2012
12.07

Two men accused of drug dealing had charges against them dropped Thursday after their attorney told a judge that five Philadelphia antinarcotics officers involved in their case had “partnered with drug dealers” in crime. READ ARTICLE

Cops on the Drug Task Forces do NOT get charged with crimes. They get reassigned. They know too much about the illegal tactics used to create their drug cases. The illegal use of private investigators to hide the lack of a search warrant. The illegal use of computer and phone hacking to get information used to ‘stumble upon’ drug buys. They know how many people have been set up and destroyed.


The action came two days after Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey transferred the five officers and a lieutenant from the aggressive Narcotics Field Unit.

District Attorney Seth Williams informed Ramsey by letter Monday that his office would no longer use the officers as witnesses, accept charges, or approve search warrants in narcotics cases in which they were involved.

“There was a group of police officers who essentially partnered with certain drug dealers, and they partnered with those drug dealers to do things that were both illegal and outright crimes,”

“The implications of this are huge,” Schwartz said in response to news of the prosecution’s statements about the officers. “And not just in terms of future prosecutions. The real unknown is, how many convictions will be impacted?”

The accusations brought to mind the scandal surrounding five narcotics officers taken off the street in 2009.

Those officers have for more than three years been under federal investigation for alleged evidence-planting, illegal searches, and theft. One officer also is accused of groping several women during searches. Ramsey recently said he did not expect the investigation to continue.

The alleged activities of the narcotics unit were spotlighted in a series of Pulitzer Prize-winning stories in the Philadelphia Daily News, based in part on interviews with a criminal informant who claimed he and veteran narcotics Officer Jeffrey Cujdik sometimes falsified information to get search warrants approved.

Later the owners of several bodegas came forward, reporting that the squad had robbed their stores under the pretense of searching for plastic ziplock bags used for packaging drugs. The officers cut the wires of store cameras to mask their conduct, those merchants said.

As members of the highly aggressive Narcotics Field Unit, Cujdik and the other members of his squad made dozens, sometimes hundreds, of arrests per year.

The Public Defender’s Office has since filed court petitions to overturn at least 55 criminal convictions involving arrests by those officers. The matter is before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The city has also settled 21 lawsuits for about $1 million from that scandal.

That pales by comparison with the more than $4 million that was paid out during the 39th District scandal of the late 1990s. In that case, five district officers who worked narcotics cases were convicted of federal corruption charges.

Out of control Drug Task Force? Where has that been documented before? The illegal activity of the “War on Drugs” has become a liability all across the US.

2012
12.07

“a little bit of a domestic issue,”… Ya think? I am still looking to confirm that he had just filed for divorce from his lawyer wife. They had separated. That detail seems to be omitted along with only a scant mention of her in the articles. He had shared a legal practice with his wife specializing in Family Law.

Philadelphia Judge Adam Beloff reportedly kills self – Read article from Philly.com

Philadelphia Judge Found Dead at NJ Shore Home, Apparent Suicide – Read Article from CBS Local

Philadelphia judge Adam Beloff ‘hangs himself after separating from his wife – Read Article from AP Newswire

Philadelphia Judge Reportedly Commits Suicide – Read article fro IQ 106.9 FM

Mourning his honor ?
An area native, who served on the Court of Common Pleas, is believed to have killed himself.

Phila. Common Pleas Court judge dies of apparent suicide

This is the preferred outcome of the Family Court where a person who has committed no crime can lose everything. Those who are familiar with the situation know the hopelessness and despair ahead.

People get nervous at the mention of the word “suicide”. Because once the word is out there everyone jumps to conclusions, and suggestions. It can be seen in these articles. People suggest he was disturbed. Suddenly, he was disturbed. Give the man some credit. He was an educated knowledgeable man with alot of experience as a lawyer and as a judge. I think he wasn’t so much disturbed as informed.

You just have to wonder as the articles suggest he didn’t know what he was doing. I see that as tremendous disrespect for a difficult decision he felt necessary. He was not an uninformed individual. He was part of the system. He knew.

He achieved his dream. Someone tell his wife, she won.