Complaint Board Finds Police Officers Violated Policy By Arresting Public Defender Who Demanded They Stop Questioning Her Clients

from the and-not-a-single-officer-was-disciplined dept

More than a year after San Francisco police officers arrested public defender Jami Tillotson for doing her job, the city’s Office of Citizen Complaints has issued its report. It clears Tillotson of any wrongdoing and lays the blame solely at the feet of the San Francisco PD.

First, a quick refresher, since we’re discussing something that happened last January: Tillotson’s clients were approached by police officers in a courthouse hallway. The officers began asking her clients questions and photographing them for a photo array. She inserted herself between the officers and the men and demanded the officers stop questioning them/photographing them without running it through her. The officers responded in the only way they knew how: they arrested her for resisting arrest — an arrest in which she cooperated fully with no amount of resistance. (It seems like circular reasoning, but “resisting arrest” is a catch-all for other sorts of interference with police work, rather than simply resisting an arrest.)


Thirteen months later, the review board has this to say about the officers’ actions.

Police arrested Jami Tillotson without cause in January 2015 and detained her in an “unduly prolonged manner without justification,” the Office of Citizen Complaints concluded.

The agency also determined that there was found a policy failure on two allegations: interfering with the right to counsel and conduct reflecting discredit on the department in the case of an officer who made inappropriate comments to the media following the incident.

The report was released by the public defender’s office because presumably the SFPD had no plans to. In fact, the police chief — despite dismissing charges and apologizing to Tillotson — still insists his officers did nothing wrong.

[H]e stood by the actions of Sgt. Brian Stansbury and the other officers who arrested Tillotson. Stansbury “had reasonable suspicion to take the pictures” and a right to do so in a public area, the chief has said.

Maybe so, but the complaint review board says otherwise. his officers may have had the “reasonable suspicion” to take pictures, but they clearly didn’t have the right to continue to do so after being told not to by an officer of the court (the public defender), much less prevent her from doing her job by arresting her.

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Comments on “Complaint Board Finds Police Officers Violated Policy By Arresting Public Defender Who Demanded They Stop Questioning Her Clients”

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49 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

The tax payers should pay.

They are the ones sitting on their asses as they do nothing to stop this bullshit.

I am sick and fucking tired everyone acting like the taxpayer is somehow not responsible for the fucking assholes in charge.

When the taxpayer is done paying they will vote in someone that promises to clean up the police, until then… they will just keep voting in those “tough on crime” assholes that like to employ those that like to stomp around in their “Authority” jackboots.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

The tax payers should pay.

This is entirely the problem. The taxpayers do pay – over and over and over again.

Until the police start facing jail time (which admittedly, the tax payers will also pay for), this behavior will continue.

If jail is supposed to be a deterrent, then perhaps it’s time to start applying it to police, who in theory are supposed to know better.

Zonker says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

When the taxpayer is done paying they will vote in someone that promises to clean up the police…

And that someone will break that promise the moment they step into office. You honestly think the voters have a choice of real candidates who will represent them rather than corporations and unions? That is not the American way.

Anon E. Mous (profile) says:

She never should have been arrested in the first place and of course the police abused their powers.

The fact that bothers me is that the police arrested her because they didnt like her sticking up for her clients and they full well knew she was within her right in acting as the defendants counsel and that this was taking place outside of the courtroom.

So Police decided to play the heavy card and arrest her, and this was plain and simply abuse of power. There are certain elements of the police that seem to think they can do and say what they want and when questioned on it, abuse the powers of arrest and trumped up charges to justify their illegal acts.

It’s the police officers stupidity in this case that if this lady sues, you can bet she will end up with a settlement because how can the police say this was justified especially when there were a hall full of witnesses and someone who happened to video record it.

I doubt this will be the first or last time we see something like this happen, seems nowadays peoples rights are being trampled with impunity

Anonymous Coward says:

Suing the police department will accomplish absolutely nothing but to marginally increase the citizen’s taxes.

But as an officer of the court, can she not swear out and prosecute charges against the individual cops herself? A criminal conviction should be easy, and with a criminal record, they can no longer be cops, correct?

Quiet Lurcker says:

Re: Re:

I should think the larger issue would be, could she petition the court for a contempt proceeding in that particular case, and how would the court handle such a thing. At the very outer limits of possibility, I suppose she might convince the judge to dismiss the case or at least disallow some of the evidence because of what the cops did.

And if the cops and prosecutor both get a good dressing down in public and handed a substantial fine on top, so much the better. It might actually direct their attention to the fact they got it wrong.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

‘Personal responsibility’? What kind of madness is that, it’s not like police choose what they do or have any control over their own actions, so punishing them for doing something wrong would be highly unfair.

No, the only fair course of action is to punish someone else, I’m sure if you do that enough the police will learn their lesson, what with seeing someone else foot the bill for their actions.

That Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

So can she sue the department?
They removed a lawyer from being able to provide assistance to her clients and put a black mark on her record she would have to report to the bar.

