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ROBERT G. OTTO,
MICHAEL SPICER,
BRIAN REYNOLDS,
PERRY BETTS,
JOHN SPEISER, and
THOMAS LICIARDELLO
CIVIL ACTION
No. 2:15-cv-03217-LFR
Plaintiffs,
v.
R. SETH WILLIAMS;
CITY OF PIDLADELPIDA;
OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY
OF PIDLADELPHIA COUNTY;
POLICE COMMISSIONER CHARLES RAMSEY;
and,
MAYOR MICHAEL A. NUTTER
FILED
JUL 2 4 2015
Defendants.
Plaintiffs, by and through their undersigned counsel, amend their Complaint, including by
adding two new Defendants - Defendant Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey, and,
Defendant Mayor Michael A. Nutter - and in support thereof it is averred:
DIRECT AND RELATED HISTORY
1. This action was commenced by Writ of Summons in the Philadelphia Court of Common
Pleas on November 21, 2013.
2. No Defendant Ruled Plaintiffs to File a Complaint.
3. This action grows out of a defamatory and otherwise actionable December 3, 2012 letter
(sometimes referred to herein as "D.A. Williams' letter") from Defendant R. Seth
Williams, then and now the District Attorney of Philadelphia County, to Defendant
Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey. A true and correct copy of D.A.
Williams' letter is Exhibit A hereto, and its full text is contained in paragraph no. 51.
4. The Plaintiffs are the five Police Officers and one Lieutenant who are the subject of that
defamatory letter. Exhibit A.
5. D.A. Williams' entirely misbegotten and irresponsible letter started a gigantic,
destructive avalanche of severe and permanent wrongs, damages and injustices, inflicted
not only upon the Plaintiffs but upon all Philadelphia citizens who count on the
fundamental purpose of government - public safety and order through the criminal justice
system.
6. The pre-Complaint deposition of (now discontinued) Defendant Tasha Jamerson was
taken by the Plaintiffs on January 10, 2014.
7. On March 19, 2014, the first Entry of Appearance for Defendants Tasha Jamerson, R.
Seth Williams, and Office of the District Attorney was filed, along with the perfection of
a Jury Trial Demand by those Defendants.
8. On July 29, 2014, five of the six Plaintiffs (all except Plaintiff Robert G. Otto) were
indicted by a Federal Grand Jury in United States ofAmerica v. Thomas Liciardello,
Brian Reynolds, Michael Spicer, Perry Betts, Linwood Norman [not a Plaintiff], and John
Speiser, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 2:14-cr00412-ER.
9. On May 14, 2015 all of the aforesaid Plaintiffs/criminal defendants were acquitted by the
federal jury of all charges. (All told, for all six criminal defendants, there were 4 7 Not
Guilty verdicts for the 4 7 charges.)
10. The case presented to the jury by the prosecutors against the Plaintiffs/criminal
defendants was literally laughable, and, disgraceful - as to the prosecutors.
11. On May 29, 2015, the Plaintiffs filed a Stipulation by All Parties as to the Discontinuance
of Defendant Tasha Jamerson Pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 229 (b) (1).
12. On June 4, 2015, the Plaintiffs filed their Complaint in the Philadelphia Court of
Common Pleas.
13. On June 9, 2015, Defendant City of Philadelphia removed this action to this Court.
14. This Court has granted leave to the Plaintiffs to amend their Complaint prior to
responsive pleadings by the Defendants.
15. The subject matter of this civil action does not include any wrongs inflicted on the
aforesaid Plaintiffs/criminal defendants by agencies of the United States of America, i.e.,
the Department of Justice; the United States Attorney's Office, Eastern District of
Pennsylvania; and, the Federal Bureau oflnvestigation.
PARTIES
16. Plaintiff Robert G. Otto is an adult individual and citizen of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, and at times pertinent hereto he was a Philadelphia Police Department
Lieutenant, and he remains so.
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- ------------------
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_.
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Defendant Office of the District Attorney of Philadelphia County. Tasha Jamerson has
been discontinued as a Defendant (see paragraph no.11).
24. Defendant R. Seth Williams ("D.A. Williams") at all times pertinent hereto has been the
elected District Attorney of Philadelphia County, including at the time of D.A. Williams'
letter.
25. D.A. Williams is sued in his individual capacity, and in his official capacity of District
Attorney of Philadelphia County.
26. Defendant D.A. Williams at times pertinent hereto acted as the policymaker for
Defendant Office of the District Attorney of Philadelphia County.
27. At pertinent times hereto, D.A, Williams acted under color oflaw.
28. Defendant City of Philadelphia ("City") is a political subdivision of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania; specifically, it is a municipal entity that exists and acts pursuant to state
law.
29. At pertinent times hereto, the City acted under color oflaw.
30. Defendant Office of the District Attorney of Philadelphia County, is a
division/component/agency and/or subagency of Defendant City, and the City is
pertinently vicariously, directly and otherwise liable for certain pertinent acts of said
agency Defendant.
31. Newly added Defendant Police Department Commissioner Charles Ramsey at all
times pertinent hereto acted as policymaker for the Philadelphia Police Department.
32. Defendant Commissioner is sued in his individual capacity, and in his official capacity of
Philadelphia Police Department Commissioner.
33. At pertinent times hereto, Defendant Commissioner acted under color of law.
34. The Philadelphia Police Department (sometimes referred to herein as the "Department")
is a division/component/agency and/or subagency of the City, and the City is vicariously,
directly and otherwise liable for certain pertinent acts of said Department, as well as
certain pertinent acts of Defendant Commissioner.
35. Newly added Defendant Mayor Michael A. Nutter at all times pertinent hereto has
been the elected Mayor of the City of Philadelphia.
36. Defendant Mayor is sued in his individual capacity, and in his official capacities of
Mayor of Philadelphia and head of the Office of Mayor, City of Philadelphia.
37. Defendant Mayor at times pertinent hereto acted as policymaker for Defendant City of
Philadelphia.
38. At pertinent times hereto, Defendant Mayor acted under color of law.
39. The City is vicariously, directly and otherwise liable for certain pertinent acts of
Defendant Mayor.
FACTS
40. On December 3, 2012 (the date of the D.A. Williams' letter referenced in paragraph no.
3), all of the Plaintiffs were serving in the Philadelphia Police Department's Narcotics
Field Unit (NFU), specifically, NFU-South.
41. At that time, Plaintiff Otto, as Lieutenant, was a supervisor of the other five Plaintiffs in
NFU-South.
42. At that time, Plaintiff Otto was an extremely effective, skilled, dedicated, hard-working,
honest, and experienced Police Lieutenant.
43. At that time, the five Police Officer Plaintiffs, were 'ail extremely effective, skilled,
dedicated, hard-working, honest, experienced police officers, including as Narcotics
officers.
44. Plaintiff Spicer had served as a Police Officer with the Philadelphia Police Department
since approximately 1995, and had been assigned to NFU since approximately 2000.
45. Plaintiff Reynolds had served as a Police Officer with the Philadelphia Police Department
since approximately 1993, and had been assigned to NFU since approximately 1999.
46. Plaintiff Betts had served as a Police Officer with the Philadelphia Police Department
since approximately 1995, and had been assigned to NFU since approximately 1999.
4 7. Plaintiff Speiser had served as a Police Officer with the Philadelphia Police Department
since approximately 1994, and had been assigned to NFU since approximately 2007.
48. Plaintiff Liciardello had served as a Police Officer with the Philadelphia Police
Department since approximately 1995, and had been assigned to NFU since
approximately 2000.
49. The Plaintiffs are authoritatively considered to have constituted the most accomplished
and effective narcotics unit in the history of the Philadelphia Police Department.
50. The public service, efforts, courage, unflagging energy and dedication exhibited by the
Plaintiffs could be fairly characterized as heroic.
51. On December 3, 2012, D.A. Williams caused to be delivered to Philadelphia Police
Commissioner Charles Ramsey an irresponsible, outrageous, defamatory and otherwise
actionable December 3, 2012 letter, which stated in full:
R. Seth Williams
District Attorney
58. The writing of the letter by D.A. Williams, as well as his dissemination of the letter to
Commissioner Ramsey, was the policy of the D.A.'s Office, as well as its practice,
custom and usage.
59. D.A. Williams wrote the letter, and disseminated it to Commissioner Ramsey, in bad
faith and with deliberate indifference to, and reckless disregard for, the liberty interests
and the reputational interests of the Plaintiffs.
60. The aforesaid policy and practice (including the writing of the letter and its dissemination
to Commissioner Ramsey) was made and carried out in bad faith and with deliberate
indifference to, and reckless disregard for, the liberty interests and the reputational
interests of the Plaintiffs.
61. At the time of the December 3, 2012 writing and then the delivery of the letter to Police
Commissioner Ramsey, it was, at the least: (1) very likely (if not intended) that the
defamatory letter would be disseminated to the public, including potential employers;
and, (2) very likely that both the D.A.'s Office and the City (including through its
division/component/agency and/or subagency - the Philadelphia Police Department)
would actually publicize the contents and substance of the letter to the public.
62. Immediately after the delivery, the probability of such further dissemination and
publicizing of the letter went from very likely to inevitable, and then, to actual
dissemination and publicizing.
63. D.A. Williams' bad faith letter was the result of, inter alia, deliberately indifferent and
reckless and personal and professional irresponsible disregard for the truth, deliberately
indifferent and reckless and irresponsible disregard for the rights and reputations and
liberty interests of the Plaintiffs, deliberately indifferent and reckless and irresponsible
disregard for the proper exercise of the prosecutorial function, wholly and deliberately
inadequate and irresponsible "investigation" of the Plaintiffs, and, a reckless and
irresponsible reliance on the allegations of persons who were not credible and deserved
no credence.
64. By way of background to D.A. Williams' letter, during or about the week of November
26, 2012, D.A. Williams met with Commissioner Ramsey wherein D.A. Williams
demanded that the Commissioner remove the Plaintiffs from Narcotics.
65. Commissioner Ramsey, not knowing or even being then informed of any legitimate
reason for such a demand, then rightly resisted D.A. Williams' request.
66. There was no legitimate reason for the request.
67. An indication of the absence of a legitimate reason for the request is that D.A. Williams
was making such a major policy and personnel request orally - and that was because
there was no articulable legitimate reason.
68. Commissioner Ramsey refused to act on any such oral request and insisted that any such
request must be in writing.
69. Ironically, that then-principled stand forced the birth of the letter that started the
avalanche of injustices.
70. Some of those injustices were not even contemplated by the perpetrators - although they
and others did nothing to stop it, irresponsibly fueled it, and enjoyed grandstanding on
top of it as it ran its destructive and tragic course.
71. D.A. Williams' request was motivated by pertinently non-germane reasons; that is
reasons completely unrelated to either the integrity or competence or effectiveness of the
Plaintiffs.
72. D.A. Williams' request was motivated by petty or non-pertinent: bureaucratic,
administrative and political conflicts (between the D.A.' s Office and the Police
Department): personality conflicts (between Plaintiffs and persons in the D.A.'s Office),
and resentments (of the Plaintiffs by persons in the D.A's Office).
73. Some of the aforesaid conflicts and resentments arose out of the D.A. Office's desire to
receive more credit for narcotics successes and receive a greater share of seized and
forfeited drug money.
74. Some of the aforesaid conflict and resentments arose out of the very blunt, speak-hismind, get-things-done, personality of Plaintiff Liciardello.
75. Incredibly, these petty and often-wrongheaded bureaucratic, administrative, "political"
and personality conflicts, and the aforesaid resentments, were behind D.A. Williams'
request to the Commissioner that the Plaintiffs be transferred.
76. Out of that pettiness and wrongheadedness, the letter was created and an avalanche of
destruction began.
77. The putative cause of the avalanche - the lack of honesty and credibility of the Plaintiffs
-was illusory.
78. D.A. Williams wrote the letter that Commissioner Ramsey had effectively requested at
the aforesaid meeting under the circumstances presented by D .A. Williams.
79. Upon its delivery to Commissioner Ramsey, both the Commissioner and the District
Attorney knew there was no legitimate evidence against the Plaintiffs' honesty and
credibility.
80. Yet, thereafter, both the Commissioner and the District Attorney, acting as policy makers,
irresponsible and recklessly acted, represented, and promulgated policies and uttered
statements that were premised on the falsehood that the honesty and credibility of the
Plaintiffs could be legitimately attacked - when there was zero legitimate evidence for
that premise.
81. At pertinent times after Commissioner Ramsey received the December 3, 2012 letter,
Defendant Mayor Nutter, acting as a policy maker, acted, represented, and promulgated
policies and uttered statements that were premised on the falsehood that the honesty and
credibility of the Plaintiffs could be legitimately attacked - when there was zero
legitimate evidence for that premise.
82. On December 3, 2012, the second highest-ranking official in the D.A.'s Office was First
Assistant District Attorney Edward McCann.
83. On December 3, 2012, after the letter had been sent for delivery to Commissioner
Ramsey, First Assistant D.A. McCann instructed Director of
Communications/Spokesperson Jamerson how to handle media inquiries about the letter.
84. On that day, First Assistant D.A. McCann instructed Jamerson that she had authority to
communicate to the press that the D.A.'s Office would no longer be using the six
Plaintiffs in narcotics cases because of prosecutorial discretion.
85. The aforesaid was an instruction from the second highest-ranking official in the D.A.'s
Office, and was the policy and practice of the D.A.'s Office.
86. At that time, it was the practice of Jamerson to relay to First Assistant D.A. Mccann all
media inquiries before she answered them.
87. By at least December 7, 2012, Jamerson was communicating to members of the media
that the six Plaintiffs would no longer be used by the D .A.' s Office in narcotics cases
because of prosecutorial discretion, and she continued to do so for a time pertinent herein.
88. The aforesaid dissemination and publicizing and publication to the media by Jamerson of
the contents and substance of the December 3, 2012 letter was the policy and practice of
the D.A.'s Office, a division/component/agency and/or subagency of Defendant City.
89. The aforesaid policy and practice (the explicitly authorized
dissemination/publicizing/publication by Jamerson to the media of the contents and
substance of the letter) was made and carried out in bad faith and with deliberate
indifference to, and reckless disregard for, the liberty interests and the reputational
interests of the Plaintiffs.
90. On December 4, 2012, upon a directive originating with Police Commissioner Ramsey,
the Plaintiffs' commanding officer was ordered by the Department in writing to
personally notify the Plaintiffs that they were transferred from Narcotics to other
assignments effective 12:01 a.m. on December 5, 2012 as follows:
Lt. Robert Otto to:
Traffic
A true and correct copy of the aforesaid December 4, 2012, 11 :42 a.m. transfer order is
attached hereto as Exhibit B.
91. If Commissioner Ramsey, whose very public persona is as a fierce advocate of the
integrity, honesty and ethics of his Department and its officers, believed for a minute
there was any basis for D.A. Williams' letter, he would have taken these putatively
untrustworthy officers off the street and confiscated their weapons.
92. If the Plaintiffs were indeed untrustworthy, they would have been placed in the
Differential Police Unit, performing duties that would never require testimony and did
not require weapons.
