Pubdate: Sun, 22 Feb 2009
Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
Page: Front Page, Right Side
Copyright: 2009 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Contact: http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/letters/sendletter.html
Website: http://www.ajc.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28
Authors: Bill Torpy, Bill Rankin, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Tesler
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?246 (Policing - United States)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States)

A KILLING, A COVER-UP, A BREAK IN RANKS

3 Police Officers: Their Actions Lost Public Trust in the Atlanta 
Police Department.

Jason Smith was losing it.

"I [screwed] up; I think I killed this woman," the Atlanta narcotics 
cop told partner Arthur Tesler in the yard behind a small brick 
bungalow on Neal Street. "You guys got to help me."

Inside, a 92-year-old woman lay dead, killed by a fusillade of police 
bullets. Officer Gregg Junnier, his face grazed by a bullet and 
bleeding, stalked through the home looking for suspects and contraband.

But there were no dealers, no kilo of cocaine. The tip that brought 
police to 933 Neal St. was as bogus as the story they used to sell a 
judge on the raid.

Desperation and self-preservation kicked in. Smith remembered the 
marijuana seized earlier that day. Better make it look like a drug 
house, he reckoned. He pulled baggies of pot from his sleeve, nodded 
to Tesler, and planted them in the basement.

The Nov. 21, 2006, killing of Kathryn Johnston, two days before 
Thanksgiving, outraged residents of the northwest neighborhood, 
shocked the nation and rocked Atlanta's police force. It laid bare 
the corruption of an out-of-control narcotics squad that lied to get 
search warrants and planted drugs on suspects.

This time, Smith had authored the trumped-up affidavit. For all 
three, it was business as usual.

On Monday, the three former officers will be together again in 
federal court to be sentenced for conspiring to violate Johnston's 
civil rights. A sentencing memo from prosecutors to the judge, along 
with prior testimony and other court records, reveals how the 
officers concocted a sophisticated cover-up that fell apart when 
Junnier, the squad veteran and the son of a cop, turned on his 
colleagues. He crossed the "blue line."

Getting the Story Straight

Two hours after the shootout, Junnier lay in a hospital bed with 
flesh wounds to his cheek and thigh. Smith and Tesler sidled up to 
him, waiting for his room at Grady Memorial Hospital to clear.

Junnier was irritated; Smith seemed more concerned about getting 
their story straight than how he was doing. Smith was mad because 
Junnier hadn't answered his cellphone at the hospital.

The three officers were members of a squad with free rein to operate 
in a netherworld of drugs, criminals and danger. The rules and truth 
were measured on a sliding, situational scale. They had to depend on 
each other. But they weren't friends. And now trust was in short supply.

But they were in this together. They began to construct what federal 
prosecutors would call "a diligent and devious effort" to deflect 
their complicity.

Their sergeant and lieutenant had already questioned Smith and 
Tesler. Now the two told Junnier the story they were going with: that 
they got the warrant for the raid after Alex White, a reliable snitch 
they often used, purchased crack cocaine at the Neal Street home. 
They'd told their superiors they drove White to the house in a patrol car.

Junnier was incredulous.

"Take an informant to make a buy in a patrol car?" he asked. "You're 
going to have to come up with something better than that."

At 40, Junnier had 18 years on the force, eight in narcotics. He'd 
followed his father into the brotherhood of blue. His wife was a 
nurse, and Junnier worked second jobs to send her to school. He 
skipped lunch with his partners so he could clock out quickly and go 
home to their son and daughter.

But part of his side income came from "security jobs" prosecutors say 
he ran while on duty, jobs in which the cops, for weekly cash 
payments, provided extra surveillance for businesses in high-crime 
areas. Authorities suggest Junnier and others cut corners not only to 
more easily catch criminals but to save time to work their crooked jobs.

Now the job was to get White, the informant, on board with their 
story. Later that night, Smith called Junnier to say things were set 
with White.

"He's cool with everything," he told his anxious colleague.

Feeling the Heat

The tragic string of events had started at 4 p.m. Nov. 21, 2006, when 
Tesler roughed up and arrested small-time dope slinger Fabian Sheats 
and threatened him with prison unless he gave up someone bigger. The 
nervous suspect eventually picked out Johnston's home -- apparently 
at random -- where he said he saw a dealer named "Sam" with a kilo of 
cocaine just an hour before. The officers were pumped. A kilo was a 
huge score for cops used to seizures measured in grams.

But Sheats was unreliable, so they called White at 5:05 p.m. to come 
make a buy to prove a dealer lived there. White couldn't come. But 
for this squad, it didn't matter. They'd just invent the facts they needed.

The officers were at the Fulton County jail a half hour later to get 
a warrant from a magistrate. Smith told the judge they had watched 
"Sam" greet their informant, go inside and sell him drugs. At 5:53 
p.m., they had their "no-knock" warrant. It would allow them to 
batter down the door and catch the criminals inside by surprise.

By 7 p.m. Johnston lay dead, shot five or six times. Believing 
intruders were at her door, she'd fired her revolver once. The entry 
team responded with 39 shots.

The next day, a worried Tesler approached Junnier, who'd been 
released from the hospital. He told him their supervisor suspected 
they were lying. Still, the sergeant had told him, "You need to get 
your story together and stick to it."

To that end, Tesler wrote a police report to match the false 
affidavit and cover story.