If she can, can she name the chief personally?

They over reached, and then compounded it by arresting her and he wants to ignore that part. Well they totally are allowed to take photographs in a courthouse… aren’t there usually limits on photography in courthouses to try and protect witnesses & victims?

It is sad it only took them a year to decide it was wrong, shall we hold our breath for any repercussions for the officers?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Regardless of anyone’s right to photography in public, no one has the right to force you to pose for the picture. The issue was that the cop detained them to take the picture. That detainment was without a warrant or exigent circumstances.

The ‘reasonable suspicion(RS) to take pictures’ is bullshit since RS is never needed to take pictures. Might as well claim RS because water is wet.

Techno says:

And so...

Does this Citizens Council have any authority? Is there any censure of the police?Any punitive actions? This sounds a lot like a paper tiger roaring with no real action. Police wonder why people are more accepting of violence towards them than in the past. If you’re acting like a tyrant the citizens are going to respond like you’re a tyrant and you lose your authority. Police seem to have forgotten that no one governs except by the power of those that they govern. There is no army large enough to subdue an entire people.

Anonymous Coward says:

Iv held the suspicion for some time that a lot of these incidents are arranged by conspirators to collect insurance settlements. Iv even considered proposing to a LEO “hypothetically, if you knew someone would be walking their little puppy dog at such and such a place at such and such time, and all you have to do is show up, shoot the dog, pepper the person and arrest him for refusing to ID (easy case), and it would be a 6040 split, would you consider that?”

Have the ol “hidden” camera or streaming recording, keep your fucking mouths shut, and an hour of burning eyeballs with a weekend in jail could net 100k+.

For a disgruntled cop that would be the ideal “severance package.”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Just a few problems with that…
1) 100k would barely cover legal costs. If you ignore the policeman’s costs (as covered by the department), the ‘plaintiff’ would still be shelling out.

2) The ‘victim’ in this scheme would have something over the cop. There’s no guarantee the cop would actually get anything out of it. (qv The Maltese Falcon)

3) The cop IS going to be watched, by media, by activists, by someone. The chances of the fraud going undiscovered are not small.

4) He’s a cop. If things go sour in all this, it might end up with bodybags. Really want to volunteer for something like that? Even for a huge payout?

Even cops would not fall for that.

Anonymous Coward says:

Iv held the suspicion for some time that a lot of these incidents are arranged by conspirators to collect insurance settlements. Iv even considered proposing to a LEO “hypothetically, if you knew someone would be walking their little puppy dog at such and such a place at such and such time, and all you have to do is show up, shoot the dog, pepper the person and arrest him for refusing to ID (easy case), and it would be a 6040 split, would you consider that?”

Have the ol “hidden” camera or streaming recording, keep your fucking mouths shut, and an hour of burning eyeballs with a weekend in jail could net 100k+.

For a disgruntled cop that would be the ideal “severance package.”

btr1701 (profile) says:

Officer of the Court

> Maybe so, but the complaint review board says otherwise.
> His officers may have had the “reasonable suspicion” to
> take pictures, but they clearly didn’t have the right to
> continue to do so after being told not to by an officer
> of the court

Being an officer of the court doesn’t give a lawyer some super power or authority to give unilaterally binding orders to other citizens.

She could ask the cops to stop questioning her client, but if they keep questioning anyway, the only consequence is that whatever the client says is inadmissible at trial.

Likewise, the chief was correct– just as citizens can legally photograph anything they want in a public place, so can the cops. Being told “stop” by a defense attorney doesn’t strip them of that right, nor does that attorney’s status as an “officer of the court” place her in a position of superior authority over the police.

Ed K says:

Re: Officer of the Court

They can take pictures in a public place, but they can’t insist that their subjects pose for said pictures(!) without an arrest or a warrant.

The lawyer didn’t try to take away their camera, she just insisted that there was no need for her to get out of the way of the camera, or to allow them to interact with her client without her involvement. That seems very straightforward, and the cops were clearly in the wrong.

Gray Grantham says:

Suspicion

Why do we as a society allow corrupt cops to even open their mouths and claim “suspicion” is a justification for abuse of police power.

The Criminal code doesn’t hinge on suspicion, it hinges on “probable cause” that a criminal statute has been violated.

Anytime a cop uses “suspicion” to justify anything it is an admission that the cop is corrupt and is trying to justify an action that cannot be justified using the probable cause standard.

Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Re: Suspicion vs. Probable Cause

Pretty much we decided that suspicion is probable cause enough at the point that the 1984 US Supreme Court decided to allow for the Good Faith Exception.

It’s become worse since then, now that the supreme court has decided that fruit of the poisonous tree (that is suppression of evidence and of all investigations that followed from that evidence) was not poisonous enough if the suspect was a terrible enough person.

In the case where this was decided terrible enough person was someone in possession of controlled substances.

Why? Because we like putting people in jail for any petty reason, really.

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