Wednesday, October 11, 2017

10112017 - Detroit PD Officer Kwame Powell - Sentenced To Probation For Domestic Violence

 

Detroit PD Officer Kwame Powell Posts:
Officer Kwame Powell's Original Charges:
  • Assault by strangulation - MCL 750.84 - Felony punishable by imprisonment for not more than 10 years 
  • Domestic Violence - MCL 750.81 - Misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than 93 days
  • Felonious assault - MCL 750.82 - Imprisonment for not more than 4 years
  • Felony firearm - MCL 750.227b - Imprisonment for 2 years
  • Interfering with a crime report - MCL 750.483a - Imprisonment of 1-4 years



Officer Kwame Powell's Plea Agreement: 2 years probation
  • Assault by strangulation
  • Domestic Violence
  • Interfering with a crime report






Kwame Powell - Sentenced To Probation
Michigan Department Of Corrections
October 11, 2017






















Officer arrested for domestic violence
Click On Detroit | Local 4 | WDIV
Apr 5, 2017


A Detroit police officer has been suspended with pay after being arraigned Friday in Highland Park on a domestic violence charge, Detroit Police Director Michael Woody said.
















Detroit officer suspended, charged with assault
The Detroit News
April 07, 2017

Detroit Police Department officer Kwame Powell is suspended with pay after facing charges related to an alleged assault on woman he dated, officials confirmed.

Powell was given a personal bond of $50,000 Wednesday at an arraignment at 30th District Court, confirmed Marli Blackman,  a spokeswoman for Highland Park. Powell, 34, faces charges of assault by strangulation, felonious assault, felony firearm, interfering with a crime report and domestic violence.

The Wayne County Prosecutors office said Powell is in a "dating relationship" with a 32-year-old woman. Maria Miller, assistant prosecutor, said in a statement that the woman alleges that on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, Powell strangled her and she got away and attempted to call 911, but that Powell took her cellphone from her.

"The defendant then choked the victim and she then ran outside to her car," Miller continued in the statement regarding the allegations. "The defendant followed, tackled her to her car trunk, grabbed her throat with one hand and with the other pointed a handgun to her head. The victim was able to get away, drive to a gas station, and called 911."

Powell is suspended with pay, said Michael Woody, director of media relations for the Detroit Police Department. Once the department has the court record, Powell's case will be brought to the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners for consideration to make his suspension unpaid, Woody said. The hearing could come as early as the board's April 13 meeting.

Powell was the partner of officer Myron Jarrett, who was killed in the line of duty in a hit-and-run crash in October.
















Detroit police officer arrested for domestic violence
WXYZ-TV Detroit | Channel 7
Apr 8, 2017

















Detroit police officer arrested for domestic violence
WXYZ-TV Detroit | Channel 7
Apr 8, 2017

Detroit police say an officer has been suspended with pay following domestic violence charges.

According to Director Michael Woody, Officer Kwame Powell was arraigned in Highland Park on Friday for a domestic violence felony.

Detroit Police Chief James Craig is submitting paperwork to the Police Board of Commissioners to change his suspension to without pay. That hearing is expected to be held on Tuesday.

Sources tell us the incident involves a woman he dated.
















DPD officer facing assault charges can’t carry a gun
The Detroit News
April 17, 2047



A Detroit Police Department officer who is suspended with pay as he faces domestic violence charges has been prohibited from carrying a gun or having contact with the woman, according to a personal protection order granted by Wayne County Circuit Court, records show.

The protection order granted means that officer Kwame Powell cannot carry a firearm even as a law enforcement officer, said Michael Woody, director of media relations for the Detroit Police Department.

“If you have an active PPO against you, which prohibits you from carrying a firearm, as a police officer (Powell) wouldn’t be able to perform his duties,” Woody said. “As long as that PPO is in effect, he wouldn’t be able to work here.”

Powell is facing charges of assault by strangulation, felonious assault, felony firearm, interfering with a crime report and domestic violence, according to the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office. He has a probable cause hearing at 9 a.m. April 18 at Highland Park’s 30th District Court.

The Detroit Board of Police Commissioners is expected to consider whether to convert Powell’s paid suspension to an unpaid suspension at its meeting Thursday night.

But even if the suspension were lifted entirely, Woody said, the officer would have to get the personal protection order amended to be able to carry a gun in the line of duty.

Powell, 35, reached by phone Thursday, told The News that being suspended from work has been “terrible” and that the allegations he faces are “very upsetting.”

“I love my job. This has been the worst time of my life,” Powell said. “I’ve never been involved in anything, not even a parking ticket. So this is really hurting me. The allegations are very upsetting to me.”

Powell said he’s been spending this week “spending time with friends and family, getting things in order, for the worst and the best.”

“Everybody who knows me knows my character, and knowing that’s not my character.” Powell said. “I haven’t lost one bit of friend and family support because they know I’m not that man.”

The order against Powell is in effect through April 5, 2018, one year from when it was granted by Judge Eric Cholack. Woody said he doesn’t know that the department would be required to accommodate an officer who was barred from carrying a weapon.

“If a PPO is issued against you, there’s usually pretty good cause,” Woody said. “A PPO is usually pretty difficult to get. It has to meet a certain threshold or standard, so if a PPO is issued, especially if it prohibits an officer from carrying a firearm, it’s usually a pretty serious deal.”

Powell said he’d been dating the woman who filed the PPO for about a year-and-a-half before his arrest and charges April 5.

Powell’s accuser wrote in her PPO request that after going to dinner together at Inyo on the night of April 4, the couple returned to Powell’s Highland Park home. At 3 a.m. on the morning of April 5, she was awakened by Powell choking her. She tried to run into his living room to call 911 and gather her bags.

“At this point, he choked me again,” she wrote in the PPO request. “I tried calling 911 but he took my phone. The next thing I knew ... I was on the floor in his kitchen being choked by him. He choked me so hard my eyes felt like they were going to pop out.”

She escaped through the front door but wrote that Powell put her in her trunk, choked her, and held a gun to her head “saying he could kill me and nothing would happen because he’s DPD.”

She says she tried to get into her car, but Powell continued approaching on foot, so she rolled out of the car.

“He followed on foot and disappeared,” the woman wrote. “A moment later I saw headlight behind me as I approached Woodward. It was him. I turned on Woodward and went to the gas station where a Highland Park squad car was sitting.”
















Cop accused of domestic violence suspended w/o pay
The Detroit News
April 20, 2017


Acting on a recommendation from Detroit Police Chief James Craig, the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners voted last week to suspend Officer Kwame Powell, 35, without pay.

Powell had been suspended with pay since he was arraigned on five charges, three of them felonies, at 30th District Court in Highland Park. Powell is facing charges of assault by strangulation, felonious assault, felony firearm, interfering with a crime report, and domestic violence related to an alleged April 5 incident at his Highland Park home.

A seven-year veteran of the Detroit Police Department, Powell is prohibited from carrying a gun, according to the terms of a personal protection order filed by his girlfriend of one-and-a-half years and approved by Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Eric Cholack. The prohibition expires on April 5, 2018, records show.

Even if Powell’s suspension were lifted, he would need to get the terms of the order amended to be able to work.

As Detroit Police Department media relations director Michael Woody told The News in a previous report: “If a PPO is issued against you, there’s usually pretty good cause. A PPO is usually pretty difficult to get. It has to meet a certain threshold or standard, so if a PPO is issued, especially if it prohibits an officer from carrying a firearm, it’s usually a pretty serious deal.”

Powell’s accuser wrote in her PPO request that after going to dinner together at Inyo on the night of April 4, the couple returned to Powell’s Highland Park home. At 3 a.m. on the morning of April 5, she said she was awakened by Powell choking her. She tried to run into his living room to call 911 and gather her bags.

In the end, the woman wrote in the request, she spotted a Highland Park cop car at a gas station on Woodward Avenue and was able to run to safety.

Powell has pleaded not guilty and was given a personal bond of $50,000 at his arraignment. His attorney, Randall Upshaw, could not immediately be reached.

Powell was the partner of late Detroit police officer Myron Jarrett, who was killed in the line of duty in October by a hit-and-run driver.
















Detroit cop facing assault charges, other felonies
Detroit News
April 25, 2017

Highland Park — Detroit police officer Kwame Powell, on unpaid suspension as he faces charges related to an April 5 assault of his girlfriend, was bound over for trial Tuesday in 30th District Court.

Judge Brigette Officer-Hill decided there was enough evidence presented for Powell’s case to move forward. Powell’s next appearance is at 9 a.m. May 9 inside Wayne County Circuit Court.

Only one person offered testimony at Powell’s exam: the woman who accuses Powell of the assault.

Defense attorney Randall Upshaw asked about the rocky relationship between the two, who’d been dating for a year-and-a-half before the incident.

He asked if the couple ever had a physical altercation before; she said Powell had hit her about two months before the incident, but that she’d never called 911 or sought medical attention.

On the stand, the victim said she was choked by Powell no less than four times the morning of April 5, starting when she woke up about 3 a.m., with Powell smelling of alcohol as he choked her while standing at the side of his bed.

The couple had gone out to dinner at Inyo that night but had a “heated discussion” afterward, the woman said. They returned to Powell’s Highland Park home, where he let her in but went out again.

The victim said she was able to escape being choked, and ran into the living room. Powell chased and choked her from behind for “eight seconds,” she said.

When he let go, the victim said, she grabbed her cellphone, which was near the front door, and tried to call 911, but was prevented by Powell.

As she neared the front door again, she said Powell slammed her to the kitchen floor. She was face up.

“This time he choked me the hardest; it felt like my eyes were going to pop out of my head,” she said.

This time she escaped from the house, but not before grabbing Powell’s cellphone, the woman testified.

Upshaw said Powell followed her outside to get his phone back.

The victim said that when they neared her Mazda 6, Powell pushed her in the back so she was face down on the trunk. With one hand, she said, Powell choked her, and with the other he put a handgun to her right temple.

It was a black gun with a “soft holster,” and she’d seen it before, the victim said.

“(Powell) said he could kill me and nothing would happen because he was DPD,” she said. “I was afraid.”

She escaped and headed toward the front door of her Mazda. She’d dropped Powell’s phone, and Powell threw her phone to her.

She got inside the car and drove off, calling 911 from her phone. Powell, she said, followed on foot and then in his gold Pontiac. She turned left from East Grand Boulevard onto Woodward and pulled into a gas station when she saw a Highland Park police officer outside.

As the investigation began, police took photos of both parties. It wasn’t until 6:30 a.m. that the woman left and headed back to her home. Powell was arrested and released after being given a $50,000 personal bond.

The woman said she spoke with three family members over the phone, and was urged to file a personal protection order against Powell, which she did. The order was granted.

Hours later, the victim said, she sought medical attention at a Beaumont hospital.

Officer-Hill granted Upshaw’s requests for pictures taken of the woman at the gas station — which caused a short break in the proceeding — and for her medical records. She denied Upshaw’s request for psychiatric records.

Afrer the hearing, Upshaw said he plans to challenge the personal protection order entered against Powell, which prohibits him from carrying a gun.

Unless successfully challenged, that prohibition, which runs through April 5, 2018, a year from when it was granted, would be in effect even if the Detroit Police Department lifted Powell’s suspension.









Friday, September 1, 2017

09012017 - Lisa Underhill - Co-Defendant Of Kellie Bartlett. Crimes Against SD Deputy - Charged With Use Of Computer To Commit A Crime, Conspiracy, Identity Theft, Stalking

 





Lisa Underwood


2015-2017 - Eaton County SD Clerk Kellie Bartlett (wife of Potterville PD Chief Shane Bartlett) had an affair with an Eaton county SD deputy.


Spring 2017 - Eaton County SD deputy broke off his relationship with Bartlett and requested she "cease contact with him."


2017-2018 - Bartlett did not stop contacting the sheriff deputy. The deputy informed his supervisor of Bartlett's stalking and the department began an investigation.
  • Bartlett stalked the deputy and sent a nude photo of him to his current girlfriend
  • She allegedly created a fake email account and Facebook profile for the deputy, and accessed his Gmail account without his consent or knowledge.
  • Barlett repeatedly tried to contact the deputy's current girlfriend
  •  She used resources at the sheriff's department to download police reports and to look up personal information on the deputy
  • Throughout the summer of 2017, Bartlett sent "numerous harassing and threatening text messages to him," despite repeated requests to stop.
  • She used work computers to find and inspect internal investigations that she was the primary subject of
  • Bartlett faked a note from a a physician in order to receive compensation for time off from the Eaton County Sheriff's Office (identity theft charge)

2017-2018 - Lisa Underhill (Co-Defendant) - The deputy's ex-girlfriend. Underhill and Bartlett created a fake Facebook profile for the deputy using his personal identifying information and also created a fake email address in the deputy's name. 


December 2017 - Bartlett was fired from the sheriff's office. 


January 2018 - Bartlett filed a complaint with the Michigan State Police, alleging the deputy had sexually assaulted her in March 2017. The investigation, however, determined Bartlett was a "willing and consenting partner in this act".


September 21, 2018 - Kellie Bartlett charged with making a false rape allegation against an Eaton County Sheriff's Office deputy. Bartlett was charged 10 felonies and four misdemeanors
Bartlett was arraigned on charges of: 
  • Two counts of using a computer to commit a crime
  • Two counts of identity theft
  • Three counts of unauthorized access to a computer
  • One count felony conspiracy
  • One count false report of a felony 
  • Two counts misdemeanor stalking
  • One count of intentional dissemination of sexually explicit visual material
  • Two misdemeanor counts of using a computer to commit a crime

September 21, 2018 - Co-defendant in the case, Lisa Underhill. Bartlett and Underhill were accused of creating a fake Facebook profile for the deputy using his personal identifying information, and creating a fake email address in his name. Underhill was charged with:
  • Using a computer to commit a crime
  • Conspiracy to have unauthorized access to a computer
  • Conspiracy to commit identity theft
  • Identity theft 
  • Stalking

October 2018 - Bartlett was charged with an additional charge of aggravated stalking - she continued to stalk the deputy after she was criminally charged for filing a false rape


February 11, 2019 - Co-defendant Lisa Underhill pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of attempted unlawful posting of a message on a computer. 


May 01, 2019 - Potterville Police Chief Shane Bartlett (husband of Kellie Bartlett) was charged with:
  • Common Law Offense/Misconduct in Office
  • Lying to a Peace Officer
  • False Report of a Felony (*Kellie Bartlett filed a false complaint with Michigan State Police in January 2018, saying a deputy had sexually assaulted her in March 2017. *)
Shane Bartlett faced up to five years in prison for the misconduct charge, four years in prison for lying to a police officer and four years in prison for false report of a felony. 


May 2019 - Chief Shane Bartlett was put on administrative leave. He was fired from his job as police chief after he was charged. 


August 2019 - Kellie Bartlett attempted to have Barry County Prosecutor Julie Nakfoor Pratt disqualified from her criminal case. Kellie Bartlett's previous attorney, Lucas Dillon, disputed Bartlett's claims against Nakfoor-Pratt.


September 2019 - Judge ruled that prosecutor Nakfoor-Pratt  who charged Bartlett with filing a false report of rape was not biased in the case. 


December 2019 - Kellie Bartlett pled guilty. Originally charged with 16 charges, pled guilty to three felonies and two misdemeanors: filing of a false police report, unauthorized access to a computer, identity theft, stalking and lying to a police officer


January 2020 - Shane Bartlett's preliminary hearing.


January 2020 - Kellie Bartlett filed a complaint against Nakfoor-Pratt with the Attorney Grievance Commission. Included in Bartlett's complaint were full-page nude photos of Bartlett and the deputy. 

December 2020 - Kellie Bartlett's sentencing: 15 months probation 










Charlotte woman charged with falsely accusing deputy of rape will stand trial on 10 felonies
Lansing State Journal
February 11, 2019

CHARLOTTE — A Charlotte woman charged with accusing an Eaton County Sheriff's Office deputy of rape will stand trial after she waived her preliminary hearing Friday. 

Kellie Bartlett, 35, is facing 10 felonies and four misdemeanors in connection with the report police say was false. 

Bartlett filed a complaint with Michigan State Police in January, reporting that the deputy had sexually assaulted her in March 2017. The investigation, however, determined Bartlett was a "willing and consenting partner in this act," Michigan State Police Detective Sgt. Erik Darling testified in a hearing that led to criminal charges.

Barry County Judge Michael Schipper bound Bartlett's case over to circuit court Friday after Bartlett waived her preliminary hearing. Her case is being heard by a Barry County judge because Eaton County Prosecutor Doug Lloyd recused his office. 

A second woman, the deputy's ex-girlfriend, Lisa Underhill, pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of attempted unlawful posting of a message on a computer. The State Journal is not naming the deputy because he has not been charged with a crime.

Underhill, 48, tried to make the deputy feel frightened and harassed, she said in court Friday as a part of her plea. She's set to be sentenced at 9 a.m. March 26. 

She initially was charged with using a computer to commit a crime, conspiracy to have unauthorized access to a computer, conspiracy to commit identity theft, identity theft and stalking. All but stalking are felony charges. All those charges have been dismissed with her no contest plea. 

Bartlett and Underhill are accused of creating a fake Facebook profile for the deputy using his personal identifying information, Barry County Prosecutor Julie Nakfoor Pratt said. They also created a fake email address in his name, she said. 

Bartlett worked at the sheriff's office from 2008 through December 2017, when she was fired. She was in a relationship with the deputy from late 2015 through spring 2017. 

After they broke up, she began stalking the deputy, Darling testified. She repeatedly tried to contact him and his current girlfriend, despite repeated requests to stop. 

In January Bartlett told the State Journal she continued to contact the deputy, in part, because she had loaned him money and wanted him to repay it. She said she didn't initially report the alleged sex assault because she thought she'd be accused of lying. 

"I felt like I kept getting the treatment that I’m just a scorned woman, that I’m just crazy and I think if I had come out with it at that time it would have looked even worse," Bartlett said. "I think it would have just been chalked up to that.”

She said she decided to report the incident after the sheriff's office fired her because she no longer feared losing her job. 

Although the deputy was under investigation for sexual assault, he was never taken off patrol or put on administrative leave, Nakfoor Pratt said. Eaton County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Jerri Nesbitt and Sheriff Tom Reich declined to comment on the deputy's status during the investigation.

Bartlett is charged with: 
  • Two counts of using a computer to commit a crime
  • Two counts of identity theft
  • Three counts of unauthorized access to a computer
  • One count felony conspiracy
  • One count false report of a felony 
  • Two counts misdemeanor stalking
  • One count of intentional dissemination of sexually explicit visual material
  • Two misdemeanor counts of using a computer to commit a crime
















Records: Prosecutor threatened to charge Charlotte woman's husband if she didn't plead guilty
Lansing State Journal
August 21, 2019

Editor's note: This story has been updated with comments from Kellie Bartlett's former attorney disputing allegations made by her current attorney. It has also been corrected to reflect Lisa Underhill's relationship to the deputy. 

LANSING — A Charlotte woman accused of lying to police about being raped said the prosecutor assigned to her case threatened to bring criminal charges against her husband if she did not plead guilty, according to a motion filed to disqualify the prosecutor.

Kellie Bartlett's previous attorney, Lucas Dillon, disputes that account. 

Bartlett, of Charlotte, is facing 16 charges related to her clerk job at the Eaton County Sheriff's Office and her report to Michigan State Police that a sheriff's deputy raped her.

Bartlett was charged in September by Barry County Prosecutor Julie Nakfoor Pratt, who the Attorney General's office appointed as a special prosecutor because Eaton County Prosecutor Doug Lloyd recused his office. 

Bartlett's attorney, Neil Rockind, asked to disqualify Nakfoor Pratt because she: 
  • Made herself into a necessary witness by conducting independent investigations into Bartlett as well as destroying evidence.
  • Created an appearance of "impropriety and exceeded the scope of her authority on multiple occasions," one of which occurred when she filed out-of-county charges without the Attorney General appointing her as special prosecutor on the case.
  • Intervened in a family court matter. 
  • Threatened to charge Bartlett's husband, Shane Bartlett, if she did not accept a plea deal, and followed through with her threat.
  • Withheld discovery from a previous defense attorney.
  • Took an "extremely personal interest" in Kellie Bartlett's prosecution.
  • Did not function as would be expected of a neutral prosecutor.
  • Nakfoor Pratt denies any wrongdoing in Bartlett's case. 

