Pasadena PD on Brink of Suburban Rampart Scandal? Cops Allegedly Beat Black Teen Jeremi Carr

Categories: Police

jeremi carr.jpg
MySpace
Jeremi Carr says he "didn't know what these dudes were about to do."
Just a few months after unarmed black teen Kendrec McDade was shot to death by Pasadena police officers -- we called him "the next Trayvon Martin" -- the Pasadena Police Department finds itself in familiar waters.

An ongoing probe into the investigative tactics of Detective Kevin Okamoto and Detective Keith Gomez has uncovered new allegations that the out-of-control cops beat young black man Jeremi Carr, now 24...

... "to coerce him into making false statements" about a 2007 homicide, reports the Pasadena Star-News. (A third cop, Detective William Broghamer, is also named in the alleged beating.)

The victim's declaration in Pasadena Superior Court is part of a growing pool of accusations against Detectives Okamoto and Gomez.

Pasadena attorney Michael Kraut -- who happens to be the same man who ripped the lid off the LAPD's Rampart Scandal circa 1997, and has since moved on to sniff out dirty cops in suburbia -- became suspicious when Detective Okamoto refused to turn over key evidence in a criminal case against his client, Edward Damas.

Investigators tried to jail Damas in 2009 for his alleged role in a bar brawl at the Wokcano sushi restaurant and lounge. But Damas, along with his lawyer, have insisted from the beginning that Detective Okamoto's hidden evidence would quickly rule him out as a suspect.

okamoto.jpg
Pasadena Living
Detective Okamoto has been on paid leave since late May.
"I would be kidding myself if I thought my client was the first person this happened to," the attorney recently told the Star-News. "The question is: How many times has he hidden evidence?"

Indeed -- Okamoto and Gomez have been accused of this same brand of backward policing by Jamaul Harvey, a man they investigated for murder in 2007. Harvey claims that Okamoto has harassed him for years, and that Gomez once said to him:

"Do you know my reputation on the street? I'm a detective that gets what he wants and I can do what I want. ... I could kill you right now and get away with it because I know you have a gun."

Detective Gomez also plays a starring role in the high-profile "wrongful death" lawsuit filed by the family of Kendrec McDade.

The suit points out that Gomez has been directly involved in multiple police beatings and killings of black men in Pasadena over the years -- making his appointment as investigator into the McDade murder all the more puzzling. (An investigation which we all know ended with the re-instatement of both cops who shot McDade, along with the exoneration of a 911 caller who lied to police that the teen was armed and dangerous.) Most devastatingly, Gomez pulled the trigger on 30-year-old resident Maurice Clark in 2004, a fatal shooting that his distraught father would later call "unjustified."

Which brings us back to Jeremi Carr's new allegations against these same detectives -- evidence that Kraut, the veteran cop-misconduct lawyer, is apparently using as proof of their routine tactics. Via the Star-News:

According to Carr, Okamoto, Gomez and Broghamer stormed a Pasadena home in December 2007, grabbed Carr and took him against his will to Pasadena Police Department headquarters. There, Carr alleges, they attempted to beat him into agreeing with untrue statements related to the [Shawn Baptiste] murder investigation.

In his claim, Carr, a Pasadena resident, alleges he suffered injuries to his ribs, shoulder, lower back and face as a result of the beating.

kendrec mcdade.jpeg
ABC7
Officers riddled McDade with bullets as he came toward their patrol car.
Caree Harper, the attorney representing McDade's family in court, tells LA Weekly today that this comes as "no surprise."

Detective Gomez "is a very important piece of the puzzle in trying to cleanse the Pasadena Police Department," says the attorney. "It is beyond my comprehension why he's still patrolling the streets with all these allegations pending against him and all these unanswered questions."

Reads the McDade lawsuit: "This reeks of a cover-up."

We've contacted the Pasadena PD for comment. What we really want to know: Why did Pasadena Police Chief Philip Sanchez let this controversial detective look into the highly sensitive McDade shooting, considering his public reputation for racial profiling?

Updates to come as Pasadena's own mini suburban Rampart Scandal explodes; from what we're hearing, this is only the tip of the firecracker.

[@simone_electra / swilson@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]

My Voice Nation Help
5 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest
anonymous
anonymous

The racism extends to Asians too.  The white establishment supported a white woman over the first Asian elected to City Council.  It's rare to find asians on city commissions or in city management.

Jsill9
Jsill9

This is disgusting news and I am a white person, I just wish justice could happen to all of those no good murderes and racists that want to divide this nation. I wish that they would all die of cancer and with a lot of pain.

Denny_wb75
Denny_wb75

There are two people responsible for the city of Pasadena's current problem with its police department: Mayor Bill Bogaard, and former Pasadena Police Chief Barney Melekian. Both Bogaard and Melekian wanted Pasadena's ethnic neighborhoods subjugated. That encompassed Northwest Pasadena, where the majority of the city's poor blacks reside, west of Lake Avenue, east of the 210 freeway, and north of City Hall. Bogaard and Melekian both were committed to keeping the city's ethnic blacks and Latinos away from Old Pasadena, and the city's Paseo Colorado multi-use shopping center on Colorado Boulevard. To be successful, the police department, specifically its anti-gang unit was empowered to use whatever force it deemed necessary to send a message to Pasadena's ethnic neighborhoods that they were not welcome south of City Hall. The killing of Kendrec McDade would have stood as a justified shooting had it not been for a few people out walking that night who witnessed the murder. But this is merely the tip of the iceberg for the Pasadena Police Department. Most of the city's educated and wealthier blacks and Latinos dare not stand up to the establishment that is the city of Pasadena. I specifically call attention to the all-powerful Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association, which is comprised of elite Anglos, and the even more powerful Valley Hunt Club, which actually runs the city of Pasadena and is a whites-only private club. If this case is heard in Pasadena's Superior Court, the offices will be acquitted. That's because the judges there are also part of Pasadena's elite, white establishment.

michael nigol
michael nigol

douche bag cops and politicians ruined america

Track The Cops
Track The Cops like.author.displayName 1 Like

Cops should be forced to wear GPS tracking devices, audio and video recording devices on their person at all times.  Period!  No exceptions.  The technology is here, so let's use it on our public servants.

Now Trending

From the Vault

 

General

©2013 LA Weekly, LP, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Los Angeles

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city