Pubdate: Thu, 7 Jan 2010 Source: Tallahassee Democrat (FL) Copyright: 2010 Tallahassee Democrat Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/hdEs6Z0o Website: http://www.tallahassee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/444 Author: By Jennifer Portman, Democrat Senior Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ryan+Pender PENDER HEARING OVER; RULING TO COME Fate of Former TPD Investigator to Be Decided by End of March Former Tallahassee Police Investigator Ryan Pender should know by the end of March whether he will get his job back. Pender was the only officer fired by police Chief Dennis Jones for his role in the 2008 drug sting that led to the death of confidential informant Rachel Hoffman. His two-day police union arbitration hearing wrapped up Wednesday following hours of personal testimony about how he recruited the 23-year-old as a C.I. after a drug raid at her apartment and then lost her less than three weeks later. Pender took no responsibility for Hoffman's failure to obey his orders during the May 7, 2008, buy-bust operation he planned and her subsequent decision to follow Deneilo Bradshaw and Andrea Green to dead-end Gardner Road, where she was robbed and killed. Bradshaw was found guilty of her murder last month; Green stands trial in October. "It was not my decision; it was not my direction; it was solely her choice," he said. Pender fought back tears only once -- when he was asked by his attorney how he would feel if he were to be reinstated as a Tallahassee police officer. "To get my career back, that I worked eight-and-a-half years for ... ," he trailed off, overcome with emotion. "I've learned a tremendous amount more than I thought I would have learned from this." During his testimony, Pender described Hoffman as a model informant. She was forthcoming with information, and was reliable and well-connected in the local drug scene. He had full confidence that she was up to carrying out his plan to handle $13,000 in cash to purchase drugs and a gun from the men. Even though she only had a few ounces of marijuana at her place when he busted her April 17, 2008, Pender recounted how Hoffman told him right away that she was a "bookkeeper or mule" for a major marijuana dealer who moved 5 to 10 pounds of pot a week -- with a street value of about $5,000 a pound -- through her east Tallahassee apartment. "Her role in the drug trade in Tallahassee was very significant," Pender said. "She was extremely knowledgeable." Pender and other officers who testified during the hearing said there was nothing unusual about the fateful buy-bust that ended with Hoffman being killed. They said the operation was properly vetted, approved by the chain of command and conducted in keeping with long-standing department practice. At the time, there was no specific department policy on how to handle confidential informants in buy-bust drug deals. The officers described a fluid process of planning and approval, in which details could be sketchy, locations could change, paperwork could be put off and much happened on the fly. Pender's supervisors, who signed off on the operation plan that day, were suspended without pay for two weeks, but kept their jobs. They testified Pender was a hard-working officer, who had always demonstrated sound judgment. Fellow vice Investigator Kevin Miller testified Wednesday that after Pender was fired he asked for a one-on-meeting with Jones to express his concern about the termination. "I felt it could have been any one of us," Miller said. During that meeting, Miller said the chief told him that if Pender were to get his job back through the union grievance process he was "not going to contest it." Pender said Jones told him that he would have no problem welcoming him back. On Tuesday, Jones said he thought it would be difficult for Pender to return to the department after all that has happened. Arbiter Christopher Shulman is to decide Pender's fate within 30 days after he receives final written statements from both sides in the case, which are expected by Feb. 19. "I've got a lot to consider here," Shulman said. "I will work as quickly as I can." Lance Block, the attorney for Hoffman's parents wrote a statement on behalf of them. "Ryan Pender case managed one of the most notoriously incompetent undercover operations in law enforcement history. He lost his job because of it, but that pales in comparison to Rachel Hoffman losing her life because of it," Block wrote. "There can be no justice for Irv Hoffman and Margie Weiss for the wrongful death of their only child in the Pender arbitration regardless of the outcome. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake