Pubdate: Sun, 29 Jun 2008 Source: Times, The (Shreveport, LA) Copyright: 2008 The Times Contact: http://www.shreveporttimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1019 Author: John Andrew Prime Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) JURY FINDS FORMER SHREVEPORT POLICE OFFICER GUILTY Roderick Moore Faces Up To 30 Years On Each Of Two Counts. A Caddo jury quickly found former Shreveport police officer Roderick "Rickey" Moore guilty Saturday of supplying drugs to strippers in return for sexual favors. Judge John Joyce polled the seven-woman, five-man jury just after 2 p.m., barely two hours after he charged them. That showed only two of the 12 jurors believing defense claims there was no proof Moore actually passed drugs to the police confidential informant, a stripper at Larry Flynt's Hustler Club. Moore, 52, had been charged with providing her with Lortab and cocaine. Moore was impassive as the jury determined his fate. He was dressed in tan pants and a gray tweed jacket with elbow protectors, and looked almost professorial. His family members did not comment. But his daughter Kammi, who testified against her father, was quietly overcome by emotion as she sat in a rear row of seats as the verdict was read. Moore's brother, visibly angry, quietly stalked the Milam Street sidewalk outside the courthouse as defense lawyers spoke among themselves and with other family members, planning the next steps. Moore was handcuffed in court and remanded pending a presentencing bond hearing, to be scheduled. He will be sentenced at a later date. Prosecutors Jason Brown and Damon Kervin argued Moore, a 17-year veteran of the Police Department, abused his power as a police officer and the trust of the law enforcement community and his family. "'To protect and serve,'" Brown, lead prosecutor, opened his closing arguments. "Honor, trust. Words, just words. Words that have considerable meaning to all of us. Words that he violated." Brown said numerous facts could be determined, but he only had to prove the elements of his case, that Moore provided drugs to the dancers at the strip club. He said Moore preyed on them since he perceived them to be weak and vulnerable due to the drug addictions he perceived them to have. "The end game is simple," Brown said. "He'd do whatever it takes to get into her pants." It was a naked abuse of power and the fall of a public servant. "This is rock bottom," Brown said. "Not only did he violate the bonds of family, friendship, duty, honor; he threw it all away. He gave it away for the abuse of power (over) women in strip clubs." Defense attorney Rick Candler repeatedly pointed out what he termed inconsistencies in evidence and testimony and questioned estrangement between Moore and his daughter. He also questioned whether stresses in the family caused by Moore's divorce and the death of a son might have affected the daughter's testimony. Candler also suggested Kammi Moore was coerced to testify for the prosecution through fear she might lose custody of her child if she did not provide evidence against her father. "She was afraid. She was simply afraid." Candler also asked why the prosecutors could not provide a stream of complainants they said Moore coerced drugs from in order to supply his strippers, and used prosecutors' arguments that such people were foremost among informants as part of his logic. "Not one turned into a confidential information, not one turned into a snitch." He also said much of the evidence used would have been more appropriate at Moore's drug trial in late August in Bossier City and had no place in the Caddo trial. Candler also cited a number of recent high-profile convictions based on witness testimony that have been overturned in recent years with defendants freed, and argued the jury not make the same mistake with Moore. During the trial that began earlier last week, prosecutors introduced video and audio recordings that included messages Moore left on the informant's answering machine, as well as witness testimony by drug agents, police officers and Moore's daughter. Defense attorneys called a single witness, the former house mother at the strip club, who oversaw a dressing room and restroom used by the strippers and tried to ensure they did not use drugs or drink while at work. Moore faces up to 30 years in prison on each count, Candler said. If the sentences are consecutive, he could serve up to 60 years in all, but Candler said that's unlikely. Candler told the family he wants an expedited sentencing hearing. "We can't appeal until he's sentenced," he told them. How that appeal will be crafted has yet to be determined, he said. But he said it was clear to him the evidence as presented did not support a conviction in Caddo. "This was a Bossier Parish case." Moore faces charges of possession of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, methadone, marijuana, oxycodone, hydrocodone, alprazolam and lorazepam in Bossier District Court on Aug. 25 based on a search of his Bossier Parish residence in connection with the investigation that led to his Caddo conviction. Caddo prosecutors were pleased. "I think the citizens of Shreveport should be glad they have a Police Department that will investigate itself for corruption," Brown said. "Corruption in Shreveport will not be tolerated or go unpunished." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath