Friday, April 29, 2022

04292022 - Flint PD Officer Javion Miller - First Domestic Violence Assault Incident

 
Related Posts:







Flint Police officer fired and arrested
Mid-Michigan NOW
June 09, 2022

















Flint police officer fired after being charged with domestic assault
MLive
Jun. 09, 2022



FLINT, MI – A Flint police officer was fired this week after being charged with assaulting his domestic partner.

The former officer, Javion Miller, had been with the Flint Police Department for six months, according to a Wednesday, June 8, press release.

Online court records show he is charged with misdemeanor domestic assault and battery stemming from a June 1 incident. A separate file also charges him with domestic assault and battery but has an April 29 offense date.

A domestic assault complaint was filed with the department on June 1, alleging that Miller had assaulted his domestic partner.

The following day, the Flint Police Department Internal Affairs Division opened an internal investigation into the incident. Miller was placed on leave without pay pending the results of the investigation and review of the complaint by the city attorney’s office.

On Tuesday, June 7, the Flint city attorney’s office authorized a warrant for domestic assault against Miller. The department immediately fired him and placed him under arrest.

“Our agency will continue to demand the highest level of professionalism from those in the ranks that have sworn to protect the public,” the department said in a statement.


Tuesday, April 26, 2022

04262022 - A Glimpse Into What OIDV Victims Endure: Relative Of Andrew Zaleski Threatens OIDV Project Of Michigan If Post Is Not Removed



Related Post:






Despite Brianna Zaleski's threats, the post on Andrew Zaleski's arrest and conviction for domestic violence will remain on the OIDV Project Website. This is just a glimpse into what it must have been like for Zaleski's victim as she endured threats and retaliation in her fight for justice...












Monday, April 25, 2022

04252022 - Genesee County SD Deputy Jacob Wilkinson - Charged With Torturing/Killing Service Dog, Habs

 




Justice For Habs! Murder is murder!!!
Candace Shellnut/Sterling's Legacy Change.org Petition For Habs
Change.org



MDOC officer Jacob S. Wilkinson brutally tortured and murdered his adopted rescue dog named Habs. Habs was found dead in a ditch with his legs bound and mouth duct taped shut. He also had three .22 caliber bullets in his body. Habs is believed to have been murdered in September. The snow in Michigan his his body for months. 

While is pains me to write these details, we MUST stand up together for Habs. Whether human or furry, MURDER IS MURDER. Jacob Wilkinson must pay for his crimes. Laws need to change. This is a disgusting and heinous crime. 

While details are still coming in, we do know that the next court hearing is being held via zoom on May 9th at 10:15 a.m at the Saginaw County courthouse. We need your support. Please check Sterling's Legacy/Sterling's Legacy-public for more information.  












Dog allegedly killed by ex-corrections officer spurs planned protest at Saginaw County courthouse
MLive
May 06, 2022




SAGINAW, MI — In light of a former corrections officer charged with torturing and killing an inmate-trained dog he adopted, animal lovers are planning a protest outside the Saginaw County Courthouse.

The protest planned for the morning of Monday, May 9, coincides with the next scheduled court date of 25-year-old defendant Jacob S. Wilkinson. At 10:15 a.m., Wilkinson is to appear before Saginaw County District Judge Elian E.H. Fichtner for a pre-examination conference.

The hearing will be held remotely, meaning Wilkinson will appear before the judge via Zoom rather than in person.

Wilkinson on April 25 was arraigned on one count of second-degree torturing or killing an animal, a felony punishable by up to seven years in prison. The charge stems from Wilkinson allegedly killing a brown pit bull mix named Habs in September. At the time, Wilkinson worked as a corrections officer at the Saginaw Correctional Facility in Tittabawassee Township, where Habs had been trained by prisoners.

Habs, previously named Randy, came from the Humane Society of Macomb before arriving in Saginaw County.

Ken Kempkens, director of the Humane Society of Macomb, is organizing the protest and said he and fellow attendees plan on arriving between 9 and 9:30 a.m.

“We mainly want to call attention to the proceedings going on,” Kempkins said. “Our goal for that day is to try to get the judge to move the case from District Court to the Circuit Court level.”

So far, about nine people plan on participating, Kempkens said.

“Anybody who wants to come up there with us is absolutely welcome,” he said. “I know people up there are pretty passionate about what’s going up there. People are passionate about their animals. When something like this happens, we’re going to stay right on top of this.”

Habs had been trained by inmates at the Saginaw prison through Pinckney-based Blue Star Service Dogs. Blue Star’s program sees inmates within the prison’s veterans block live with and train dogs for four to six months.

Though Habs did not meet the requirements to be a veteran’s service dog, he completed basic obedience training before being adopted by Wilkinson.

“He didn’t pass the service dog test because he was too friendly,” Kempkens said. “This dog was so quick to learn. He was less than a year old when he left us.”

Saginaw County Road Commission personnel on March 24 found Habs’ carcass in a ditch near the intersection of West Freeland and Hackett roads in Tittabawassee Township. Animal Control officers retrieved the body, finding it had duct tape around its muzzle and both sets of legs and had been shot three times.

A necropsy — the animal equivalent to an autopsy — was performed on Habs’ body, during which a microchip was discovered. That microchip led investigators to Wilkinson, who by then was working at the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office.

Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson addressed the matter in a Facebook live video on April 27.

“We’re gonna hold our own accountable. Nobody is exempt from that,” Swanson said, holding a driver’s license identification photo of Wilkinson.

The sheriff said Wilkinson claimed he had been trimming Habs’ nails when the dog nipped at him.

“That guy thought … ‘You’re not gonna do that,’ so he duct taped the rear legs of the dog. Duct taped the front legs of the dog. Duct taped the muzzle,” Swanson said. “And because he lives in Saginaw, he dumped it in Tittabawassee Township. Before he dumped it and left, he shot it three times and killed it.”

Swanson expressed doubt that Habs had nipped at Wilkinson

“A service dog that has been trained by people … to help counsel and work through issues that is completely innocent, that dog nipped at him?” he rhetorically asked.

Wilkinson worked for the Michigan Department of Corrections from May 2, 2021, through Jan. 27. In December 2021, he applied for a job with the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office, months after he had allegedly killed Habs.

“He never disclosed in his interview that he shot and killed and tortured a dog,” Swanson said. “He never disclosed it to a psychologist when he was sent for a psychological interview before his hiring.”

Swanson hired Wilkinson on Jan. 31. He said Wilkinson graduated with honors from Saginaw Valley State University with a minor in psychology, was an EMT and combat medic, and is in the National Guard.

“He’s got a stellar background but never, never, did we know or even think he’d torture an animal like that,” Swanson said. Wilkinson only worked in the county jail as a corrections officer and was not a certified road deputy, he added.

The sheriff learned of Wilkinson’s alleged conduct through “the good work of our Saginaw County friends,” giving a personal shout-out to Saginaw County Animal Care & Control Director Bonnie Kanicki. Wilkinson was working a shift in the jail when investigators came to speak with him in April.

“When the detectives came down, we brought him down and without getting into all the details of the case, he confessed to everything,” Swanson said. “He was immediately terminated.

“Some people talk about the blue line,” he continued. “There ain’t no blue line when it comes to right and wrong.”

Kempkens stressed there are always alternatives to killing a pet, such as surrendering it to an animal shelter.

“This guy had options,” he said. “He could have called us and we would have taken Habs back in a second.”

Wilkinson is represented by Flint attorney Michael T. Beer. MLive has been unable to reach Beer for comment on the case.















Deputy Jacob Wilkinson Arrested!!!
The Skip Tracer
May 02, 2022
Genesee County Deputy Jacob Wilkinson was recently arrested for killing an innocent service dog. I found disturbing evidence showing that Jacob thinks he'll face no consequences.


















Genesee County deputy charged with torturing, shooting his service dog
Midland Daily News (MI)
May 2, 2022 
A former Michigan sheriff's deputy was arrested on a felony charge for torturing and killing his service dog after the animal allegedly nipped him.

Jacob Wilkinson was apprehended last week and was terminated from his post at the Genesee County Sheriff's Office after the corpse of his dog with its head and limbs duct-taped was discovered in a Saginaw County ditch, according to Genessee County Sheriff Christopher Swanson in a Facebook update on Friday, April 27.

Wilkinson reportedly killed his service dog, named Habs, sometime between September and October of 2021 because it "nipped at him" as he was cutting the canine's nails, according to Swanson.

"And that guy … thought he had enough control over the dog that you're not gonna do that. So he duct-taped the rear legs of the dog, duct-taped the front legs of the dog, duct-taped the muzzle," Swanson said.

Wilkinson bound Habs, shot him three times and dumped the remains in the ditch. But the gruesome sight wasn't uncovered until spring thaw melted away blanketing snow.

The remains were discovered by road commission workers in March, and authorities were notified.

A necropsy, which is an animal autopsy, found that the dog was shot three times and that it had a microchip ID.

"They used the technology and they tracked that microchip to a resident of Saginaw County … and they tracked that individual to be Jacob Wilkinson," Swanson said.

At the time of his crime, Wilkinson was working for the Michigan Department of Corrections, assigned to the Saginaw area, according to Swanson. Wilkinson had helped train Habs, who was part of a blue star service training program in which inmates within the Michigan Department of Corrections help train service dogs to give to veterans and officers.

When Habs' training was complete, Wilkinson adopted him.

"A service dog that has been trained by people … that is completely innocent," Swanson said. "That dog nipped at him and he tortured it and he killed it and he left it for dead."

Wilkinson applied for the sheriff's office in December of 2021. And he went through the process like anybody else, according to Swanson.

"He never disclosed in his interview that he shot and killed a dog. That he tortured a dog. He never disclosed it to a psychologist when he was sent for a psychological interview before his hiring on the 11th of January 2022."

Wilkinson is in the national guard and he graduated from SVSU with honors, with a minor in psychology. He was an EMT. He worked as a combat medic, according to Swanson.

"Has got a stellar background. But never did we know, or even think he'd torture an animal like that." Swanson went on to say Wilkinson confessed to everything and has been charged with a seven-year felony along with his termination from the Genessee County Sheriff's Office.

"This isn't the first time that we've held our staff here accountable. It's not the first time that we've arrested our own," Swanson said. "I've been elected as the sheriff to hold this office accountable to the people and I'm gonna continue to do that."

Wilkinson was arraigned Tuesday. Bond was set at $10,000, and he was ordered not to possess or purchase a firearm or other dangerous weapon or to have contact with animals, court records show.

His next hearing date is slated for May 9.

The case has alarmed animal advocates. For instance, a group that fights for the rights of the pit bull breed called Stand Up For Pits Foundation, Inc, posted about Wilkinson's crime on Facebook Friday, April 29 to its 127,000 followers.

"The murderer's next hearing date is slated for May 9," Stand Up For Pits Foundation stated in the post. "This is call to action to demand he serve the full sentence for this horrific crime against a voiceless helpless being. If someone can please do some research as to who the decision-makers are in this case and send it to info@standupforpits.us we will post this call to action. This story cannot just disappear. It needs to be heard and known and the human who did this needs to suffer consequences."















What Cop Did To This Dog SHOULD PUT HIM BEHIND BARS
The Junkyard News
Apr 29, 2022

















Rescued stray dog tortured and killed by Michigan deputy who adopted him
FOX 2 - Detroit
Apr 28, 2022

Wilkinson has been charged for torturing and killing Habs after the dog was found in a Saginaw County ditch duct-taped and shot to death. It turns out, Habs was left there in September.

















Ex-Corrections officer charged in his pet dog's torture and killing in Saginaw Co.
Detroit News
April 28, 2022



A former state corrections officer and former Genesee County sheriff's deputy has been charged in connection with torturing and killing his dog, the county's top cop announced this week.

Jacob Wilkinson was arraigned Tuesday in Saginaw County Circuit Court on one count of second-degree animal torture/killing, records show.

Wilkinson, who previously worked for the Michigan Department of Corrections, faces up to seven years in prison, Genesee County Sheriff Christopher Swanson said in a Facebook update Wednesday.

He had only been with the county office 42 days when he was fired as a result of the charge, Swanson added.

"This isn't the first time that we've held our staff here accountable. It's not the first time that we've arrested our own," Swanson said. "I've been elected as the sheriff to hold this office accountable to the people and I'm gonna continue to do that."

Authorities started investigating after road crews found a dog's remains in Tittabawasee Township in Saginaw County, Swanson said.

A necropsy determined the dog, named Habs, had been shot three times, the sheriff said. Media reports said the dog had been shot in the head. The dog's front and rear legs as well its muzzle had also been duct-taped.

A microchip led to an address in Saginaw and Wilkinson, he said.

An attorney representing Wilkinson did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

Jacobson attended a preliminary examination conference Monday in 70th District Court in Saginaw County via Zoom, according to court staff. No new hearings have yet been scheduled in the matter. 

Habs was part of the Blue Star service program that helps military veterans, and Wilkinson adopted the animal after working to train it through MDOC in Saginaw County, Swanson said.

Wilkinson told investigators he bound the dog with duct tape after a nail-trimming incident in September or October last year, Swanson said.

"That dog nipped at him and he tortured it and he killed it and he left it for dead."

Wilkinson served in the National Guard, was a combat veteran and studied psychology at Saginaw Valley State University.

He never disclosed the incident to county officials when applying for his job last year or undergoing a psychological evaluation, Swanson said.

Saginaw County Animal Care & Control Director Bonnie Kanicki alerted Swanson about the probe. The sheriff said he allowed Wilkinson to be questioned immediately in what he called a "horrific, horrendous murder."

"He confessed everything," Swanson said. "He was immediately terminated."

At his arraignment, Wilkinson was ordered not to possess firearms or animals. Bond was set at $10,000. A hearing is scheduled for May 9.

His case has alarmed animal advocates. Candace Shellnut, who leads Sterling's Legacy, a group that formed after a Macomb County pit bull mix was slain in 2019, this week launched a Change.org petition calling for stricter punishment. It has collected more than 2,000 signatures.

She hopes keeping the case in the public eye leads to stronger penalties for animal abuse.

"I'm just disgusted," Shellnut said Thursday. "I cannot believe a human would do that to another living being."















Ex-corrections officer, deputy charged with killing dog trained by prisoners
MLive
Apr. 27, 2022


SAGINAW, MI — When the spring thaw melted away the blanketing snow, it unveiled a grisly sight in a muddy Saginaw County ditch: the carcass of a dog, its muzzle and limbs duct taped, bullet holes in its head.

Little did investigators know their ensuing investigation would lead them to a suspect who worked as a corrections officer for the Michigan Department of Corrections and was a deputy with the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office.

Now, their suspect is facing a felony for allegedly torturing and killing the dog he adopted, one that had undergone training by MDOC prisoners.

On March 24, Saginaw County Road Commission employees reported finding the carcass in a ditch near the intersection of West Freeland and Hackett roads in Tittabawassee Township, according to Saginaw County Animal Care & Control Director Bonnie Kanicki. Two Animal Control officers went to retrieve the body, finding it had duct tape around its muzzle and both sets of legs.

Officers took the body back to headquarters and discovered the dog had been microchipped. This led investigators to the Humane Society of Macomb, where staff said the dog had been transferred to them from Detroit Animal Care and Control. The dog, originally named Randy, was then transferred to Pinckney-based Blue Star Service Dogs.

Randy was renamed Habs after a veteran who died of suicide and was trained by inmates of the Saginaw Correctional Facility, Kanicki said. Blue Star’s program sees inmates within the prison’s veterans block live with and train dogs for four to six months.

“These dogs master basic obedience, command training, and pre-task training and basic tasks such as turning off and on lights, picking up objects, and opening doors,” Blue Star’s website states.

Though Habs came short of meeting the service dog standards, he completed obedience training, Kanicki said. When Habs’ training was finished, corrections officer Jacob S. Wilkinson adopted him, having been familiar with him through the training process, Kanicki said.

Investigators also sent the carcass for a necropsy — the animal equivalent of an autopsy — to determine the cause of death. The necropsy showed Habs had been shot three times in its head with .22-caliber bullets, Kanicki said.

“It just shocks the conscience,” Kanicki said. “That dog suffered greatly.”

By the time of the carcass’ discovery, Wilkinson was no longer employed by the MDOC and was then working for the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office, Kanicki said.

Investigators interviewed Wilkinson, who confessed to killing Habs and dumping his body in the ditch, Kanicki said. Wilkinson told investigators he had been trying to trim Habs’ nails when the dog nipped at him, prompting Wilkinson to wrap him in duct tape, drive him out to the ditch, shoot him three times, and leave his carcass, Kanicki said.

Wilkinson is believed to have killed Habs in September, with snow concealing the body for months.

Authorities issued a warrant for Wilkinson on Monday, April 25. The next afternoon, Wilkinson voluntarily appeared before Saginaw County District Judge David D. Hoffman via Zoom for arraignment on one count of second-degree torturing or killing of an animal. The felony is punishable by up to seven years in prison.

Defense attorney Michael Beer appeared with Wilkinson at the arraignment. He said Wilkinson graduated with honors from Saginaw Valley State University, is a current member of the National Guard, is an EMT, and was employed by the MDOC for six months. MDOC’s own records show Wilkinson was employed from May 2, 2021, through Jan. 27, during which time he worked at the Saginaw Correctional Facility.

Wilkinson was a Genesee County Sheriff’s deputy until Friday, April 22, Beer said.

“Unfortunately, due to the charges he did end up losing his job on Friday,” Beer said.

He said Wilkinson lives with his father in Saginaw and has forfeited all of his firearms. He asked the judge to set a personal recognizance bond.

“He is not a danger, he will not flee,” Beer said.

Hoffman freed Wilkinson on a $10,000 personal recognizance bond. Conditions of his bond are that he not possess firearms or animals.

The judge scheduled Wilkinson’s case for a pre-examination conference at 10:15 a.m. on May 9.



















Wednesday, April 6, 2022

04062022 - Detroit PD Officer Michael Carson - Charged With CSC Of Minor

 




Detroit police officer accused of sexually abusing young family member will go to trial
Abuse began when girl was 6 years old, witness says
Click On Detroit
September 22, 2022



BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, Mich. – A judge has decided that there is enough evidence to send a Detroit police officer to trial in a child sex abuse case.

The decision came after a 15-year-old high school student testified that Michael Anthony Carson sexually abused her for years.

Carson is a family member of hers. He has been charged with two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a minor.

She testified that she was six years old when Carson began ordering her to perform oral sex. She said she was 10 years old when Carson began sexual penetration almost daily.

The girl’s mother also testified on Thursday. She said she wasn’t aware of the abuse until recent years, but didn’t report it to police until months later -- in January 2022.

“I was in shock (and) denial),” her mother testified.

Carson was arrested and charged on April 1.

“The allegations stemming from this investigation, which have spanned several years, are disturbing and do not represent the overwhelming majority of the hardworking men and women of the Detroit Police Department,” Detroit police Chief James White said in a statement in April. “The DPD will continue to cooperate with the investigation.”

Carson had worked with the Detroit Police Department for 20 years and was placed on administrative leave without pay.

“These are just allegations right now,” Carson’s defense attorney Lillian Diallo said.
















Bond reduced for a Detroit cop charged with rape of Oakland Co. child
Detroit News
April 11, 2022



Bloomfield Township — A veteran Detroit police officer remained jailed on charges of sexually assaulting a minor in West Bloomfield Township but received a lower bond at a court hearing Monday.

Michael A. Carson, 60, a 22-year-veteran of the Detroit Police Department was arraigned on April 1 on two counts of criminal sexual conduct involving a victim under the age of 13 years old, according to Bloomfield Township 48th District Court Records. Police said the allegations involve reported incidents over several years.

He was scheduled for a probable cause hearing before Judge Kimberly Small but his defense attorneys requested a later date to allow them more time to review evidence in the case.

Defense attorneys also cited Carson’s ties to the community, long term of public service and no prior criminal history as an adult or as a juvenile as supporting a lower bond. Carson has three adult children and seven grandchildren living out of state, attorneys said.

Small set a May 3 preliminary examination in the case and approved a request for a lower bond for Carson — $500,000 with a 10 percent provision — with certain conditions on his release.

“Obviously the nature of the allegations in this case are extremely serious,” Small told attorneys, who said she would require that Carson wear a GPS tether as a condition of release and have no contact of any kind, including by a third party, or come within five miles of the alleged victim or her mother.

One of Carson’s attorneys, Lillian Diallo, described the charges to The Detroit News as “outrageous” and said they stem from a pending divorce.

Carson was arrested with the assistance of Detroit police, a West Bloomfield Police Department spokesman said.

Detroit Police Chief James White said he was asking Carson be suspended without pay pending the outcome of the case.

“The allegations stemming from this investigation, which have spanned several years, are disturbing and do not represent the overwhelming majority of the hardworking men and women of the Detroit Police Department,” White said. “The DPD will continue to cooperate with the investigation.”

Carson faces up to life in prison if convicted of the charges.















Detroit police officer charged with sex assault of minor
Click On Detroit
Apr 8, 2022

A Detroit police officer is being held on $750,000 bond after being charged with two counts of criminal sexual conduct first degree. The victim is a minor.

















Detroit Police Dept. releases vague statement about officer who did bad thing (allegedly)
Why are cops like this
Detroit Metro Times
Apr 8, 2022 


Last year, the Detroit Police Department's new police chief, James E. White, acknowledged that law enforcement has a trust problem.

"I think you get the people to believe in policing and trust the police by partnerships. You get the increased trust through transparency and acknowledgment," he told the Detroit Free Press, adding, "I'm not speaking to Detroit, just generally speaking. So there has been a lack of trust in policing."

Well, things are off to a bad start. On Thursday night, DPD released the following vague statement in an email with the subject line, "Statement from Chief James E. White Regarding Officer Charged':

“The allegations stemming from this investigation, which have spanned several years, are disturbing and do not represent the overwhelming majority of the hardworking men and women of the Detroit Police Department. The DPD will continue to cooperate with the investigation.

Today, I am making a request to the Board of Police Commissioners that the officer-involved be suspended without pay pending the outcome of this matter.” - James E. White, Chief of Police

That's it. That's the whole statement. There is no mention of which officer was charged, or the crime allegedly committed.

A quick Google search pulls up a Fox 2 article published Thursday about a DPD officer named Michael Anthony Carson, who was arraigned on two counts of first-degree sexual conduct on Wednesday for raping a minor in West Bloomfield.

According to the article, Carson, 60, is accused of abusing the child for seven years, since the child was 6.

The obfuscating language commonly used by police was undoubtedly a huge factor that led to the 2020 summer of protests against police brutality. When the Minneapolis Police Department first described how George Floyd died, it simply reported that a man died after he "appeared to be suffering medical distress." A now-famous video shot by a 17-year-old bystander later showed that Floyd died after officer Derek Chauvin kneeled on Floyd's neck while other officers looked on. Chauvin is now behind bars for manslaughter, but he almost certainly would not be if the enormous discrepancy between how MPD described the incident and the video evidence was not revealed.

Police departments — and the journalists who parrot them — routinely use a passive voice and vague phrases like "officer-involved shooting" to describe when cops shoot people. Police love to say "officer-involved." In his statement, White says that the "officer-involved" should be suspended without pay, even though that doesn't grammatically make sense. Police are just so used to typing "officer-involved" that at this point it's muscle memory.

Metro Times replied to the press release by asking who the officer was, what they were charged with, and why DPD and other police departments always have to be so unnecessarily opaque about everything. We have not received a response.















Detroit police officer charged with sexual assault of a minor in Oakland Co.
The Detroit News
April 08, 2022



West Bloomfield Twp. — A veteran Detroit police officer is jailed and facing charges of sexually assaulting a minor in West Bloomfield Township, police confirmed Friday.

Michael A. Carson, 60, a 22-year-veteran of the Detroit Police Department, was arraigned on April 1 on two counts of criminal sexual conduct involving a victim under the age of 13 years old, according to Bloomfield District Court records. He is held in the Oakland County Jail in lieu of a $750,000 bond.

A probable cause hearing is scheduled for Monday.

The arrest was based on a complaint to township police by the alleged victim regarding incidents over several years, Detroit police said.

“I can confirm he was arrested "with the assistance of Detroit police,” West Bloomfield Township Deputy Chief Curt Lawson said.

Lawson declined further comment.

Carson’s co-counsel, Lillian Diallo, described the charges as "outrageous."

"It's outrageous to charge and jail a person on such a high bond on unsubstantiated charges which stem out of a pending divorce," Diallo said.

"They come from someone who alleges witnessing things over several years but never made a report or complaint about them," she added. "There are going to be some trouble with this case and those who brought it."

Detroit Police Chief James White said “the allegations stemming from this investigation, which have spanned several years, are disturbing and do not represent the overwhelming majority of the hardworking men and women of the Detroit Police Department. The DPD will continue to cooperate with the investigation."

White said he intended to make a request to the Board of Police Commissioners that Carson "be suspended without pay pending the outcome of this matter.” 

Carson faces up to life in prison if convicted as charged.















Detroit PD Officer Michael Carson: Administrative Leave Without Pay
Detroit Board Of Police Commissioners
April 7, 2022



















Detroit police officer accused of raping a minor
FOX 2 News - Detroit
Apr 7, 2022

A Detroit police officer has been charged and is being held in the Oakland County Jail, on a $750,000 bond, cash surety.

















Detroit police officer charged in sex abuse of minor
Click On Detroit
Apr 7, 2022

A Detroit police officer is being charged with two counts of criminal sexual conduct with a minor.

















Detroit Police Officer Charged In Sexual Assault Of Minor
CBS News - Detroit
April 07, 2022
(CBS DETROIT) – A Detroit police officer has been charged with sexually assaulting a minor, Fox 2 News reports.

On Wednesday, April 6, Michael Anthony Carson, was arraigned on two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct in Oakland County.

Sources told Fox 2 News that the assaults have been going on for seven years and the victim is believed to be the only victim assaulted by Carson.

“The allegations stemming from this investigation, which have spanned several years, are disturbing and do not represent the overwhelming majority of the hardworking men and women of the Detroit Police Department. The DPD will continue to cooperate with the investigation.” Police Chief James White said in a statement. “Today, I am making a request to the Board of Police Commissioners that the officer-involved be suspended without pay pending the outcome of this matter.”

Law enforcement from other jurisdictions are investigating this case, which could lead to more charges.

Carson is being held on on a $750,000 cash/surety bond.
















Detroit police officer charged with sexually assaulting minor
FOX 2 News - Detroit
April 7, 2022


WEST BLOOMFIELD, Mich. (FOX 2) - A Detroit police officer has been charged with sexually assaulting a minor in West Bloomfield.

The officer, Michael Anthony Carson, was arraigned on two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct Wednesday in Oakland County, FOX 2 has learned.

According to sources, the assaults have been going on for seven years. The minor is believed to be the only victim assaulted by Carson.

Carson is being held on a $750,000 cash/surety bond.

More charges could follow, as law enforcement from other jurisdictions are also investigation Carson's actions.

Detroit police are aware of the allegations but did not immediately provide a comment.

The department will request the Police Board of Commissioners move to suspend Carson without pay and health insurance. 
















Detroit cop accused of sexually assaulting minor over course of 7 years
MLive
Apr. 07, 2022


WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI -- Michael Anthony Carson, a police officer with the Detroit Police Department, has been charged with two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct after he allegedly sexually assaulted a minor.

According to Fox 2 Detroit, Carson, 59, was arraigned Wednesday in Oakland County on the charges stemming from an investigation into claims that he assaulted the minor. Fox 2 also reports the assaults took place over the course of seven years.

During the arraignment, the judge set bond at $750,000 cash/surety and Carson is currently being held at the Oakland County Jail.

The minor involved in the case is believed to be the only known victim at the time, but further charges could be brought against Carson by other jurisdictions. The Detroit Police Department is aware of the case, but did not comment on the matter.

However, the department is expected to ask the Police Board of Commissioners to suspend Carson without pay and health insurance as the case unfolds.