Pubdate: Thu, 02 Nov 2000 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Francisco Chronicle Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Author: Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer FOUR OAKLAND COPS FACE 48 FELONY COUNTS Alameda County Crackdown In Police Corruption Probe OAKLAND -- In one of the toughest crackdowns against police corruption in Oakland history, the Alameda County district attorney will charge four police officers known as ``The Riders'' with a total of 48 felonies. Kidnapping, assault with a deadly weapon, assault under color of authority and filing false police reports are among the most serious charges stemming from a three-month investigation into accusations that officers in West Oakland were beating suspects and planting evidence, an attorney for one of the officers said yesterday. The four officers, who probably will surrender to authorities, also will face a total of 11 misdemeanors, said the attorney, Michael Rains of Pleasant Hill. Alameda County District Attorney Tom Orloff and Oakland Police Chief Richard Word will hold a news conference today to formally announce the charges against the officers, who were turned in to their supervisors in late July by a rookie cop who left the department. Although none of the officers have been arrested, prosecutors have already proposed bail figures for officers Matt Hornung, 28; Clarence ``Chuck'' Mabanag, 35; Jude Siapno, 32, and Francisco Vazquez, 43, said Rains, Mabanag's attorney. The charges against Vazquez appear to be the most serious, with a bail of $195,000, Rains said. Siapno's suggested bail is $175,000, Mabanag's is $157,000, and Hornung's is $54,000, according to Rains. Other attorneys in the case could not be reached for comment yesterday. Rains said he and the other officers' lawyers will probably object to bail and try to work out a plan that allows the officers to surrender. John Crew, a police practices specialist for the American Civil Liberties Union in San Francisco, described the Oakland case as ``the most significant, in terms of scope,'' that he has seen in Northern California during his 15 years of tracking such cases. A VERY SIGNIFICANT CASE ``It's potentially as significant as the Rampart scandal in Los Angeles,'' he said referring to the corruption probe of a Los Angeles Police Department sector that has resulted in many convictions being overturned. Noting that the Oakland case developed after a rookie police officer blew the whistle, Crew said major questions remain about ``other police officers who may have been in a position to know about these activities and did not report them.'' ``You can't look at the scope of this scandal in Oakland -- four different officers facing 48 different felonies -- and not be concerned about the atmosphere'' that allowed it to happen, Crew said. Oakland's scandal followed a 1999 announcement by Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown that crime reduction was one of his top goals for the city. But Brown and Word have made no excuses for the officers and promise to clean up criminal conduct within the department as well as on the streets. The four officers will be named in a criminal complaint that outlines charges against all four as well as charges against specific officers, said Rains, who had not seen the complaint but was familiar with its contents. Other charges include conspiracy to obstruct justice and willful inhumanity to prisoners. `SAD DAY' FOR FOUR OFFICERS ``It's a sad day for my client; it's a sad day for the four officers and their families and the Oakland Police Department,'' Rains said. ``These are very, very good officers who have had excellent records with this department.'' Mabanag, who won a department medal of merit in 1997 for his narcotics work, has been charged with 15 felonies and four or five misdemeanors, his attorney said. The scandal could lead in some cases to convicted individuals being freed, released from parole or probation or resentenced, authorities say. Those arrested could have their charges dismissed. As for the officers, a felony conviction would automatically prevent them being peace officers. E-mail Henry K. Lee at --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck