Pubdate: Thu, 01 Jul 2004
Source: Eugene Weekly (OR)
Copyright: 2004 Eugene Weekly
Contact:  http://www.eugeneweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/136
Author: Alan Pittman

POLICING POLICE

Magana verdict leaves many unanswered questions about police policing 
themselves.

Roger Magana was convicted Wednesday on 42 out of 45 charges that he 
sexually abused women while a Eugene police officer.

The jury has answered the question of Magana's guilt or innocence. But the 
massive trial involving alleged crimes including rape, sex abuse, 
kidnapping, sodomy, coercion, harassment and official misconduct has raised 
a host of unanswered questions about the need to reform how the Eugene 
Police Department polices itself.

Prosecutor Robert Lane told the jury in closing arguments last week, 
"There's nothing you can do that's going to restore any shine to the badge. 
There's nothing you can do to make women feel safer in Eugene or elsewhere. 
The cops have to do that for themselves."

Exactly how they will do that remains unclear. But it is clear that the 
public trial has left EPD's secretive police discipline system much to 
answer for. What follows is a rundown of some of the bigger police 
accountability questions raised by the trial this past week.

Officers Dismissed Complaints

Last summer police Detective Scott McKee first contacted one woman who 
Magana allegedly forced oral sex from on multiple occasions by threatening 
to arrest or shoot her.

In a taped conversation of McKee's call, the woman said she had told 
officer Jerry Webber and police Lt. Pete Kerns and was "99 percent sure" 
she'd also told officer Roberto Rios of the abuse when it was happening, 
but the officers did nothing.

"Why the hell didn't they listen to me? That's gravely offensive," the 
woman told McKee.

"It's disturbing to me," McKee admitted.

"It's absolutely horrendous," the woman said. She compared it to police 
failing to investigate the Green River serial murders because they involved 
prostitutes.

Other officers also heard allegations against Magana and also apparently 
failed to act. Police Officer Larry Crompton said he was doing a bar check 
at Diablos one night with Magana. A man came up and angrily confronted 
Magana and "there was some pretty pointed allegations made."

The judge in the Magana trial did not allow Crompton to specify the exact 
nature of the allegations because of a defense objection that they were 
hearsay. Crompton said he thought the confrontation was "pretty unusual," 
but he apparently did not report the man's allegations to superiors for 
investigation.

In his opening statement in the trial, defense attorney Russell Barnett 
said it was hard to believe that a competent police department would have 
let Magana's alleged crimes continue for so long against so many victims 
without detection. "He's either the slickest guy working with the dumbest 
people, or perhaps the accusations don't add up."

Prosecutor Lane said police did not see what Magana did and did not believe 
the complaints from drug users against their fellow officer. "This bunch of 
cops are not stupid."

But Lane himself pointed out to the jury that most of Magana's victims were 
not drug users and that even drug users are often held up by police as 
reliable informants in cases against criminals.

Policing Themselves

Eugene police have trouble policing themselves, according to testimony.

The alleged victim in the taped phone conversation asked how McKee felt 
investigating a fellow officer.

"Initially it was very uncomfortable and you can't help but feel some 
loyalty" to an officer with 10 years on the job, McKee said.

Lane told the jury that McKee investigating a fellow officer at first 
"chose to, let's face it, adopt a strategy of trying to clear this guy" by 
using police records to place him somewhere else. "He failed."

Police officer Jeff Glemser said officers often discredit complaints 
against police officers from drug users. He said he would tell superiors of 
a complaint involving coerced oral sex, "but on the other hand, you take 
that kind of thing with a grain of salt."

Police Officer Mel Thompson testified that he has often heard charges from 
drug users that "so and so is dating a cop" but has brushed them off.

Magana isn't the only EPD cop to be accused of sex on the job. Members of 
the EPD Rapid Deployment Unit were accused about five years ago of drug 
use, money theft and consorting with prostitutes, according to testimony 
from Officer Thompson. Thompson said the allegations weren't true, but it's 
unclear what the police did to investigate.

One thing the police didn't do was conduct a sting operation. Police 
regularly use stings to catch people using prostitutes. Det. McKee 
testified that Officer Webber proposed that the police check the 
allegations against the police unit by doing a sting with fake prostitutes, 
but EPD Lt. Jim Fields refused to authorize the sting.

Two of the alleged Magana victims also offered to help with a sting against 
Magana, but police did not apparently follow through, according to testimony.

Police had another opportunity to stop Magana's alleged sex crime spree 
three years ago when a woman filed a complaint that Magana had sexually 
harassed her, according to testimony.

Sgt. Willy Harris said the complaint "caused me some concern." Stopping the 
woman late at night appeared lawful, but Magana inexplicably did not report 
on information gathered from the woman nor did he run a computer check on 
her for warrants, according to Harris. But Harris said he could not "make a 
definitive determination" that Magana acted unlawfully and the department 
dismissed the complaint.

Lane asked Police Chief Robert Lehner if he was aware that a 2001 audit of 
police complaints found that the department should have found Magana guilty 
of wrongdoing at that time. Lehner said he was not aware of that.

The woman stopped by Magana while looking for her cat testified that Magana 
asked if she was pregnant and asked if she had a boyfriend. The on-duty 
officer asked her to call him on his day off. "I felt very afraid when I 
was speaking with him," she said.

Lax Supervision

Magana lacked effective supervision and had apparent free reign to 
allegedly victimize women while on duty, according to testimony.

Magana's most recent supervisor, Sgt. Harris, was apparently clueless about 
Magana's alleged criminal activity. "I never had any concerns as to where 
he was," Harris said. Harris testified that he gave Magana positive 
performance evaluations and praised him for his knowledge of police work 
and for working a lot of hours.

Harris apparently did not regularly check up on officers on the street. He 
said he relied on their honesty. "It's absolutely crucial for us to be 
honest with each other."

At one point, Magana allegedly placed himself on "special assignment" with 
dispatchers so he would have time to coerce sex from a female drunk driver 
while on duty. Harris said he would have known and authorized such a 
"special assignment" but he appeared ignorant that Magana gave himself the 
assignment that night.

Fellow officers had questions about where Magana was while on duty, but 
apparently did not report their concerns.

"There were times I would see Mr. Magana at the briefing and not see him 
until the end of the shift," testified officer Greg Reeves, who worked an 
adjacent patrol sector to Magana.

Officer Jeff Glemser said he patrolled Bethel with Magana but now realizes, 
"I never really knew where officer Magana was."

Officer Thompson said in 1999 he looked for Magana at a location he had 
reported by radio but couldn't find him. He said he found Magana a few 
blocks away entering a drug "flop house" where one of his alleged victims 
lived.

A trainee officer, John Sharlow, noticed Magana was on his personal cell 
phone a lot late at night when most people were asleep. Magana allegedly 
used the phone to call his sex victims.

Yet More Questions

Did Magana have many more victims? The jury was only asked to consider 
crimes against 11 victims. But McKee told an alleged victim last year that 
he had 18 victims he was investigating, according to a tape played at trial.

Did Magana also steal money? McKee testified that Magana has not been 
charged with theft, but he did begin investigating questions about his 
finances. He said people contacted him with concerns of how Magana was able 
to afford a half million dollar house, new cars and thousands of dollars in 
new fitness equipment on his and his wife's relatively small salaries. 
There was also suspicious evidence that Magana had paid for several hundred 
dollar cell phone bills and $3,000 to $10,000 in fitness equipment in cash. 
"I haven't completed that inquiry" into Magana's finances, McKee said.

Magana helped train several police officers while he was allegedly also 
sexually abusing women. It's unclear if those officers will now require 
retraining.

David Montgomery prosecutes drug cases for the district attorney and 
testified that he had to dismiss many drug cases Magana was involved in 
after the allegations against the officer came to light. "There was a cloud 
and it would be uncomfortable to go forward based on the allegations 
against Mr. Magana," he said. It's unclear if the district attorney will 
also have to go back and retry or dismiss existing drug convictions that 
were based on Magana's testimony.

In the taped phone call to a victim last summer, the woman told Det. McKee 
that she "was surprised it's taken this long" to catch Magana.

McKee, noting allegations stretched back to 1997, replied, "I am too."
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