Ex-Atlanta cops get prison for drug raid killing
Judge says police department quotas put excess pressure on officers. A federal judge who sent three fallen cops to prison for a notorious drug raid that left an elderly woman dead said Tuesday that Atlanta Police Department performance quotas unduly influenced the officers' behavior.
"It is my fervent hope the Atlanta Police Department will take to heart what has happened here," U.S. District Judge Julie Carnes said. At the close of an emotional two-day hearing, Carnes sentenced former officers Gregg Junnier, Jason R. Smith and Arthur Bruce Tesler to between 5 and 10 years in prison.
At the hearing, Tesler's lawyer provided examples of other Atlanta police officers breaking the rules or violating the law and said a disturbing culture of misconduct pervades the force.
Carnes imposed the most severe sentence–10 years–on Smith, 36, who obtained the illegal, no-knock search warrant allowing officers to batter down 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston's door.
A terrified Johnston, thinking she was victimized by a home invasion, fired a warning shot through the door. Narcotics officers responded with a hail of gunfire, killing her.
Carnes sentenced Junnier, 42, to 6 years in prison. Junnier, the most experienced officer, was the first to cross the "blue line"–the unspoken code of silence among police–and divulge to the FBI what really happened at Neal Street and how the officers concocted a sophisticated coverup.
For Junnier's cooperation, Carnes cut his time from the 10 years recommended by sentencing guidelines.
The judge gave the biggest break to Tesler, saying prosecutors' recommendation of a 10- to 14-year term was "unduly harsh" because, overall, he played a "minor role." She sentenced Tesler, 42, to five years in prison.
There is no parole in the federal system, but inmates can carve 15 percent off their time with good behavior. Junnier and Smith are to be sentenced March 5 in Fulton County on state charges, including voluntary manslaughter. Those sentences are to run concurrently with the federal time.
Tesler's lawyer, Bill McKenney, told Carnes his client was being made "a sacrificial lamb and a scapegoat." A former military man and a rookie on the squad, Tesler followed orders–including adhering to the script Smith provided for a cover story.
After the shooting, Smith planted marijuana in Johnston's home to make it look like a drug house. Paige Fitzgerald of the U.S. Justice Department's Civil Rights Division called such conduct "simply shameful."
In court, McKenney divulged details of an FBI report forwarded to Atlanta Police that shows how other officers broke rules. Prosecutors say the FBI's recommendations, which have yet to be fully disclosed, could lead to some officers being disciplined, fired or charged.
McKenney said the FBI found that at least two other officers took "handoffs" from Junnier. A "handoff" occurs when one officer collects information on a drug case and passes it on to another officer, who then falsely swears on a search warrant affidavit as if he or she had firsthand information about it.
Another officer, McKenney said, split a rock of crack cocaine seized in one case and used it for another case. One officer, he said, padded expense vouchers and used the cash to buy tinted windows for surveillance cars.
The FBI also found performance quotas of 9 arrests and 2 search warrants a month expected of officers, McKenney said. Officers who failed to meet their quotas risked being transferred, he said.
This helped explain, Carnes said, why Smith, Junnier and Tesler–three men who were devoted family men and who gave selflessly to the communities–began cutting corners through lies.
"The pressures brought to bear" by the quotas had an impact on Smith, Junnier and Tesler, as well as other officers, Carnes said.
Following the sentencing, U.S. Attorney David Nahmias noted the Johnston tragedy prompted Atlanta Police to require new training and to revamp the narcotics unit. The prison terms also send a strong message to other officers who may think the "ends justifiy the means" by taking shortcuts or telling lies, he said.
Carnes also ordered all three former officers to reimburse Johnston's estate the $8,180 it cost to bury the 92-year-old woman.