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Milwaukee Police less Than 100% Competent?
A complaint filed with the Milwaukee Fire and Police Commission accuses three top ranking Milwaukee Police Department (MPD) officers of taking shortcuts in a murder investigation and then stopping other detectives who tried to solve it.
The complaint was filed by Milwaukee Police Detective Ricky Burems. It alleges that Deputy Chief Brian O'Keefe, Lt. William Jessup and Capt. Timothy Burkee failed to conduct a full investigation into the death of Debra Maniece.
Maniece was murdered in 1994. The 31-year-old woman was found beaten to death in an abandoned house at 12th and Brown on the city's north side. Her daughter, who was 14 at the time, still wants to see someone brought to trial. "We still haven't had no closure to it. And you have D.N.A. and all this information and there's still nothing being done about it," Tamara Maniece now says.
That D.N.A. was discovered in 2001. By then the Maniece case had gone cold. Then the state crime lab matched blood found on her body with that of Kelvin Strong. Strong was already serving lengthy prison sentences for the violent rape of two other women near the area where Maniece was killed.
Police cleared the case, saying Strong was the suspect. But, Detective Burems' complaint alleges officers did not do a complete investigation.
Police took their case to the District Attorney's office. But the D.A. said there wasn't enough evidence to charge Strong.
Burems believes police didn't want to take the time to conduct a thorough investigation and he contends the victim's race and status as a prostitute and drug addict were the reasons.
According to the complaint, Detective Burems and his partner were assigned to look into the Maniece case in 2004. They found new evidence that two other men's D.N.A. was found on Maniece's body.
Burems claims that Jessup, O'Keefe and Burkee tried to stop him from fully investigating the case. He alleges that eventually they had him removed from the investigation.
MPD has a policy that prevents them from commenting on ongoing investigations. The timing of the allegations is interesting to note. Burems filed the complaint in late July of 2007. It comes as the Fire and Police Commission is considering O'Keefe for the Chief of Police position.
The District Attorney's office tells TODAY'S TMJ4 reporter Lauren Leamanczyk that with three men's D.N.A., they didn't have the evidence to prove that Strong committed the murder.
However, Burems alleges in the complaint that as he pushed for charges Assistant District Attorney Mark Williams told him, "I get the feeling that certain people in your department don't want to see charges issued in this case."
The League of Martin, an association of black police officers, contends that if the allegations are true they are very disturbing. Vice President Kerry Flowers says they have received similar complaints about cases getting short shrift from MPD detectives.
If true, he says, "This just might be the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the improper clearing of heinous crimes in the City of Milwaukee," Flowers said.
Milwaukee Police Less Than 100% Competent?
I thought I was on JS online. Why is this on here?