A stocky, well-built New York native, Tesler, 40, had joined the Army 
at 24 to get experience as a military policeman so he could become a 
cop. He joined the Atlanta force in 1999.

As the rookie on the narcotics squad, Tesler recalls being told to 
"listen and learn." He apparently did. Prosecutors say 19 of the 20 
search warrants he authored contained false statements.

Over the next few days, Tesler, Junnier and Smith continued to 
fine-tune their story. They also called White repeatedly, offering 
him cash to get on board.

After Thanksgiving, the officers met at My Cousin Vinny's, a Marietta 
pizza joint. Smith, a lean and boyish 34-year-old, walked in carrying 
a pile of papers.

A former officer with the Georgia Army National Guard who served in 
Bosnia and Iraq, Smith was known as meticulous and detail-oriented. 
In his hand was a typed summary of their version of events, a script 
for all to study.

They had junked their story about driving White to the Neal Street 
house in a patrol car. Now they rehearsed how they had gotten there 
in White's car --- "recalling" it smelled of mildew. They agreed 
they'd seen the informant walk down the driveway to meet the 
suspected drug dealer.

Layers of details would make their stories believable. But they were 
just more lies to keep straight.

The men got touchy as the days wore on. They worried about phone 
taps. They tracked who was talking to whom.

Their paranoia was realized the next week when informant White went 
to a television station and spilled his story: After the shooting, he 
said, two narcotics cops told him "you need to cover our [rear]."

Police Chief Richard Pennington held a news conference with federal 
and state law enforcement officials to discuss White's shocking allegation.

Feeling the heat, the three officers called another meeting. This 
time they drove the route they claimed to have traveled with White to 
absorb small details, such as the carwash parking lot where they'd 
"met" him. Smith even drew a diagram showing the direction White's 
car had faced.

The Story Unravels

On Dec. 7, Tesler went to speak with FBI agents now wary of the 
officers' tale. Junnier's attorney already had approached the agents 
and mentioned it was possible Junnier would corroborate White.

But Tesler knew nothing of this.

As a patrolman, Tesler has said, he reported another cop for using 
racist language and turning situations on the street volatile. But 
instead of being supported by the department, he said, he was demoted 
to duty at the airport. Worse, he became known as a "rat."

He didn't want to live through that again. He stuck with their 
fabricated story.

Afterward, Tesler called Junnier and asked him to meet in the parking 
lot of a Mexican restaurant in Cobb County.

Junnier could see Tesler was agitated.

"He was worried I was breaking away from them," Junnier recalled. "He 
told me I needed to stick with them."

On Dec. 11, in his first interview with the FBI, Junnier broke ranks. 
He admitted it was all a lie.

The officer says his decision came after consulting his wife and 
pastor. But Junnier knew what the criminals he busted knew: First one 
in gets the best deal.

On Dec. 21, agents rattled Tesler, confronting him with details 
they'd learned from Junnier. Tesler asked whether he could return 
after the holidays with his attorney.

Around Christmas, Junnier got a panicked call from Smith: Tesler 
hadn't called after his second FBI meeting, he said. Smith figured 
Tesler was cooperating.

Then Junnier got a call from Tesler. He wanted to meet again at the 
Mexican restaurant. He thought Tesler sounded strange, so he brought a gun.

What happened at that meeting depends on who is telling the story. 
Junnier claims Tesler told him they needed to stick together.

Tesler says he was frightened by his two more senior officers, who 
kept dragging him deeper into the plot. He recalls telling Junnier 
that his wife was pregnant with their fourth child. He wanted out.

Paying the Price

On Jan. 4, 2007, Tesler told FBI agents he had lied. A week later, Smith caved.

In the end, they all implicated each other.

The revelations eroded public trust in the Atlanta Police Department, 
which disbanded and later rebuilt the narcotics department. Fulton 
County prosecutors were forced to review scores of pending cases and 
ultimately dismissed or reduced the charges in 69, meaning several 
likely criminals went free.

"It has harmed the community, the many honest members of the police 
force that protect the community, the integrity of the justice system 
and, indeed, the very rule of law," federal prosecutors wrote in 
their sentencing memorandum.

All three officers have pleaded guilty. Prosecutors are seeking more 
than 12 years imprisonment for Smith, with up to a 20 percent 
reduction for his cooperation. The recommendation for Tesler is 10 years.

But authorities want a "substantial reduction" to Junnier's 10-year 
sentence because of "his almost unprecedented decision" to cross the 
"blue line." His early cooperation allowed the case to be solved in 
weeks, "rather than months or years" had authorities been forced to 
use circumstantial evidence and drug-dealing snitches.

Prosecutors say the three ex-cops should be equally responsible for 
one thing: They must pay Johnston's estate $8,180 --- the cost of burying her.

[sidebar]

HOW WE GOT THE STORY

This account of the police cover-up involving the 2006 death of 
Kathryn Johnston is drawn from court testimony, documents produced by 
the U.S. Attorney's Office and a sentencing memorandum written by 
federal prosecutors based on their two-year investigation. The broad 
outlines of the cover-up by former officers Gregg Junnier, Jason 
Smith and Arthur Tesler are contained in the memorandum. The 
officers' conversations, as well as other details of their plot, are 
drawn from the testimony of Junnier and Tesler in Tesler's trial in 
Fulton County Superior Court in May. Reporters Bill Torpy and Bill 
Rankin also interviewed lawyers involved in the case. 
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