Former detective Thomas A. Carroll;
Now serving 52-month prison sentence for
beating up a handcuffed suspect.
(From stltoday.com)
The case suggests someone in the state takes police and prosecutorial corruption seriously -- and we have experienced plenty of it in Springfield, MO. That could be bad news for lawyers involved in bringing bogus "assault on a law enforcement officer" charges against my wife, Carol, in an effort to cover for police brutality that left her with a shattered arm, requiring trauma surgery for repair.
In the St. Louis case, former detective, Thomas A. Carroll, is serving a 52-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to violating the civil rights of Michael Waller by assaulting him on July 22, 2014. Waller had been arrested on suspicion of breaking into Carroll’s daughter’s car and stealing her credit card.
The former prosecutor who helped Carroll cover up the crime, Bliss Barber Worrell, was sentenced in July 2016 to 18 months of probation and 140 hours of community service.
Could individuals wind up in prison for violating Carol's civil rights? The answer is yes, but it might depend on whether legal corruption in the southwest corner of the state is even worse than it is in Missouri's largest city.
As for the three lawyers who allegedly lied about a cover-up in the Thomas A. Carroll case, this is from a report at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
Two former St. Louis prosecutors and a St. Louis County family court lawyer are facing possible professional discipline over allegations that they lied about the cover-up of a St. Louis police detective’s assault on a handcuffed suspect in 2014.
The city paid the man who was assaulted a $300,000 settlement in October, according to a copy of a document released to the Post-Dispatch on Thursday.
The two former prosecutors — Ambry Nichole Schuessler and Katherine “Katie” Dierdorf — were working in the St. Louis Circuit Attorney’s Office at the time and the third — Caroline Anne Rutledge — was an intern there.
In her defense filing, Caroline Rutledge portrays a prosecutor's office that lacked professionalism and integrity:
Rutledge’s filing says Worrell told her that Carroll “beat that guy up,” and she was aware of “limited discussion by others of an assault.” She denied lying to investigators but acknowledges that she could have been more “forthcoming.”
Former prosecutor Bliss Barber Worrell:
She admitted covering up police abuse.
(From stltoday.com)
What's ahead in the case? From the Post-Dispatch report:
No disciplinary hearing has been scheduled. The disciplinary process could result in dismissal of the case, an admonition or discipline ranging from a reprimand to disbarment.
As for allegations that the St. Louis prosecutor's office was riddled with corruption and unprofessional conduct, we're guessing that the office in Greene County might be just as bad -- if not worse. And we're starting to see signs that the Public Defender's office isn't any better.