Sunday, August 29, 2004

08292004 - Waterford Police Officer Mike Waleskowski - Suspended - Waterford PD







On August 29, 2004, Officer Mike Waleskowski was suspended from the Waterford Township Police Department for his theft from the property room the previous day... 









Suspended Officer Kills Family, Self; Sets House Afire
Man Accused Of Stealing $500 From Police Fund

Detroit Free Press
August 30, 2004
http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/3690485/detail.html

WATERFORD TOWNSHIP, Mich. -- A Waterford Township police officer shot andkilled his wife, child, and himself after he was suspended from the department early Sunday, according to Local 4 reports.

Police announced in a 3 p.m. press conference that an investigation revealed that Officer Mike Waleskowski killed his 40-year-old wife, Lorna, and their 9-year-old son, Hayden, in their home on Meadowview Drive.

Police say Waleskowski, 40, set the house on fire to cover up their deaths and his suicide moments later, the station reported.

Authorities believe Waleskowski's suspension from the force may have motivated the attack.

Waleskowski was being investigated both criminally and internally for the theft of money and had been suspended from the Waterford Police Department, according to Chief John Dean, of the Waterford Police Department.

Waleskowski allegedly stole about $500 from a police department fund.

"They called him in, in the middle of his shift, and took his gun and his badge away and drove him home at 3:30 in the morning," said Beth Wright, a family friend.

The bodies were discovered in the home after the fire broke out about 6:45 a.m. Sunday.

Neighbors said they tried to save the family from the fire.

It was initially believed they were trapped inside the fire, but the Oakland County medical examiner ruled Monday that the victims died from gunshot wounds to the head.

Neighbor John Bojczyk said as he grabbed a hose to help put out the flames, he then heard gunshots.

Neighbors reportedly backed away from the home until firefighters arrived.

The fire was extinguished within 15 minutes, Local 4 reported. The family was believed to be in the second floor of the home, which collapsed. The Waleskowskis reportedly lived in the home for 10 years.

Three firefighters were injured while fighting the blaze, according to Waterford police. They were sent to a hospital for treatment.

"Needless to say, it's a pretty tragic day for the members of the Waterford Police Department and the community," Dean said after hearing the news Sunday.

Hayden was expected to begin fifth grade at Haviland Elementary School Monday. His former teacher, Kathryn Kluesner, said the family was remarkable and very close knit.

"It's a terrible loss," said Kluesner.

Rhonda Lessel of the Waterford School District said counseling would be available to students Monday.

"Mike worshiped her and he adored Hayden and I just can't believe he did this," said Wright.

Police say Waleskowski left behind a suicide note."From what I understand, the note said he could not live with the disgrace," Wright said.


Suspended Michigan Cop Shot Family, Burned House, Then Turned The Gun On Himself
Officer.Com
August 31st, 2004
http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?id=16592&siteSection=5

WATERFORD TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) -- A suspended police officer under criminal investigation shot his wife and 9-year-old son before killing himself as part of a double murder-suicide, his department said Monday.

The bodies of Officer Michael Waleskowski, his wife Lorna and son Hayden were found inside their Waterford Township home Sunday morning. When authorities arrived, the house was engulfed in flames, but Robert Gerds, administrator for the Oakland County medical examiner's office, said all three died from gunshot wounds to the head.

He said Waleskowski's manner of death was determined to be suicide, while the others were homicides.Waterford Township Police Chief John Dean said Waleskowski was under criminal and internal investigation for allegations of stealing money.

He said Waleskowski had been suspended because of the investigation, but didn't give any more details.

``We now believe that Officer Mike Waleskowski killed his wife, his 9-year-old son and then killed himself,'' Dean told reporters at a news conference. After reading from a prepared statement, Dean took no questions. ``It's a very difficult time for all of us,'' Dean said.

Beth White, a family friend who came to the police department for the news conference, said afterward that Waleskowski was suspended during his shift just hours before the 6:45 a.m. EDT fire was reported.

White said neither she nor others who knew Waleskowski thought he was capable of killing his family.

``I don't think they can believe it either,'' White said of Waleskowski's police colleagues. ``They're all in shock. They were his friends."

'Neither police nor fire officials would say what role the fire played in the double murder-suicide.

Dennis Storrs, the township fire chief, said there was a high probability that flammable liquids were involved in the fire, which injured three firefighters who battled the blaze.

``The house was literally an inferno,'' Storrs said.

The bodies were found in bedrooms on the upper floor of the two-story house where the Waleskowskis had lived for at least 10 years, authorities said Sunday.

Storrs on Monday declined to discuss details of what firefighters found inside the home, noting that the investigation into the deaths was ongoing.

Waleskowski was a five-year veteran of the police department in Waterford Township, about 35 miles northwest of Detroit.

Hayden would have started fifth grade Monday at Haviland Elementary School, where he was a student since kindergarten, said district spokeswoman Rhonda Lessel.

Lessel said the school's roughly 54 fifth graders were told Monday that a one of the school's students died in a fire, and that a letter was sent home with children to parents explaining the situation. She also said the school had counselors and psychologists available to talk with the children.


Shame turned good cop into killer
Interview, 911 call, suicide note paint chilling picture of Waterford officer's final hours

The Detroit News
Sep 13, 2004
http://www.detnews.com/2004/metro/0409/14/a01-273029.htm

WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — It was 4:28 a.m. on a late August morning when Officer Michael Waleskowski turned from enforcing the law to breaking it. Overwhelmed with debt, and facing a $939 property tax bill he couldn’t pay, Waleskowski, 39, tapped into the quickest source of cash he could find: he stole money from the police property room. The money belonged to a drunken driving suspect being held at the county jail.

Waleskowski was caught on tape and 26 hours later, the shame of being a good cop gone bad turned him into a killer.

Waleskowski shot his son, Hayden, 9, while the child lay sleeping in a makeshift tent in their family room. Investigators concluded that he carried the boy’s lifeless body to the bed where his mother, Lorna, slept.

Waleskowski next turned his gun on the family Chihuahua and at 6:46 a.m. on Aug. 29, he shot and killed Lorna, his wife of 15 years. He set their home on fire before climbing into the bed and shooting himself, investigators said.

The last hours of the Waleskowski family are chronicled first in police tapes of an interview with a man known to his fellow cops as a fine officer and a loving family man; in 911 calls from their home as Waleskowski went on his rampage; and in a suicide note he left taped to the driver’s side window of his truck.

“My family will forgive me, but I will never forgive myself,” Waleskowski wrote. “I know this is the coward’s way out, but I cannot go back to work after this is all over even if I had a job. I cannot leave this world and leave my family here to listen to the ridicule and whispers.”