"All I’ve done in this case, the only thing I’ve done in the last year, is my job," Nakfoor Pratt said. "I stand by my charges." 

She would not go into detail about the allegations, saying she'd rather wait and file her response to the motion in writing. 

Police determined Bartlett's rape report was a lie partially because of texts exchanged with her husband the morning after she said she was raped.

The texts were "sexual in nature and mock(ed) the sexual encounter she had with (the deputy)," Michigan State Police Detective Erik Darling said at a hearing that led to criminal charges for Shane Bartlett. 

"Had (Kellie) Bartlett been a victim of (sexual assault), these messages could be considered so grossly inappropriate as to shock the conscience," Darling said. 

Bartlett was charged with: 
  • Five counts of using a computer to commit a crime
  • Two counts of identity theft
  • Three counts of unauthorized access to a computer
  • Conspiracy to commit identity theft
  • False report of a felony 
  • Two counts of stalking
  • Intentional dissemination of sexually explicit visual material
  • Aggravated stalking

Threats against her husband
Shane Bartlett, who at the time was the chief of police in Potterville, was charged with misconduct in office, lying to a police officer and false report of a felony. His charges are connected to his wife's charge of filing a false rape report. 

Rockind said Nakfoor Pratt approached Kellie Bartlett's former attorney, Dillon, and told him Shane Bartlett was being investigated. She offered Kellie Bartlett a plea deal, and said if she accepted it, "the investigation and potential charges against her husband, Shane, would cease." 

Dillon, however, said Nakfoor Pratt never came close to making any threats against Shane Bartlett. Shane Bartlett was not discussed in plea negotiations, Dillon said. 

"Shane was being charged regardless," Dillon said. "To say that anything in Shane's case hinged on Kellie's charges...I will testify that that's a complete lie." 

Rockind said in the motion that Nakfoor Pratt attempted to "leverage (Kellie's) husband's spotless criminal record and freedom and career...in order to convince her to plead guilty to a number of felonies."

Shane Bartlett was fired from his job as police chief after he was charged. 

'Animosity' toward Bartlett
Even at hearings that have nothing to do with Kellie Bartlett, Nakfoor Pratt introduced Kellie Bartlett's alleged wrongdoings into the narrative, Rockind wrote. 

At co-defendant Lisa Underhill's sentencing for attempted unlawful posting of a message on a computer, Nakfoor Pratt spent time detailing the things she believed Kellie Bartlett had done wrong, Rockind wrote. At Shane Bartlett's arraignment, she "went on a long tangent" about Kellie Bartlett as they tried to determine his bail.

When Shane Bartlett's attorney, Matt Newberg, requested the deputy's personnel file, Nakfoor Pratt "spent considerable time focusing her arguments on Kellie Bartlett — who had nothing to do with Mr. Bartlett's request for said documents," Rockind wrote. 

"There's a clear pattern here," Rockind wrote. "At all turns, the Barry County Prosecutor always comes back around to focusing all of her energy and wrath on Ms. Bartlett."

Dillon said this, again, is untrue. He did not notice any animosity toward Kellie Bartlett, and said there was no indication that Nakfoor Pratt cared more about this case than others.

Appearance at a custody hearing
Nakfoor Pratt also passed notes to the deputy Bartlett accused of raping her and his attorney at a Friend of the Court hearing for a custody case between the deputy and Underhill, according to the motion and transcripts from the hearing. Those notes were subsequently destroyed.

Underhill is the deputy's ex-girlfriend. The State Journal is not naming the deputy because he has not been charged with a crime.

The FOC hearing involves all the same parties and significantly overlaps with Bartlett's criminal case, Rockind wrote in the motion. 

In addition, at the custody hearing — which Rockind said Nakfoot Pratt had no reason to attend in the first place — the prosecutor interrupted the hearing and asked for a recess to tell the judge that Underhill was lying. 

"This is not normal or routine," Rockind wrote. "In fact, this is unprecedented...The Barry County Prosecutor is clearly way more emotionally connected to this case than she will admit and her improper and unethical conduct...demonstrates exactly that."