E.D.N.Y. Officers’ failure to mention gun when first allegedly seen makes them all unbelievable

Court finds three officers’ testimony incredible on seeing defendant having a gun and letting him get out of the car with it and never saying a word about the gun until after it’s seized. United States v. Mayo, 960 F. Supp. 2d 419 (E.D. N.Y. 2013):

But there is one undisputed fact that dwarfs all others in undermining the testimony of these officers that they saw a firearm in Mayo’s waistband before anyone exited the car: their mutual silence at the time about that critically important fact. Few things are more important to the safety of the public and especially of the police themselves when they stop a suspect than the presence of a firearm. A firearm on the scene is a big deal even to the most experienced officers, and the cases evidencing that reality are legion.fn3 The government would have me believe that Zakiewicz saw a firearm in Mayo’s waistband and then let both Jwayyed and his sergeant exit the car to stop him without even mentioning to them that the person they were about to stop was carrying a gun. It would have me believe that Zakiewicz decided he wanted to stop Mayo and also decided to communicate that decision to his colleagues but chose not to mention why he wanted to stop him. It would have me believe that an officer who said he wanted to stop someone, apparently for no reason, chose not to tell his immediate supervisor the one fact that would make the stop lawful.

FN3 See, e.g., United States v. Doughty, No. 08-cr-375, 2008 WL 4308123, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 18, 2008) (“Officer Rodriguez saw ‘what appeared to be’ the handle of a firearm. Officer Rodriguez yelled ‘gun, gun,’ and he unsheathed his own gun. Hearing Officer Rodriguez yell ‘gun,’ Officer Omisore grabbed Defendant in a ‘bear hug’ and threw him into a nearby doorway.”); United States v. Smith, No. 11-cr-677, at *1 (N.D. Ill. May 11, 2012) (“While focusing on Smith’s waist, from inside the police car approximately 25 feet away from the sidewalk, Officer Byrne saw the butt of a handgun at Smith’s waistband. Officer Byrne testified that he stated ‘gun’ and Skarupinski stopped the slow-moving car.”); United States v. Grant, No. 09-cr-337, 2009 WL 3921369, at *1 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 19, 2009) (“Officer McCarthy, believing based on his experience that Defendant was tucking a gun into his waistband, immediately said to Officer Hand: “Hand, Hand, I think he’s got a gun.” The officers then pulled their car into the intersection . . . with their headlights on Defendant. They exited the car, with their hands on or near their visible but holstered guns, and Officer McCarthy yelled to Defendant: ‘Show me your hands.'”).

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