93. By December 5, 2012, D.A. Williams' December 3, 2012 letter was already in the hands
of the media, namely TV station FOX 29 of Philadelphia. See Exhibit C hereto, a printout
of a Thursday, December 6, 2012 myfoxphilly online posting, wherein it is stated that the
letter "was obtained by FOX 29 on "Wednesday" (which was December 5, 2012).
94. On December 5, 2012, the managing editor of FOX 29 was the husband of (discontinued
Defendant) Tasha Jamerson, who was the Director of Communications and the
spokesperson for Defendant Office of the District Attorney of Philadelphia County;
Jamerson herself was formerly a reporter for FOX 29.
95. By December 6, 2012, FOX 29 of Philadelphia broadcast a television report naming all
the Plaintiffs, stating, among other defamatory and false light statements, that they had
been moved out of the Narcotics unit, CREDIBILTY QUESTIONED". Exhibit C.
96. An avalanche of publicity unfairly blackening the reputations of the Plaintiffs followed,
some by Defendants, some by the media.
97. D.A. Williams' defamatory December 3, 2012 letter, which immediately and deliberately
was disseminated and published to the Department and then to the public: stigmatized
and humiliated the Plaintiffs; impugned, blackened and utterly disparaged their
professional and personal reputations; put the Plaintiffs in highly offensive false light;
created false impressions about the Plaintiffs, including of their honesty, credibility,
morality and ethics; and, caused members of the Department, the public and the law
enforcement, judicial and legal communities, and prospective employers to scorn and
revile them, all to their great detriment, including to their emotional, reputational,
pecuniary and liberty interests.
98. The transfers of the Plaintiffs, ordered by the Department and then published and
disseminated to the public, did further: stigmatize and humiliate the Plaintiffs; impugn,
blacken and utterly disparage their reputations; create false impressions about the
Plaintiffs, including of their honesty, credibility, morality and ethics; and, cause members
of the Department, the public and the law enforcement, judicial and legal communities,
and prospective employers to scorn and revile them, all to their great detriment,
including to their emotional, reputational, pecuniary and liberty interests.
99. After December 6, 2012, Jamerson, acting pursuant to the policy and practice of the
D.A.'s Office, and Commissioner Ramsey, the policymaker for the Philadelphia Police
Department, continued to recklessly publicize and disseminate the content and substance
ofD.A. Williams December 3, 2012 letter.
100.
After receiving the letter, Commissioner Ramsey publicized and disseminated the
Within days of the letter and upon its dissemination to the public, the District
Attorney began withdrawing drug cases based on the putative lack of credibility of the
Plaintiffs.
102.
Criminals began to walk free, and the Plaintiffs' now became the substituted
withdrawal of drug cases, Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas President Judge Pamela
Pryor Dembe was approving of D.A Williams' actions, telling the press that "This
certainly is the right thing to do".
104.
Actually, D.A. Williams has triggered a process that ceded to criminals the power
Eventually, hundreds of cases were dismissed or withdrawn, and the public scorn
106.
gratuitously publicized to the media that a federal grand jury was probing at least four of
the Plaintiffs herein.
107.
media that the six Plaintiffs had been pulled off street duty.
108.
Commissioner Ramsey's spokesperson then publicized to the media that the six
These reckless and outrageous and gratuitous revelations were defamatory and put
all six Plaintiffs in a false light and created false impressions about them.
111.
Commissioner Ramsey that legitimately attacked the credibility and honesty of the
Plaintiffs.
112.
On July 29, 2014 all of the Plaintiffs (except Plaintiff Otto) were indicted by the
United States, and the process of termination from the Police Department began.
114.
In the course of that process, on or about July 31, 2014, Commissioner Ramsey
and Mayor Nutter held a joint, televised press conference in which they irresponsibly
grandstanded at the great expense of the completely innocent indicted Plaintiffs.
115.
116.
Commissioner Ramsey told the press that "I have been a police officer for more
than 40 years and this is one of the worst corruption cases that I have ever heard".
117.
Commissioner Ramsey told the press that badges of the officers would be
destroyed - literally.
118.
The Commissioner and the Mayor were in fact wrongfully destroying the
reputations and lives and liberty interests of the officers. As to the badges - they all got
them back after the case against them was shown to be literally laughable.
119.
shocking and complete lack of credible evidence, and shoddy and reprehensible work by
prosecutors and investigators.
120.
The witnesses against the criminal defendants were criminals and perjurers. For
some reason, the United States Attorney could not figure out before Indictment and trial
things like an officer was out of state on vacation when the drug dealers said he was
committing crimes on duty in Philadelphia.
121.
imprimatur thereon was jumped on by everyone - the media, the public, criminals,
lawyers for criminals, the Mayor, and, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania.
122.
Following their acquittal on all charges, on July 10, 2105, the five
Neither the Mayor nor the Commissioner nor the District Attorney have
The profound reputational damage they inflicted on the Plaintiffs can never be
repaired.
125.
They inflicted the damage irresponsibly and never on the basis of any credible
evidence.
126.
There was never a scintilla of evidence for D.A. Williams' attack on the
credibility and honesty of the Plaintiffs, nor was there ever a scintilla of evidence for the
"piling on" and grandstanding statements and acts and policies of the Mayor and the
Commissioner thereafter.
127.
The media served as a completely effective and efficient outlet and mechanism
for giving expression and effect to the defamatory, false light, and otherwise wrongful
statements and acts of the District Attorney, Commissioner and Mayor, beginning with
the publication of D.A. Williams' letter.
128.
started by D.A. Williams, and irresponsibly propagated, fueled and happily ridden on by
all the Defendants, also included the filing of dozens of civil rights lawsuits against
Plaintiffs by criminals only too happy to ride on the D.A. Williams letter.
129.
The damages sought herein do not include any lost pay, compensation, benefits,
overtime, etc., contractually owed to the Plaintiffs as employees of the City resulting
from any job action taken against the Plaintiffs by the City, nor does the relief sought
include any request for return of assignments/positions jobs, etc. Those items of damages
and relief are the province of the City's arbitration process.
130.
As a result of the defamatory and false light statements and the disseminations
thereof, the Plaintiffs' names have been severely blackened and they are entitled to a
name clearing hearing.
131.
As a result of the defamatory and false light statements and the disseminations
thereof, the Plaintiffs' have and will suffer substantial pecuniary losses as a result of the
blackening of their reputations in the eyes of prospective employers.
132.
As a result of the aforesaid wrongful acts of the Defendants, the Plaintiffs have
sustained and suffered substantial emotional distress, mental anguish and humiliation,
including as a result of the public scorn and hatred engendered by the statements at issue,
and including, derivatively, bearing and enduring the scorn and humiliation suffered by
their families.
133.
Paragraphs 1 through 132 are incorporated by reference as though fully set forth
at length hereunder.
134.
135.
The stigmas were caused during the course of alterations to the ongoing
The stigmas were recklessly caused by the false statements at issue; the direct,
unmistakable inferences from those statements; the false light in which the statements
directly and inevitably put the Plaintiffs; and the false impressions about the Plaintiffs
that the statements directly and inevitably created.
137.
The Defendants, acting under color of state law, caused the stigmas with reckless
disregard for and deliberate indifference to the liberty rights and interests of the Plaintiffs
guaranteed under the United States Constitution, and deprived them of those liberty
interests.
138.
The false statements at issue were either very likely to be publicized when made
The Defendants publicized the false statements at issue, and the statements
140.
The injuries and damages suffered by the Plaintiffs as a result of the stigmas
wrongfully caused by the Defendants include, but are not limited to: stigmas to their
reputations for which they are entitled to have a name clearing hearing; loss of
employment prospects; and, emotional distress.
WHEREFORE, the Plaintiffs demand judgment against the Defendants for damages,
including nominal, special, compensatory and punitive damages, a name clearing hearing,
and attorney fees and costs, and all other and further relief as the Court deems
appropriate.
141.
Paragraphs 1 through 140 are incorporated by reference as though fully set forth
at length hereunder.
142.
The Defendants recklessly gave publicity to a matter that placed the Plaintiffs
The false light in which the Plaintiffs were placed would be highly offensive to a
reasonable person.
144.
The Defendants had knowledge of the falsity or the implied falsehoods of the
145.
Alternatively, to the extent any statements were literally true, the Defendants
characteristics and conduct that were false and therefore placed the Plaintiffs in false
positions before the public.
14 7.
The injuries and damages suffered by the Plaintiffs as a result of the false light
created by the Defendants include, but are not limited to: stigmas to their reputations; loss
of employment prospects; and, emotional distress.
WHEREFORE, the Plaintiffs demand judgment against the Defendants for damages,
including nominal, special, compensatory and punitive damages, and costs, and all other
and further relief as the Court deems appropriate.
148.
at_length hereunder.
149.
150.
151.
152.
defamatory meaning.
153.
The Plaintiffs suffered and will continue to suffer, among other things,
WHEREFORE, the Plaintiffs demand judgment against the Defendants for damages,
including nominal, special, compensatory and punitive damages, and costs, and all other and
further relief as the Court deems appropriate.
EXHIBIT A
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EXHIBITB
GENERAL:3647 12/04/12.
TRANSFERS:
----------------------------
PR#
-----207574
201077
215966
221845
208466
221409
219761
FROM
---------SOUTH DET.DIV
NARCOTICS
NARCOTICS
NARCOTICS
NARCOTICS
NARCOTICS
NARCOTICS
TO
----------
NARCOTICS
SOUTH DET. DIV
TRAFFIC
CENTER CITY DIST.
CENTER CITY DIST.
CENTER CITY DIST.
CENTER CITY DIST.
EXHIBITC
1 Drug Case Dropped In Wake Of Transferred Philly Officers - Philadelphia News, Weat...
I,
DISTRICT AT''rORNEV' OF IC
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PHILl\OfH.
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The Philadelphia District Attorney's Office has dropped at least one drug case in
court, but sources believe hundreds could follow in the wake of a letter sent to
Philadelphia Police, FOX 29's Jeff Cole reports.
The letter, sent to Commissioner Charles Ramsey, was obtained by FOX 29 on
Wednesday.
The letter is blunt and states that the DA's office will no longer be using six officers
as witnesses in narcotics cases.
"I am writing to inform you that in an exercise of prosecutorial discretion, the
Philadelphia District Attorney's Office will no longer be using the following officers
as witnesses in narcotics cases," the letter reads.
The letter lists officers Thomas Liciardello, Brian Reynolds, John Speiser, Michael
Spicer, Perry Betts and Lt. Robert Otto.
"Also the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office will no longer accept any narcotics
cases for charging when any of these police officers is a necessary witness," the
letter states.
Page l of2
1 Drug Case Dropped In Wake Of Transferred Philly Officers - Philadelphia News, Weat...
City public defender Bradley Bridge says the letter shows something "ve1y
substantial" has come to the attention of the DA's office.
Ridge tells FOX 29's Jeff Cole he's heard about these officers and says his clients
have mentioned these officers before.
FOX 29 was not able to reach the officers for comment Thursday.
Also on Thursday, FOX 29 obtained a federal lawsuit filed against some of the
officers, alleging illegal searches and seizures.
Police say the six officers have been reassigned, but not disciplined or charged.
All content Copyright 2000 - 2013 Fox Television Stations, Inc. and Worldnow. All ~ights Reserved.
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Page 2 of2
CERTIFICATION OF SERVICE
I, Christopher D. Mannix, Esquire, hereby certify that I will cause true and correct copies
of the within Amended Complaint to be served upon the following via email, and, via electronic
filing:
Armando R. Brigandi, Esquire
City of Philadelphia Law Department
One Parkway, 1515 Arch St., 16th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19102-1595