Emmanuel Tanay, a forensic psychiatrist at Wayne State University, said the killing of a family by a suicidal member is well-documented in psychiatric research. “We are a unit; I go and the family goes with me,” Tanay said in explaining the mind-set of suicidal family members.

Waleskowski told investigators in a taped interview that he was $500 short of being able to pay his summer property tax bill. The amount he stole: $466.

“I was a few hundred bucks short,” he said on the tape. “I just spent $300 on school clothes for my kid. I spent the whole day thinking about how I could get (the stolen money) back. I thought I could slip it in a different bin so guys thought the property was given to the wrong person,” he told investigators. “It’s like pulling the trigger; once you do it, you can’t take it back.”

But property taxes were only the beginning of Waleskowski’s debt. Records show he owed $61,000 on credit cards and another $9,600 on other loans. Moreover, Oakland County deed records show the couple bought their home in Waterford in 1993 for $109,000 and took out a $99,000 mortgage. They refinanced the house nine times in the next 11 years, pushing their debt on the house to $200,000 in their last mortgage in December 2003.

Michael Waleskowski’s base salary was $55,000 a year. Overtime often pushed that up to above $70,000. He also made an undetermined amount of money working part-time as a security guard. Lorna Waleskowski’s job as a pharmacy technician for Oakland County paid $31,000 and made their combined salaries at least $86,000 a year.

His overtime and his part-time work pushed their income above $100,000 in a township where the median household income was $55,008 when the 2000 census was taken.

The family’s money woes stumped investigators who said there was no evidence that Waleskowski used drugs, gambled or had other vices more commonly linked to such extensive debts.

Colleagues saw a family man who fished and golfed with his 9-year-old son. His bosses saw a police officer who worked hard and well. Waleskowski took pride in his work and described his marriage as perfect: “We had two fights in 16 years,” he said on the tape.

“I can see someone in financial trouble stealing; you can almost understand that,” said Waterford Deputy Police Chief Dale LaCroix, who was Waleskowski’s golf partner. “But the rest, we just don’t know. No one saw it coming.”

A good cop
Michael Waleskowski was good at his job. He’d worked for the Orchard Lake Police Department for 12 years before transferring to Waterford in 1999.

Waleskowski worked midnights and served on the department’s crash reconstruction team.

“He was above average in terms of arrests and tickets,” LaCroix said.

Waleskowski’s life at home appeared equally rewarding. Waleskowski had married Lorna Naylor on June 10, 1989, and five years later, Hayden was born. Co-workers said that Waleskowski loved spending time with his son.

“When his son wasn’t in school, he would bring him with him to court,” said Police Chief John Dean. “His son just idolized him. All he wanted to be was a Waterford police officer.”

Images recorded by security cameras in the property room of the Waterford Police Department on Aug. 28 show an officer enter the property room with the lights off and retrieve a key to a property bin. The figure walks off camera momentarily.

LaCroix said a separate camera in the hallway records Waleskowski walking out of the room with a property bag under his arm at the same time.

“I grabbed the bag and took it,” Waleskowski said later, as two Sheriff’s detectives questioned him about the theft. “I’ve got it at home.”

The property in the bag belonged to a suspected drunken driver arrested six hours earlier by another officer. The driver spent the night in the Oakland County Jail and returned to Waterford about 8:30 a.m. to retrieve his things.

“The guy wanted his property,” Dean said. “The desk sergeant went down to the property room and couldn’t find it. So he told the man it was misplaced and we would contact him when we found it.”

Search continues
Dean said officers continued to search the property room throughout the day on Aug. 28. When the afternoon shift commanders came on duty at 3 p.m., they were told property was missing from an arrest on their shift.

LaCroix said commanders questioned the officer who arrested the drunken driver and he described logging the man’s property and having a fellow officer place it in a bin. The second officer confirmed his version of events, so did videotape from the security cameras.

That same tape eventually showed Waleskowski taking the bag. Commanders began an internal investigation on Waleskowski and asked the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department to send over detectives to review the criminal case.

They called in Sheriff’s deputies to head off any question about the integrity of the investigation. Also called in that night was LaCroix, who consulted with Dean by telephone. LaCroix said later that Waleskowski showed no sign of emotional distress.

Sheriff detectives reviewed the tapes and dispatch logs and prepared to question Waleskowski. It was after midnight when they tried to bring him in, but he was assisting on a K-9 track of a break-in suspect and took more than an hour to clear his call, LaCroix said.

About 2 a.m. investigators sat Waleskowski in an interview room facing a video camera.

Waleskowski first said he visited the property room twice during his shift, both times to log property from people he’d arrested. He denied returning a third time.

“You did return,” one of the detectives told him. “It’s you clear as a bell on tape. You’re not doing too good. It’s on videotape.”

Took bag home
Waleskowski’s hands moved from his chin to under his nose, but his demeanor changed little. He then admitted taking the bag and hiding it in an evidence room until the end of his shift, when he took it home.

The detectives asked Waleskowski to sign a form allowing them to search his house and retrieve the property. He agreed. They said they wanted to call his wife, so she wouldn’t be startled by the officers in the home, but he became reluctant.

Waleskowski said his wife took sleeping pills. “She’ll never wake up,” Waleskowski said.

He eventually accompanied officers to his home. They recovered the property bag from a shed attached to the house. The money was inside the home.

Waleskowski surrendered his service weapon and a personal gun he kept at home. Officers did not know he had another weapon, the one he used for the killings.

After investigators finished talking to Waleskowski at the station, he went home a final time. Some fellow officers went with him and it was after 3 a.m. when they left him there. Waleskowski assured them he would be fine.

At 4 a.m. he sat down at a computer and typed out a suicide note. He addressed it to Dean, LaCroix and his fellow officers. He taped the note on the driver’s window of his truck parked in the driveway.

Investigators concluded that Waleskowski killed his son first. He died from a single gunshot to the head.

Waleskowski apparently carried the boy’s body upstairs and placed him in bed with his sleeping mother.

Someone calls 911
At 6:46 a.m. someone in the home dialed 911 but said nothing. The department’s computer system recorded sounds from the line even before the dispatcher answered the phone, which is possible through 911 recording technology.

The sound of a single gunshot is heard on the tape just before the dispatcher picks up the phone. Investigators believe that shot killed the family’s Chihuahua.

After the dispatcher hung up because there was no response, the computer continued recording what sounds like a groggy woman’s voice saying “Hello.”

Another gunshot can be heard on the tape before it stops recording. Ninety seconds later a neighbor called 911 to report seeing smoke coming from the home. When fire crews arrived, flames were pouring out the windows.

LaCroix said gasoline had been poured throughout the home. The entire family and the dog were found in the bed, Dean said.

Officers have grappled with how to move past the tragedy. Dean said he’s been criticized for the handling of the incident, but he can’t see how anything could have been done differently.

Waleskowski gave no indication what he was planning, Dean said.

“When he stole that property, it was a gross violation of public trust,” Dean said. “We couldn’t look the other way. That badge is bigger than all of us.”


Thursday, August 26, 2004

08262004 - Officer Nicole Rabior - Suspended - Detroit PD


Also See:

Officer Nicole Rabior - Arrested for domestic violence against boyfriend





Detroit Police Officer Nicole Rabior was arrested and charged with felonious assault in an August 24, 2004 domestic violence assault against her boyfriend. According to the police report, Officer Rabior hit her boyfriend [a Detroit Firefighter] with a bottle of water; kicked in a bedroom door; grabbed the phone out of her boyfriend's hand; and hit him five times on the back with the cell phone charger.



Information on Officer Nicole  Rabior's domestic violence case and the charges against her seem to have disappeared. But, in September 2010 Officer Rabior resurfaced in the news. This time Officer Rabior [still a police officer with the Detroit PD]  had been arrested for drunk driving.




 
 
 
 
 
BOARD OF POLICE COMMISSIONERS
Minutes of the Regular Board of Police Commissioners Meeting
Thursday, August 26, 2004
The regular meeting of the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners was held on
Thursday, August 26, 2004, at 3:00 p.m., at Police Headquarters, 1300 Beaubien – Rm. 328-A, Detroit, Michigan 48226.

4. SECRETARY’S REPORT – EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR GOSS(Chairperson Blackwell entered the conference room.)

SUSPENSIONS
On August 26, 2004, Police Officer Nicole Rabior, Badge 645, assigned to the Ninth Precinct, was suspended without pay by Chief Ella M. Bully- Cummings.

On August 25, 2004, the Professional Accountability Bureau, Internal Affairs Section was notified of an allegation of misconduct on the part of Police Officer Nicole Rabior, badge 645, assigned to the Ninth Precinct. More specifically, the complaint alleged that Officer Rabior used unjustified physical force against her domestic partner (hereinafter complainant).

As a result, the Internal Affairs Section initiated an investigation, which revealed the following:

On August 25, 2004, at approximately 12:15 a.m., Officer Rabior was at home with the complainant in Clinton Township, Michigan. At that time, a verbal altercation ensued. During the course of the verbal altercation, Officer Rabior threw a plastic bottle at the complainant and struck him in the head with her fist.

Whereupon the complainant retreated to the bedroom and once inside locked the door thereto. Officer Rabior then kicked down the door to the bedroom and grabbed the telephone out of the complainant's hand.

Officer Rabior then grabbed the cellular telephone charger and struck the complainant with it in the back area approximately five (5) times.

The complainant fled the location and proceeded to the Clinton Township Police Department wherein he filed a complaint.

At that time, photographs were taken and injuries to the complainant were documented. After which, Clinton Township Police Officers proceeded to Officer Rabior's residence, placed her into custody, and transported her to the Clinton Township Police Department for processing.

Officer Rabior was then lodged in the Macomb County Jail, pending the issuance of a warrant.

On August 25, 2004, a felony warrant was issued against Officer Rabior, charging her with “Felonious Assault,” contrary to MCL 750.82. Felonious Assault is punishable as a felony with four (4) years in prison and/or a fine of $2,000.00.

On August 25, 2004, Officer Rabior appeared before Magistrate John P. Russ, of District Court 41-B for Clinton Township, wherein she was arraigned on the aforementioned charge. A plea of not guilty was entered on her behalf and she was released on a $25,000.00 personal bond. The preliminary examination is pending a hearing date.

Based on the above circumstances, it is recommended that Officer Rabior be charged with, but not limited to, the following violation of the Detroit Police Department Rules and Regulations:

CHARGE: CONDUCT UNPROFESSIONAL; CONTRARY TO THE LAW ENFORCEMENT CODE OF ETHICS, THIS BEING IN VIOLATION OF THE DETROIT POLICE DEPARTMENT

MANUAL, SERIES 100, DIRECTIVE 102.3-5.7, CONDUCT UNBECOMING AN OFFICER, COMMAND 3.

Unless contravened by this Commission, the above suspension without pay will stand.

There were no contravention’s to the above suspension without pay



Tuesday, August 24, 2004

08242004 - Officer Nicole Rabior - Detroit PD

August 24, 2004: Officer Nicole Rabior, Detroit City Police Department






Detroit Police Officer Nicole Rabior was arrested and charged with felonious assault in an August 24, 2004 domestic violence assault against her boyfriend. According to the police report, Officer Rabior hit her boyfriend [a Detroit Firefighter] with a bottle of water; kicked in a bedroom door; grabbed the phone out of her boyfriend's hand; and hit him five times on the back with the cell phone charger.









Ex-boyfriend says cop assaulted him

Macomb Daily - Aug 26
PUBLISHED: August 26, 2004
By Gordon Wilczynski
Macomb Daily Staff Writer
http://www.macombdaily.com/stories/082604/loc_assault001.shtml

An off-duty female Detroit police officer has been suspended with pay after she was charged with assaulting her ex-boyfriend.

Nicole Rabior was charged with domestic assault after allegedly hitting the man with her hand and then throwing a cell phone battery charger at him, Clinton Township police Capt. Doug Mills said.

Rabior, 22, who lives on Cottrell Street in Clinton Township, was charged in 41B District Court with felonious assault, a 4-year felony. She was released on $25,000 personal bond by Magistrate John Russi.

The man told police the couple got into an argument over their relationship early Wednesday morning when he returned to her home. The man told police the woman also threw a water bottle at him and then struck him in the back of the head with another water bottle.

She also allegedly attacked him with her fists, he said.

"Her boyfriend then shut the bedroom door and she broke in," Mills said. "She then hit him in the back area with the battery charger."

Mills said the man, a Detroit firefighter, came to Clinton Township's police headquarters

to file the report.

Detroit police information officials said the woman has been a police officer for the past three years. She is assigned to patrol duties at Detroit's Ninth (Gratiot at Gunston) Precinct.

An Internal Affairs investigation will be held to review the incident, officials said.

Officials said Rabior has been suspended with pay pending a hearingthis week before the Detroit Police Commission.

"We don't have a choice but to arrest a person when a complaint is filed and there are obvious signs of injury," Mills said.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
BOARD OF POLICE COMMISSIONERS

Minutes of the Regular Board of Police Commissioners Meeting
Thursday, August 26, 2004
The regular meeting of the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners was held on
Thursday, August 26, 2004, at 3:00 p.m., at Police Headquarters, 1300 Beaubien – Rm. 328-A, Detroit, Michigan 48226.

4. SECRETARY’S REPORT – EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR GOSS(Chairperson Blackwell entered the conference room.)


SUSPENSIONS
On August 26, 2004, Police Officer Nicole Rabior, Badge 645, assigned to the Ninth Precinct, was suspended without pay by Chief Ella M. Bully- Cummings.

On August 25, 2004, the Professional Accountability Bureau, Internal Affairs Section was notified of an allegation of misconduct on the part of Police Officer Nicole Rabior, badge 645, assigned to the Ninth Precinct. More specifically, the complaint alleged that Officer Rabior used unjustified physical force against her domestic partner (hereinafter complainant).

As a result, the Internal Affairs Section initiated an investigation, which revealed the following:

On August 25, 2004, at approximately 12:15 a.m., Officer Rabior was at home with the complainant in Clinton Township, Michigan. At that time, a verbal altercation ensued. During the course of the verbal altercation, Officer Rabior threw a plastic bottle at the complainant and struck him in the head with her fist.

Whereupon the complainant retreated to the bedroom and once inside locked the door thereto. Officer Rabior then kicked down the door to the bedroom and grabbed the telephone out of the complainant's hand.

Officer Rabior then grabbed the cellular telephone charger and struck the complainant with it in the back area approximately five (5) times.

The complainant fled the location and proceeded to the Clinton Township Police Department wherein he filed a complaint.

At that time, photographs were taken and injuries to the complainant were documented. After which, Clinton Township Police Officers proceeded to Officer Rabior's residence, placed her into custody, and transported her to the Clinton Township Police Department for processing.

Officer Rabior was then lodged in the Macomb County Jail, pending the issuance of a warrant.

On August 25, 2004, a felony warrant was issued against Officer Rabior, charging her with “Felonious Assault,” contrary to MCL 750.82. Felonious Assault is punishable as a felony with four (4) years in prison and/or a fine of $2,000.00.

On August 25, 2004, Officer Rabior appeared before Magistrate John P. Russ, of District Court 41-B for Clinton Township, wherein she was arraigned on the aforementioned charge. A plea of not guilty was entered on her behalf and she was released on a $25,000.00 personal bond. The preliminary examination is pending a hearing date.

Based on the above circumstances, it is recommended that Officer Rabior be charged with, but not limited to, the following violation of the Detroit Police Department Rules and Regulations:

CHARGE: CONDUCT UNPROFESSIONAL; CONTRARY TO THE LAW ENFORCEMENT CODE OF ETHICS, THIS BEING IN VIOLATION OF THE DETROIT POLICE DEPARTMENT

MANUAL, SERIES 100, DIRECTIVE 102.3-5.7, CONDUCT UNBECOMING AN OFFICER, COMMAND 3.

Unless contravened by this Commission, the above suspension without pay will stand.

There were no contravention’s to the above suspension without pay









Officer Accused Of Cell Phone Charger Assault
Wed Aug 25, 9:09 PM
ClickOnDetroit.com
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ibsys/20040826/lo_wdiv/2346325
A Detroit police officer faced a judge Wednesday on charges that she assaulted her live-in boyfriend with a cell phone charger, Local 4 reported.

Nicole Rabior attacked her boyfriend -- a Detroit firefighter – in their Clinton Township home Tuesday night, according to police.

Rabior was upset with her boyfriend of three years after he reportedly told her he was thinking about breaking off the relationship.

The man told police that Rabior hit him with a bottle of water, then her fist before he went into a bedroom and closed the door. He said Rabior kicked in the door, threw his cell phone to the ground and hit him five times in the back with the charger.

An officer who responded to the home noticed welts on the man from the alleged assault. The man refused medical treatment, according to Local 4 reports.

Rabior was suspended with pay from the 9th Precinct. She's expected to appear in front of the police board of commissioners to determine if she'll lose those pay privileges during her punishment, the station reported. Rabior faces up to four years in prison if convicted of the felonious assault charge.



.



Monday, August 23, 2004

08232004 - Saginaw County Commissioner Al Holiday - Doused His Wife In Gasoline - Arrested For Intent To Commit Murder


















On August 23, 2004, Saginaw Commissioner Al Holiday 
poured gasoline on his wife




Commissioner Holiday then chased his wife around the house
 with a lighter, attempting to set her on fire.





Holiday was arrested on suspicion of assault 
with intent to commit murder




The Saginaw County Prosecutor did not immediately 
charge Commissioner Holiday with a crime...




Prosecutor Michael Thomas had sent a sample of the liquid
 that Commissioner Holiday had poured on his wife 
[and which everyone agreed smelled /reeked like gasoline] 
to the MSP Crime Lab for testing, to insure it was in fact gasoline.





This 'delay' in processing the evidence, went in Commissioner Holiday's favor.... 
as he was still able to run for re-election, 
as no criminal charges had been filed against him after the August assault.
Criminal charges were not filed against Holiday until after the November elections,
in which he was re-elected.





 Although Holiday had been arrested for attempted murder, he was only charged for misdemeanor domestic violence. He pleaded no-contest to these charges. Instead of facing time in jail, Holiday was given three months of house arrest.





Al  Holiday retained his position as Saginaw County Commissioner, despite the criminal charges. Commissioner Holiday was not ousted from his position until October 2011, for his role in misspending $2.8 million in HUD funds that the county had received. Holiday faced no criminal charges for his actions and Saginaw was left to repay the misspent funds.












Ex-county leader Al Holiday jailed
THE SAGINAW NEWS
August 25, 2004
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news-12/1093443715283640.xml
A former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners chairman who wants a seat on the proposed Saginaw City Charter Commission may have to put his bid on hold.

Police arrested Al Holiday, 50, at his home Monday and booked him in the County Jail on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder against his 40-year-old wife.

Police said she told them she was sitting in the bedroom of their home on Carter when Holiday walked in and started arguing about money and threatened to kill her.

Holiday left the room and returned a short time later and poured on her what she thought was water, she told police. When she realized it was gasoline, she fled the room as Holiday chased her with a lighter in his hand, police reported she said.

The woman ran to a neighbor's home and called police, they said.

Detectives today still were trying to gather additional information to take to the prosecutor's office to possibly bring charges, police said. Holiday remained in jail this morning.

Holiday, a former United Auto Workers employee assistance coordinator at Delphi Saginaw Steering Systems, served on the Board of Commissioners from 1980 to 1994, including a two-year stint as chairman in 1989 and 1990.

Holiday, who is now vice president of the Saginaw Housing Commission, has taken out nominating petitions to appear on the Nov. 2 ballot for the proposed Saginaw City Charter Commission.

Holiday has had previous brushes with the law. In January 1985, Holiday tangled with police over a confrontation with a 17-year-old man in a pool hall on East Holland. Holiday said he followed the teen there after the youth struck him in the face with a snowball earlier in the evening. Police made no arrests and prosecutors filed no charges.

Police also arrested Holiday on Sept. 1, 1990, after his wife filed a domestic violence complaint, but prosecutors did not charge him.

Dec. 21, 1990, Saginaw police arrested Holiday after receiving reports of a shooting in the vicinity of his now-former wife's home on Sheridan. A District Court jury found Holiday not guilty of malicious destruction of property but guilty of leaving the scene of an auto crash in which his 1988 Chevrolet van collided with another car in the driveway of his wife's home.

In 1996, he paid a $300 fine for disturbing the peace at the KFC restaurant at Hess and Dixie in Buena Vista Township. Witnesses said a dispute over parking between Holiday and another man led to the confrontation.

Holiday unsuccessfully challenged then-state Rep. Michael J. Hanley for the 95th House District in the 1996 Democratic primary.

In 1998, Holiday suffered a stroke in Washington, D.C., while attending the National Association of Counties' legislative conference. He was representing the Region VII Area Agency on Aging when he became ill.













Holiday sent home from jail
THE SAGINAW NEWS
August 26, 2004
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news-12/1093530178132460.xml
Saginaw County authorities released a former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners chairman from jail, but they will continue investigating an assault case involving his wife. Al Holiday, who served on the county board from 1980 to 1994, including a stint as chairman in 1989 and 1990, left the lockup Wednesday, said Prosecutor Michael D. Thomas.

"File transcripts, reports and lab work are not complete," said Thomas, in reference to whether he will authorize charges against Holiday.

Police said Holiday's 40-year-old wife told them she was sitting in the bedroom of their home on Carter on Monday when Holiday walked in and started arguing about money and threatened to kill her. Holiday, 50, left the room and returned a short time later and poured gasoline on her, she told police. She fled the room as Holiday chased her with a lighter in his hand, police reported she said.

Police jailed Holiday Monday night.

Holiday, a former United Auto Workers employee assistance coordinator at Delphi Saginaw Steering Systems, now serves as vice chairman of the Saginaw Housing Commission.












Authorities await results from lab in Holiday case
THE SAGINAW NEWS
September 19, 2004
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news1/1095589726113930.xml
Authorities say they're still awaiting crime lab results before deciding whether to charge former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners Chairman Al Holiday in an alleged assault against his wife.

The state police crime lab in Bridgeport Township is "absolutely swamped" because of budget cuts, said Saginaw County Prosecutor Michael D. Thomas. Technicians at the lab are prioritizing their work, for example handling evidence from murder cases first, he said.

"They will get to it as quickly as they can," Thomas said.

Holiday served on the county board from 1980 to 1994, including a stint as chairman in 1989 and 1990. Police arrested Holiday last month shortly after his 40-year-old wife told them he poured gasoline on her.

The woman said she was sitting in the bedroom of their home on Carter when Holiday started arguing about money and threatened to kill her. She told police that Holiday, 50, left the room and returned a short time later and poured gasoline on her. She said she fled the room as he chased her with a lighter in his hand.

Holiday, a former United Auto Workers employee assistance coordinator at Delphi Saginaw Steering Systems, serves as vice chairman of the Saginaw Housing Commission.












Crime lab 'swamped;' assault case still on
THE SAGINAW NEWS
Tuesday, October 19, 2004
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news-1/109819591487590.xml
Authorities say they have received lab work and are looking over a case involving allegations that former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners Chairman Al Holiday assaulted his wife.

"We're still reviewing it," Saginaw County Prosecutor Michael D. Thomas said Monday.

"There's nothing to report now, and we won't discuss it."

Last month, Thomas said the state police crime lab in Bridgeport Township was "absolutely swamped" because of budget cuts.

Technicians were prioritizing their work -- for example, handling evidence from murder cases first, he said.

Holiday, 50, served on the county board from 1980 to 1994. He was its chairman in 1989 and 1990.

In August, police arrested Holiday shortly after his 40-year-old wife told them he poured gasoline on her.

Holiday, a former United Auto Workers employee assistance coordinator at Delphi Saginaw Steering Systems, serves as vice chairman of the Saginaw Housing Commission.












Holiday facing assault charge
THE SAGINAW NEWS
Saturday, November 13, 2004
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news-13/1100344898203580.xml
A newly elected member of the Saginaw City Charter Commission is facing a charge he assaulted his wife.

After three months of investigation, Saginaw County prosecutors have issued a warrant charging Al Holiday, 50, of 3217 Carter, with domestic violence, Prosecutor Michael D. Thomas said.

The charge is a misdemeanor punishable by 93 days in jail.












Domestic assault trial coming next year
THE SAGINAW NEWS
December 10, 2004
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news-1/1102693875170200.xml
Saginaw City Charter Commission member Al Holiday will face trial on a charge that he assaulted his wife in August.

Holiday, 50, of 3217 Carter will go on trial sometime after January on a charge of domestic violence. Court officials have not set a trial date.

A conviction could lead to a sentence of up to 93 days in jail.

Holiday's wife called police and claimed he had doused her with gasoline in their home Aug. 23 and then chased after her with a lighter.

Saginaw police arrested Holiday but released him while prosecutors reviewed evidence.

The investigation took three months to complete.

Police originally jailed Holiday on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder, a felony that carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.

Holiday, a former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners chairman, was one of nine residents elected Nov. 2 to review the City Charter. He also serves as vice president of the Saginaw Housing Commission.












Holiday's wife won't testify
THE SAGINAW NEWS
February 11, 2005
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news2/1108138932196890.xml
Authorities plan to proceed with a domestic violence trial against Saginaw City Charter Commission member Al Holiday even though his wife won't testify against him.

Holiday's wife, Cheryl Holiday, has declared her Fifth Amendment rights and has refused to testify, Saginaw County prosecutors said Thursday after a hearing.

Assistant Prosecutor Steven J. Fenner said Cheryl Holiday "will be unavailable unless she changes her mind."

At an earlier hearing, Cheryl Holiday, 40, declined to say anything about her husband, Fenner said. She gave only her name and date of birth.

Court officials have not set a trial date for Holiday, 51, who is vice president of the Saginaw Housing Commission and former chairman of the Saginaw County Board of Commissioners. A conviction could lead to a sentence of up to 93 days in jail.

Defense attorney Thomas L. Frank said he needed more time to prepare for trial. District Judge Darnell Jackson granted him a delay.

Instead of Cheryl Holiday testifying, prosecutors will use statements she gave to police and the tape of an Aug. 23 phone call she made to Central Dispatch 911 as evidence against her husband.

Saginaw Police Officer Christine Chambers testified Thursday that she was near Saginaw High School when she received a dispatch about a man dousing his wife with gasoline at 3217 Carter.

Chambers said she arrived at the home within three minutes.

Al Holiday answered the door and then returned to the phone, she said. He indicated his wife was at another house across the street, and the officer proceeded there.

"(Cheryl Holiday) was crying," Chambers said. "She appeared upset. She then told me that her husband poured gasoline on her and tried to set her on fire."

The officer said she could smell gasoline in both houses.

The wife told investigators she was recovering from surgery and decided to lie on a couch and watch television. Her husband came in and began arguing about money, she said.

Al Holiday said he was going to hurt his wife, the officer testified that Cheryl Holiday told her. He left the room, then returned and poured what she believed was water on her, Chambers said. He had a lighter in his hand, she said.

Saginaw police arrested Holiday but released him while prosecutors reviewed evidence.

Police originally jailed Holiday on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder, a felony that carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.

Frank had argued that prosecutors can't prove their case based on testimony from one witness. Authorities need to present other evidence such as clothing or bedding with gasoline on it, he said.

Fenner disagreed and said the victim's statement to police will suffice.

Holiday has had previous brushes with the law.

In January 1985, Holiday tangled with police over a confrontation with a 17-year-old male in a pool hall on East Holland. Holiday said he followed the teen there after the youth struck him in the face with a snowball earlier in the evening. Police made no arrests and prosecutors filed no charges.

Police also arrested Holiday on Sept. 1, 1990, after his wife filed a domestic violence complaint, but prosecutors did not charge him.

Dec. 21, 1990, Saginaw police arrested Holiday after receiving reports of a shooting in the vicinity of his now-former wife's home on Sheridan. A District Court jury found Holiday not guilty of malicious destruction of property but guilty of leaving the scene of an auto crash in which his 1988 Chevrolet van collided with another car in the driveway of his wife's home.

In 1996, he paid a $300 fine for disturbing the peace at the KFC restaurant at Hess and Dixie in Buena Vista Township. Witnesses said a dispute over parking between Holiday and another man led to the confrontation.

Holiday unsuccessfully challenged then-state Rep. Michael J. Hanley for the 95th House District in the 1996 Democratic primary.

In 1998, Holiday suffered a stroke in Washington, D.C., while attending the National Association of Counties' legislative conference. He was representing the Region VII Area Agency on Aging when he became ill.

Holiday was one of nine residents elected Nov. 2, 2004, to review the City Charter.













Holiday's wife granted court protection order
THE SAGINAW NEWS
March 19, 2005
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news2/1111231283108280.xml
The wife of former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners Chairman Al Holiday has filed court papers indicating her husband assaulted her in their home in August.

Cheryl Holiday, 40, now has court protection against Al Holiday, who also is vice president of the Saginaw Housing Commission and a member of the Saginaw City Charter Review Commission. She has moved from their home at 3217 Carter and to Saginaw Township.

Saginaw County Family Court Judge Patrick J. McGraw on Thursday granted Cheryl Holiday a personal protection order, commonly known as a PPO, against her husband.

Al Holiday's attorney Thomas L. Frank said he doesn't know anything about the protection order request and can't comment.

The Saginaw News could not reach Holiday for comment.

Al Holiday has a Thursday, April 7, trial on a charge of domestic violence stemming from an incident in which his wife initially told police he doused her with gasoline and tried to set her on fire.

During a pre-trial hearing in February, however, Cheryl Holiday said she would not testify against her husband. In her protection order request, she described the February incident.

"On Aug. 23, Al Holiday doused gasoline on me," Cheryl Holiday wrote. "I did not press charges against him because I was afraid to."

Cheryl Holiday said she is not from Michigan, nor does she have family or a support system in Saginaw.

"I had no where to go and did not have enough money to move out at that time," Cheryl Holiday wrote. "Since the incident, I have saved up the money needed to move out."

Al Holiday was on a business trip to Washington, D.C., from Sunday to Thursday, March 13-17, she wrote.

"While he was away, I moved out," Cheryl Holiday wrote. "I am afraid that he may harass or threaten me. Therefore, I am asking to be provided with a PPO."

Cheryl Holiday, a county employee, indicated she and her husband married five years ago and that she moved out of the house March 15.

McGraw granted her the protection order, in effect until March 17, 2006. A violation could result in 93 days in jail and $500 in fines.

Any time during the year, Al Holiday can petition the court to remove the order.

Assistant Prosecutor Steven J. Fenner, who is handling the domestic violence case, said he will look into the order. He declined further comment.

Cheryl Holiday told police that she was watching television when she felt liquid poured over her body. At first, she thought it was water, she said. Then came the stench of gasoline, she told officers.

She said her husband began chasing her throughout their Saginaw home with a lighter in his hand. She ran from the house and called 911.












Holiday facing jail term
The Saginaw News
Thursday, April 07, 2005
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news2/1112885446114540.xml
Former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners Chairman Al Holiday has pleaded no contest to a charge of assaulting his wife in their home.

Holiday, who also is vice president of the Saginaw Housing Commission and a member of the Saginaw City Charter Review Commission, entered his plea Wednesday on a charge of domestic violence stemming from an incident in which his wife, Cheryl Holiday, told police he doused her with gasoline and tried to set her on fire.

A no contest plea means that a defendant does not contest prosecutors' evidence and is willing to accept the punishment.

Saginaw County District Judge Darnell Jackson will sentence Holiday, 51, on Tuesday, May 10. Holiday, who was supposed to go to trial today on the domestic violence charge, faces 93 days in jail.

The Saginaw News could not reach Holiday for comment.

Last month, Family Court Judge Patrick J. McGraw granted Cheryl Holiday, 40, a personal protection order against her husband.

During a pre-trial hearing for her husband in February, Cheryl Holiday said she would not testify against him. In her protection order request, however, she described the August incident.

"On Aug. 23, Al Holiday doused gasoline on me," Cheryl Holiday wrote. "I did not press charges against him because I was afraid to."

She indicated she is not from Michigan and does not have family or a support system in Saginaw. She said she had nowhere to go and not did not have enough money to move out at that time.

Cheryl Holiday, a county employee, said she saved enough money to move out of their home at 3217 Carter, and did so while her husband was on a business trip to Washington, D.C., from March 13-17.

"I am afraid that he may harass or threaten me," Cheryl Holiday wrote.

She said she and her husband married five years ago.

McGraw granted her the protection order, which will remain in effect until March 17. A violation also could result in 93 days in jail and $500 in fines.

Court records also show that Cheryl Holiday has begun divorce proceedings against her husband.












Holiday given house arrest
The Saginaw News
May 11, 2005
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news-2/1115823048315620.xml
A Saginaw County judge will consider whether to allow Saginaw Housing Commission Vice President Al Holiday to attend meetings while he is on house arrest.

District Judge Darnell Jackson on Tuesday ordered Holiday to serve three months of house arrest for domestic violence against his wife, Cheryl Holiday, 40.

He warned the former Saginaw County Board of Commissioners chairman that if he violates any terms of his probation, he will spend 93 days in jail.

Authorities said Holiday doused his spouse with gasoline and tried to set her on fire Aug. 23 at their Carter Street home.

Holiday's punishment includes nine months of probation, orders to stay away from his estranged wife -- who has filed for divorce -- and to pay $609 in fees and fines.

Holiday, 51, pleaded no contest, meaning he does not contest prosecutors' evidence and is willing to accept the punishment. He did not speak during the hearing. The conviction also means that he cannot possess a gun.

Last month, Holiday resigned from the Saginaw City Charter Review Commission.

Assistant Prosecutor Steven J. Fenner told Jackson he wanted Holiday to serve jail time. "The facts indicate the act could have resulted in the death of Cheryl Holiday," he said.

Defense attorney Thomas L. Frank sought probation only for his client and no fees, fines or incarceration. Holiday lives on a fixed income of $2,400 a month and needs time to pay the fees and fines, he said.

Holiday also has an obligation to the community to attend Housing Commission meetings and an out-of-town conference later this month, Frank said.

Jackson said he would consider allowing Holiday to attend the meetings and conference.

During a February pre-trial hearing for Holiday, Cheryl Holiday said she would not testify against her husband.

A month later, Family Court Judge Patrick J. McGraw granted Cheryl Holiday a personal protection order against her husband. In her request, she described the August incident, saying he doused her with gasoline.

"I did not press charges against him because I was afraid to," she wrote.

The protection order will remain in effect until March 17. A violation also could result in 93 days in jail and $500 in fines.

Cheryl Holiday, a county employee, said she moved out of their home at 3217 Carter in March while her husband was on a business trip in Washington, D.C.

The Holidays have been married for five years.













Familiar face, crowded race
THE SAGINAW NEWS
May 17, 2006
http://www.mlive.com/news/sanews/index.ssf?/base/news19/1147872128252430.xml&coll=9
A controversial Saginaw public figure is looking to return to his seat on the Saginaw County Board of Commissioners.

Former board Chairman Alfredia "Al" Holiday will face fellow Democrats Calvin Williams and Eddie F. Foxx in the August primary for the District 6 seat. No Republicans are on the ballot.

Tuesday was the candidate filing deadline for the Tuesday, Aug. 8, primary.

Holiday, 52, held the seat in 1994, when he lost a bid for the state House 95th district. He has since served on the Saginaw City Charter Review Commission and presently is vice president of the Saginaw Housing Commission.

But Holiday's record in governance must compete with his personal history -- most recently, a sentence of three months house arrest last year for a domestic violence charge. Authorities said he doused his wife in gasoline and tried to set her on fire in the summer of 2004.

"Folks are probably going to remember that,"
 Williams said, though he noted he does not consider it a concern for his campaign, which he plans to steer toward public health and other county services he believes residents in District 6 -- parts of the city of Saginaw and Buena Vista and Bridgeport townships -- don't fully use.

The News could not reach Holiday or Foxx. Foxx ran for the seat in 2004 and lost 746-865 in the primary to Terry W. Sangster, who this year is seeking the 95th District state House seat.

State races have opened three county board seats. The most crowded is District 2, the county's western townships, where two Democrats and three Republicans will compete in the Aug. 8 primary for the slot left by Democrat Robert D. Blaine, who is campaigning for 94th District state House seat.

Democrats Lindsey K. Read and Leonard "Lenny" J. LeFevre submitted their names.

"The commissioners run just as hard as the state reps," LeFevre said. "But ... I didn't want to have a Democrat not run. We need somebody to challenge the Republicans."

They are Timothy M. Krzeszewski, who lost a bid for county treasurer in 2004 and serves on the Swan Creek Township Planning Commission; Ronald L. Sholtz, who has served as Marion Township supervisor and lost the county board seat narrowly in 2004 with 3,434 votes to Blaine's 3,468; and Gary D. Lyvere, who has run previously for the county board and has served as a Richland Township trustee.

In District 4 -- Frankenmuth Township plus parts of Bridgeport and Birch Run townships -- one Republican and one Democrat are seeking to replace Frankenmuth Republican Kenneth B. Horn, who is running for the state House 94th District seat. Republican Dennis H. Krafft and Democrat Jean A. Schluckebier, both of Frankenmuth Township, will vie for his seat in the Nov. 7 general election.












Saginaw Housing Commission member Al Holiday ousted, executive director's performance deemed 'unsatisfactory'
The Saginaw News
Monday, October 24, 2011
http://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw/index.ssf/2011/10/saginaw_housing_commission_mem.html

  


Saginaw Housing Commission, Al Holiday

 
SAGINAW — In the wake of a Saginaw Housing Commission audit that revealed the commission misspent $2.8 million throughout the last decade, Executive Director Peter Chitekwe will be replaced in February, and Al Holiday has been expelled from the board.

Both decisions came to light Monday evening, with the Housing Commission voting to release Chitekwe and the Saginaw City Council, which met later in the evening, voting to remove Holiday from the Housing Commission oversight panel.

During a closed meeting, the Saginaw Housing Commission board voted 4-1 — Holiday cast the sole “nay” vote — in rating Chitekwe’s performance as “unsatisfactory.”

It issued a recommendation that his two-year contract not be renewed when it expires Feb. 29.

“If I found the place in good shape, I could have done better,” Chitekwe said. “But someone has to be blamed. They are not satisfied in the efforts I have put in... It was just too much. I don’t know if everybody fully understands the severity of the situation that this place was in.”

The commission hired Chitekwe as its financial manager in 2009, at a time Chitekwe said the commission was a “financial mess” and without its then-director, Director Duane L. Walker, who was battling cancer.

In March 2010, Chitekwe became the director.

The Office of the Inspector General selected the commission for audit released in August because a 2006 audit had showed the commission improperly spent $536,000 in federal funds to purchase the former Saginaw County Fairgrounds.

The 2011 audit revealed that Chitekwe, Holiday, one-time board President Parrish Anderson, who was no longer on the board at the time, and Kristi Jackson — the since-terminated grant coordinator whom a 2010 audit said intervened to help secure her two sons $20,816 in housing assistance benefits — attended Walker’s funeral in Chicago at taxpayers’ expense in 2010.

The board also authorized the purchase of a $32,000 2008 Lincoln SUV for Chitekwe to use for work.

The Saginaw mayor appoints commission board members, and the City Council may remove members but has no further authority, Saginaw Mayor Greg Branch said.

The City Council voted unanimously Monday to remove Holiday, a 14-year Housing Commission board member.

City Councilmen Daniel Fitzpatrick and Andrew Wendt were absent.

Branch said “a lot” of the problems the audit pointed to “had their genesis 10 years ago,” when the commission purchased the fairgrounds.

Holiday is “very passionate about public housing... I can’t say he’s done a bad job as a commissioner,” Branch said. “But the people of Saginaw need to have a sense of confidence in the Housing Commission, and I don’t think they are going to have it as long as anybody who was part of the fairgrounds (purchase) is still there.”

Branch appointed Thomas Begin and Odie Pruitt III to the commission board within the last year. Then-Mayor Joyce J. Seals appointed Delena Spates-Allen in 2007 and Dawn Genwright in 2008.

City Council members in September 2008 voted 6-3 against a recommendation from Seals to reappoint Holiday to the Saginaw Housing Commission.

Seals disregarded the vote and reappointed Holiday because council certification is not required.

Branch said he hopes to fill the vacancy “very soon” with a someone adept at financial management.














Al Holiday has 'no comment' after unanimous vote to remove him from Saginaw Housing Commission
The Saginaw News
October 25, 2011
http://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw/index.ssf/2011/10/al_holiday_has_no_comment_afte.html
SAGINAW — The Saginaw City Council voted 7-0 to remove long-time board member Al Holiday from the Saginaw Housing Commission Monday.

He’s been on the commission greater than a decade and is the only current member who was present in 2002 when the commission spent $536,000 to purchase the former 54-acre Saginaw County Fairgrounds, in spite of a United States Department of Housing and Urban Development ruling that federal funds could not be spent in such a manner.

The decision led to two audits by the Office of the Inspector General over the next 10 years — one in 2006 and another released in August — that revealed $2.8 million in misspent funds by the commission.

When contacted Tuesday morning for a response to his ousting, Holiday replied, “No comment.”

His removal from the board came less than two hours after he was the only board member in a 4-1 decision to vote against issuing an “unsatisfactory” evaluation to Saginaw Housing Commission Executive Director Peter Chitekwe.

In addition to the negative evaluation, Chitekwe’s contract expires Feb. 29 and will not be renewed.

Chitekwe said he doesn’t wish to sounds like a “disgruntled employee” and wouldn’t comment much about the board’s decision, but he said the financial situation was potentially wore than board members were aware.

He said he believes had it not been such a “financial mess” upon his appointment as director in March of 2010, he could have done better.




















 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




Thursday, August 19, 2004

08192004 - Officer Maliak Jones - Suspension - Detroit PD


On August 11, 2004, Detroit Police Officer Maliak Jones [while off duty] pulled her service weapon during a domestic altercation with her friend's ex-husband.Officer Jones was charged with felonious assault.



Also See:
Officer Maliak Jones - pulled her duty gun during domestic with friend's ex. [Aug 11, 2004]
































BOARD OF POLICE COMMISSIONERS
Minutes of the Regular Board of Police Commissioners Meeting
Thursday, August 19, 2004
The regular meeting of the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners was held on
Thursday, August 19, 2004, at 3:00 p.m., at Police Headquarters, 1300 Beaubien – Rm. 328-A, Detroit, Michigan 48226


4. SECRETARY’S REPORT – EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR GOSS
SUSPENSIONS.
On August 19, 2004, Police Officer Maliak Jones, badge 3706, assigned to the Thirteenth Precinct, was suspended without pay by Chief Ella M. Bully-Cummings.

On August 11, 2004, the Professional Accountability Bureau, Internal Affairs Section was notified of an allegation of misconduct on the part of Officer Maliak Jones. More specifically, the allegation concerned unjustified and/or excessive use of force against a citizen.

As a result, the Internal Affairs Section initiated an investigation, which revealed the following:

On August 11, 2004, at approximately 7:00 p.m., Officer Jones was off duty when she and her friend arrived at a residence, located on Buena Vista, within the city of Detroit.

At that time, Officer Jones' friend became involved in a verbal altercation with her former husband (hereinafter the victim). As the verbal confrontation escalated, Officer Jones stepped in, grabbed the victim by the chest and stated words to the effect, "Bitch, I will fuck you up."

As Officer Jones and the victim continued to struggle, Officer Jones pulled her Detroit Police Department issued firearm (hereinafter DPD firearm),pointed her DPD firearm at the victim and stated, "Bitch, I'll shoot you."

Eventually, upon prompting from her friend, Officer Jones put her weapon away. The victim then grabbed Officer Jones' car key, ran into the house, locked the door, and called the police.

There were several independent witnesses to the incident who were able to confirm the events as described herein.

On August 12, 2004, a warrant request was presented to the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office for “Felonious Assault,” contrary to MCL 750.82, the result of which is pending. Felonious Assault is a felony punishable by four (4) years in prison and/or a fine of $2,000.00.

Based on the above circumstances, it is recommended that Officer Jones be charged with, but not limited to the following violation of the Detroit Police Department Rules and Regulations:
CHARGE: CONDUCT UNPROFESSIONAL; CONTRARY TO THE LAW ENFORCEMENT CODE OF ETHICS, THIS BEING IN VIOLATION OF THE DETROIT POLICE DEPARTMENT MANUAL, SERIES 100, DIRECTIVE 102.3-5.7, CONDUCT UNBECOMING AN OFFICER, COMMAND 3.
Unless contravened by this Commission, the above suspension without pay will stand.
Exec. Dir. Goss stated oral arguments will waived for two weeks.

There were no contravention’s to the above suspension without pay.