The
tip comes from a confidential informer: Someone has a gun. Ten or more
minutes later, police officers find a man matching the informer’s
detailed description at the reported location. A gun is discovered; an
arrest is made.
That
narrative describes how Jeffrey Herring was arrested last year by
police officers in the 67th Precinct in East Flatbush, Brooklyn. It also
describes the arrests of at least two other men, Eugene Moore and John
Hooper, by some of the same officers.
The suspects said the guns were planted by the police.
There
were other similarities: Each gun was found in a plastic bag or a
handkerchief, with no traces of the suspect’s fingerprints. Prosecutors
and the police did not mention a confidential informer until months
after the arrests. None of the informers have come forward, even when
defense lawyers and judges have requested they appear in court.
Taken
individually, the cases seem to be routine examples of differences
between the police account of an arrest and that of the person arrested.
But taken together, the cases — along with other gun arrests made in
the precinct by these officers — suggest a pattern of questionable
police conduct and tactics.
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