Saturday, July 30, 2016

07302016 - News Article - Porter County police seeking body cams



Porter County police seeking body cams 
Bob Kasarda
Jul 30, 2016
NWI Times
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:ZmDwUf2qWMMJ:www.nwitimes.com/news/crime-and-court/porter-county-police-seeking-body-cams/article_727a2c27-7696-5a5c-ae44-f3e413daf65b.html+&cd=3&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us


VALPARAISO — The Porter County Sheriff's Department is wading into the national debate over the use of body cameras by seeking to equip each of its officers with the documenting technology.

"We think it's the right thing to do," said Porter County Sheriff Dave Reynolds.

The cameras will better protect both the officers and the public by providing a visual record and verification of what transpires during calls, he said.

The debate over the cameras heated up in the wake of several high-profile cases across the country of alleged police brutality caught on law enforcement and civilian cameras.

Reynolds voiced confidence in the conduct of his officers.

"It's not a secret what we do," he said.

The Hammond Police Department equipped each of its officers with body cameras last year as part of an effort to improve community relations "through improved officer accountability and transparency."

Reynolds' proposal surfaced during a Porter County Council meeting last week when officials from the department appeared seeking to secure the necessary funding from a federal drug enforcement forfeiture fund. The council tabled the request after asking for more information.

Reynolds said he will need between $40,000 and $50,000 a year to equip every officer with body cameras. That price, which includes the hardware, software and cloud storage, could come down after the program is in place.

There is about $109,000 available through the forfeiture fund for the effort, he said.

The department is working on developing policies and procedures involving the cameras, he said, and will be testing out a couple of different types of equipment before choosing a preferred make. He hopes to have the entire proposal together by late August or September to ask the council for funding approval.

The cameras in question are worn by officers on the front of their uniforms and are designed to capture footage of their activities, Reynolds said. All the officers at the department are in favor of the cameras, including members of the Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) team, he said.

Local defense attorneys have questioned the absence of cameras in police cars over the years considering the large amount of federal dollars that were directed back to area departments for their purchase.

Reynolds, who helped introduce the technology locally as chief of police in Portage, said it was discovered that vehicle cameras did not hold up well to the changing temperatures in the area.

"They kept breaking down," he said.

While some officers initially distrusted the use of those cameras as a form of "big brother" watching, they later came to like them, Reynolds said.



It is Reynolds' hope that each officer in his department will be equipped with the newer body cameras this year.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

07202016 - News Article - No bail for former cop accused in Portage slaying



Also See:





No bail for former cop accused in Portage slaying
Post-Tribune (IN)
July 20, 2016
www.newsbank.com
There will be no bail set for a former Hammond police officer accused of murdering the mother of his three children Nov. 8 in Portage.

On Monday, Porter Superior Judge Roger Bradford denied the bond request for Kevin Alexander Campbell, 32, of the 6100 block of Wisconsin Street in Hobart, despite this being the first case in Porter County to address bond for murder under 2013 Indiana Supreme Court decisions.

Bradford said that until minutes before the hearing began, he hadn't known that 2013 court decisions changed legislation that denies bail bonds for murder suspects and now puts the burden of proof in bond hearings on the prosecution.

However, in keeping with the new provisions, "I'm not going so far as saying the proof is evident, but it seems the presumption is strong," he said.

Lisa Mays, the mother of the deceased Tiara Thomas, said "thank God" and began crying loudly when Bradford announced his decision.

She was comforted for the rest of the hearing by family members who also supported her on the way out of court.

Defense attorney Susan Severtson had argued the prosecution had no solid forensic evidence, such as fingerprints, blood or DNA, that Campbell was at the scene of the murder, Thomas' apartment on Old Porter Road. Evidence presented Monday was "based on hearsay," Severtson said.

Portage Detective Lt. Dennis Meyers testified that Campbell had the three kids on a school night, which was a rarity, and that Campbell had turned the GPS off on his cellphone early in the morning, long before Thomas was found by her fiance about 7 a.m.

Meyers also testified that Campbell was in financial trouble and paid $1,495 a month in child support and that police drove one of the children around Lake Station to identify a park that Campbell allegedly stopped at while driving them to school.

The child said it was to throw away a brown bag that included shoes, Meyers said.

Severtson objected to the police working with the child without parental permission, but Bradford allowed it because, as Porter County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Matt Frost said, the child wasn't a suspect.

Monday, July 18, 2016

07182016 - News Article - No bail for ex-cop accused in Portage slaying



Also See:





No bail for ex-cop accused in Portage slaying
Post-Tribune
July 18, 2016 - 6:01PM

There will be no bail set for a former Hammond police officer accused of murdering the mother of his three children in Portage on Nov. 18.

On Monday, Porter Superior Judge Roger Bradford denied the bond request for Kevin Alexander Campbell, 32, of the 6100 block of Wisconsin Street in Hobart, despite this being the first case in Porter County to address bond for murder under 2013 Indiana Supreme Court decisions.

Bradford said that until minutes before the hearing began, he hadn't known that 2013 Court decisions changed legislation that denies bail bond for murder suspects and now puts the burden of proof in bond hearings on the prosecution.

However, in keeping with the new provisions, "I'm not going so far as saying the proof is evident, but it seems the presumption is strong," he said.

Lisa Mays, the mother of the deceased Tiara Thomas, said "thank God" and began crying loudly when Bradford announced his decision.

She was comforted for the rest of the hearing by family members who also supported her on the way out of court.

Defense attorney Susan Severtson had argued the prosecution had no solid forensic evidence, such as fingerprints, blood or DNA, that Campbell was at the scene of the murder, Thomas' apartment on Old Porter Road.

Evidence presented Monday was "based on hearsay," Severtson said.

Portage Detective Lt. Dennis Meyers testified that Campbell had the three kids on a school night, which was a rarity, and that Campbell had turned the GPS off on his cellphone early in the morning, long before Thomas was found by her fiancé about 7 a.m.

Meyers also testified that Campbell was in financial trouble and paid $1,495 a month in child support and that police drove one of the children around Lake Station to identify a park that Campbell allegedly stopped at while driving them to school.

The child said it was to throw away a brown bag that included shoes, Meyers said.

Severtson objected to the police working with the child without parental permission, but Bradford allowed it because, as Porter County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Matt Frost said, the child wasn't a suspect.

07182016 - News Article - No bond for former cop in Portage murder case



Also See:





No bond for former cop in Portage murder case
NWI Times
Jul 18, 2016
http://www.nwitimes.com/news/crime-and-court/no-bond-for-former-cop-in-portage-murder-case/article_10c11b42-0432-534c-8706-be5f48312fb8.html


VALPARAISO — A judge agreed with the defense Monday there may not be a lot of physical evidence linking former Hammond and Gary police officer Kevin Campbell to the slaying of his children’s mother.

But the presumption of his guilt is strong based on circumstantial evidence and that is enough to justify continuing to hold Campbell without bond while his case proceeds, said Porter Superior Court Judge Roger Bradford.

“Thank you, Jesus,” someone said aloud in the courtroom after Bradford announced his decision.

The decision came after about an hour of testimony from Portage police Detective Lt. Dennis Meyers, who summarized the prosecutor’s case against 32-year-old Campbell.

Campbell is charged with killling Tiara Thomas, 30, who was found covered in blood about 7:30 a.m. Nov. 18 in her unit at Park Place Apartments, 5970 Old Porter Road in Portage. She died later at the hospital.

Court documents point to arguments over child support and other money-related matters as a motive.

Defense attorney Susan Severtson asked for a bond Monday, arguing the case against her client is weak and his incarceration is hindering preparation for trial.

“It doesn’t show the court the evidence is strong,” she said of the detective’s testimony.

During questioning from Severtson, Meyers testified there were no fingerprints or other bodily evidence from Campbell found at the crime scene.

None of Campbell’s weapons were linked to the shooting, he said, and none of Thomas’ neighbors saw Campbell at the apartment at the time of the shooting.

Severtson downplayed evidence from Campbell’s son that his father threw a bag away at Columbus Park in Lake Station. The bag was never found, Severtson said, and neither was a key to Thomas’ apartment that Campbell’s 11-year-old son reportedly said his father asked him to bring along ahead of the shooting.

What police did discover is that while Campbell claimed to have been at home in Hobart at the time of the shooting, records show his cellphone active in Portage, Meyers said.

His home security system also recorded his front door opening and closing before the suspected time of the shooting and then again following the shooting, Meyers said.

Meyers said witnesses also said it was unusual that Campbell, rather than their mother, had the children on the day of her shooting, which was a school night.

Campbell also told police he had the same clothes on the entire day of the shooting, but his son disagreed, Meyers said.

Bradford scheduled the next hearing in the case for Sept. 26.

Friday, July 8, 2016

07082016 - News Article - No prison for Brakley - Stepdaughter of ex-Lake Station mayor gets home detention in corruption case



No prison for Brakley 
Stepdaughter of ex-Lake Station mayor gets home detention in corruption case
Post-Tribune (IN)
July 8, 2016
http://infoweb.newsbank.com.proxy.portagelibrary.info/resources/doc/nb/news/15E1FD0067283350?p=AWNB
The stepdaughter of former Lake Station Mayor Keith Soderquist will not see jail time for a federal theft charge.

Judge James Moody in U.S. District Court of Hammond on Thursday accepted a plea agreement for Miranda Brakley that will see Brakley serve six months of home detention and two years probation for agreeing to plead guilty to one count of theft from a program receiving federal funds. A second charge of her lying on her bankruptcy filing was dropped.

Additionally, Brakley must pay a fine of $664, the remaining 4 percent of the money she took.

Moody said he had fully considered "the crime of conviction" as well as letters sent by Brakley's family and friends in giving her the low end of sentencing. The plea agreement, he said, reflects the seriousness of the crime and affords deterrent of future crimes while taking into account her non-criminal history prior to 2012.

Looking gaunt and tired, Brakley, 36, read a short statement to the court before Moody accepted the plea agreement.

"Words cannot express how sorry I am for the humiliation and loss of my actions," Brakley said, fighting back tears. "I sincerely apologize to my family and friends for the embarrassment I've caused."

Brakley's attorney, Thomas Vanes, called the plea agreement "pretty straightforward," and said Brakley "just wants everything to be over."

"I'm confident she'll do what she needs to do to finally put this behind her," Vanes said after the hearing. "She has a host of medical issues that preceded any of this, so it's not like she's living a normal life at this stage."

Letters of support from family and friends for Brakley described the former court clerk as a kind woman brought up in the Catholic faith who thinks of others before herself. They lauded her getting a master's degree from Purdue.

Her father, Danny Brakley, said in his letter that Brakley now has a feeding tube and received serial balloon dilations from a surgery she had in Florida in December.

Deborah Soderquist, her mother, and Keith Soderquist, her stepfather, were not in the courtroom.

A second federal indictment accused Brakley, a former city court clerk, of stealing at least $5,000 in bond money from city court from August 2011 to July 2012 and hiding $7,000 in income from her bankruptcy case, which she filed in August 2012. Former Mayor Soderquist and his wife, Deborah, were also charged with helping Brakley hide the thefts and violate federal banking law.

The Indiana State Board of Accounts reported Brakley never deposited about $16,000 of bond money into the court's bank account. She returned the money by December 2012, claiming she had mistakenly taken it with her other belongings when she was fired from her court clerk position and that it had sat in her vehicle ever since.

FBI agents raided City Hall in 2013, and federal attorneys filed charges against the Soderquists and Brakley in the spring of 2014.

Former Mayor Keith Soderquist and his wife, Deborah, were convicted in the fall of stealing money from the Lake Station Food Pantry - which receives money from city and state tax dollars as well as donations - and the mayor's campaign fund for their personal use, including dozens of trips to Four Winds Casino in New Buffalo, Mich., from 2010 to 2012.

In January, Keith Soderquist reached a plea agreement with federal prosecutors admitting he helped Brakley hide that she stole more than $5,000 in court bond money from the city by helping her get a $15,000 loan from someone else. As part of the deal, the Soderquists dropped a motion for a new trial to overturn their September 2015 trial - in which they argued U.S. District Judge Rudy Lozano fell asleep at least twice during the two weeks it was heard - as well as their appeal rights in that case.

In return, federal attorneys dropped all charges against Deborah Soderquist in the case involving Brakley, and they will recommend that Keith Soderquist serve his sentences in both cases concurrently. They also will recommend he serve the minimum of the recommended federal sentencing guideline range in the case involving Brakley - which is up to five years for pleading guilty to one count of acting as an accessory after the fact - and that he serve within the guideline range for the other case.

The guideline range will be determined at the sentencing hearing at 1 p.m. Sept. 28 in Moody's courtroom. Soderquist will also appear at 10:30 a.m. Sept. 28 in Judge Rudy Lozano's courtroom for sentencing on those charges.

The agreements for both Soderquists stipulate that all three defendants must abide by their agreement for the ex-mayor and his wife to receive the benefits of their own agreements.

Thursday, July 7, 2016

07072016 - News Article - Brakley gets 6 months home detention




HAMMOND — The stepdaughter of former Lake Station Mayor Keith Soderquist avoided prison Thursday.

Miranda Brakley, 35, of Lake Station, received six months home detention followed by two years probation Thursday for embezzling Lake Station City Court funds.

“Words cannot express my humiliation and remorse,” she told U.S. District Court Judge James Moody.

She admitted Jan. 20 she stole more than $16,000 from the city court where she worked as a clerk between 2008 and 2012. Her position gave her access to bond money traffic offenders deposited with the court to get out of jail following their arrest.

Moody ordered her to pay $664 restitution, in addition to the $15,800 she had previously paid the City of Lake Station.

Her lawyer, Thomas Vanes of Merrillville, said home detention was the most appropriate punishment for Brakley who requires high maintenance medical care for a longstanding gastrointestinal disorder that has required recent surgery and for her to maintain a liquid-only diet.

He stated in a memorandum she is restricted to 64 ounces of liquid a day, she has to constantly monitor her blood sugar and blood pressure, go to twice weekly visited to her physicians for check-ups and treatment and has to receive the rest of her nutrients through monthly intravenous treatments at a hospital.

Her stepfather, former Lake Station Mayor Keith Soderquist, awaits sentencing Sept. 28.

He pleaded guilty to attempting to cover up Brakley’s theft by borrowing from an unidentified friend enough money to replace the missing funds to bolster a cover-up story that Brakley had only misplaced, not stolen, the amount.

A jury last year also found the former mayor and his wife, Deborah Soderquist, guilty of improperly taking thousands of dollars from Keith Soderquist’s re-election campaign fund and the city’s food pantry account to gamble at nearby casinos.

The former mayor, who had served nearly eight years in office, came under state and federal scrutiny four years ago after former Lake Station City Judge Christopher A. Anderson discovered Brakley stole money that those arrested in Lake Station posted to get out of jail.

Anderson left the bench last year, ran for Lake Station mayor and defeated Soderquist and a Republican opponent.

07072016 - News Article - No prison time for Brakley in Lake Station corruption case



No prison time for Brakley in Lake Station corruption case
Michelle L. Quinn
Post-Tribune
July 07, 2016

The stepdaughter of former Lake Station Mayor Keith Soderquist will not see jail time for a federal theft charge.

Judge James Moody in U.S. District Court of Hammond on Thursday accepted a plea agreement for Miranda Brakley that will see Brakley serve six months of home detention and two years probation for agreeing to plead guilty to one count of theft from a program receiving federal funds. A second charge of her lying on her bankruptcy filing was dropped.

Additionally, Brakley must pay a fine of $664, the remaining 4 percent of the money she took.

Moody said he had fully considered "the crime of conviction" as well as letters sent by Brakley's family and friends in giving her the low end of sentencing. The plea agreement, he said, reflects the seriousness of the crime and affords deterrent of future crimes while taking into account her non-criminal history prior to 2012.

Looking gaunt and tired, Brakley, 36, read a short statement to the court before Moody accepted the plea agreement.

"Words cannot express how sorry I am for the humiliation and loss of my actions," Brakley said, fighting back tears. "I sincerely apologize to my family and friends for the embarrassment I've caused."

Brakley's attorney, Thomas Vanes, called the plea agreement "pretty straightforward," and said Brakley "just wants everything to be over."

"I'm confident she'll do what she needs to do to finally put this behind her," Vanes said after the hearing. "She has a host of medical issues that preceded any of this, so it's not like she's living a normal life at this stage."

Letters of support from family and friends for Brakley described the former court clerk as a kind woman brought up in the Catholic faith who thinks of others before herself. They lauded her getting a master's degree from Purdue.

Her father, Danny Brakley, said in his letter that Brakley now has a feeding tube and received serial balloon dilations from a surgery she had in Florida in December.

Deborah Soderquist, her mother, and Keith Soderquist, her stepfather, were not in the courtroom.

A second federal indictment accused Brakley, 33, a former city court clerk, of stealing at least $5,000 in bond money from city court from August 2011 to July 2012 and hiding $7,000 in income from her bankruptcy case, which she filed in August 2012. Former Mayor Soderquist and his wife, Deborah, were also charged with helping Brakley hide the thefts and violate federal banking law.

The Indiana State Board of Accounts reported Brakley never deposited about $16,000 of bond money into the court's bank account. She returned the money by December 2012, claiming she had mistakenly taken it with her other belongings when she was fired from her court clerk position and that it had sat in her vehicle ever since.

FBI agents raided City Hall in 2013, and federal attorneys filed charges against the Soderquists and Brakley in the spring of 2014.

Former Mayor Soderquist and his wife, Deborah Soderquist, were convicted last fall of stealing money from the Lake Station Food Pantry — which receives money from city and state tax dollars as well as donations — and the mayor's campaign fund for their personal use, including dozens of trips to Four Winds Casino in New Buffalo, Michigan, from 2010 to 2012.

In January, Keith Soderquist reached a plea agreement with federal prosecutors admitting he helped Brakley hide that she stole more than $5,000 in court bond money from the city by helping her get a $15,000 loan from someone else. As part of the deal, the Soderquists dropped a motion for a new trial to overturn their September 2015 trial -- in which they argued U.S. District Judge Rudy Lozano fell asleep at least twice during the two weeks it was heard -- as well as their appeal rights in that case.

In return, federal attorneys dropped all charges against Deborah Soderquist in the case involving Brakley, and they will recommend that Keith Soderquist serve his sentences in both cases concurrently. They will also recommend he serve the minimum of the recommended federal sentencing guideline range in the case involving Brakley -- which is up to five years for pleading guilty to one count of acting as an accessory after the fact -- and that he serve within the guideline range for the other case.

The guideline range will be determined at the sentencing hearing at 1 p.m. Sept. 28 in Moody's courtroom. Soderquist will also appear at 10:30 a.m. Sept. 28 in Judge Rudy Lozano's courtroom for sentencing on those charges.

The agreements for both Soderquists stipulate that all three defendants must abide by their agreement for the mayor and his wife to receive the benefits of their own agreements.

07072016 - News Article - Miranda Brakley Was Sentenced to 2 Years Probation



Miranda Brakley Was Sentenced to 2 Years Probation
United States Department Of Justice
July 07, 2016