the U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Border Patrol and the Jamestown Police Department.

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  • A hero’s lesson

    A hero’s lesson

    A hero’s lesson – CBS News


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    Young Dillon Reeves stepped in to save the day when his school bus driver became incapacitated following a medical emergency. Correspondent Steve Hartman talked with Reeves, and his parents, about why the Warren, Michigan, middle school student was able to spring into action while so many other kids could not.

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  • 7th Grade Student Prevents Accident After Bus Driver Passes Out

    7th Grade Student Prevents Accident After Bus Driver Passes Out

    WARREN, Mich. (AP) — A boy grabbed the steering wheel on a school bus and hit the brakes, bringing the vehicle to a safe stop on a busy Detroit-area road after the driver had passed out, authorities said.

    “Someone call 911. Now!” seventh-grader Dillon Reeves shouted to dozens of other middle-school kids on the bus Wednesday.

    Dillon was hailed as a hero: He stopped the bus as it was veering toward oncoming traffic.

    “In my 35-plus years of education, this was an extraordinary act of courage and maturity on his part,” said Robert Livernois, superintendent of Warren Consolidated Schools.

    The incident was recorded on a video camera just above the driver. The video shows the driver fanning herself with a baseball cap and informing the transportation office that she needs to pull over.

    Seconds later, Dillon jumped into action, hitting the brake pedal and clutching the steering wheel.

    “I don’t know that it could have gone any better,” Livernois said, noting that adults helped kids out the back door. “When you have an anchor like Dillon taking care of business on the bus, it really and truly was a good day for us.”

    Dillon declined to speak to reporters Thursday, but his parents, Steve and Ireta Reeves, were proud.

    “We’ve got a little hero,” Dillon’s dad said. “He’s been on my lap driving country roads, pulling into driveways since about 4 years old. … He’s a good driver.”

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