August 6, 2009 11:54 AM

Police Cameras Don't Lie, But Did Fla. Cops?

By
Ryan Smith
Topics
Caught on Tape
VIDEO COURTESY OF CBS-4 MIAMI

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) Veteran Hollywood Police Officer Dewey Pressley said he hated lying. But if bending the truth a little would keep a fellow officer out of trouble, well, he was all for it.

A dashboard police camera video that surfaced recently showed Pressley chuckling as he wrote a fake police report, calling his creativity "a little Walt Disney" so another officer wouldn't get in trouble for rear-ending a 23-year-old woman's car in February.

Pressley and four others have been suspended with pay pending an investigation after video of the accident and the officers' attempt to cover it up became public last week, the latest Internet sensation in a line of unsettling police dashcam videos.

On the video, the officers, with calculating authority, are heard laughing about how drunk 23-year-old Alexandra Torrens-Vilas is and how they plan to "hang her out to dry" so the officer that hit her car doesn't get in trouble.

The accident occurred when Vilas had to unexpectedly stop her car. She said she was driving home from a party where she had found a stray cat, and it jumped out of the window. She got out of the car to chase the cat, and that's when officer Joel Francisco rammed the back of the car, she said.

February's crash was Francisco's seventh accident with a patrol car since 2000, according to personnel records.

Authorities said they gave Vilas a breathalyzer test, which showed she was about twice the legal drinking limit.

She admits having a few beers, but her attorney questioned the validity of the test, saying the same officer who gave it to her was the one who fudged the reports.

"I'm gonna tell you exactly how to word this so we can get him off the hook," Pressley says on the video. Later he remarks: "I don't like making things up ever because it's wrong but if I have to bend it a little to protect a cop I'm gonna."

(CBS/AP)
In the report, Pressley wrote Vilas got in the left lane and slammed on the brakes and blamed her for the accident.

The state attorney's office is assisting Hollywood Police to determine whether charges will be brought against any of the officers.

Vilas' attorney Mark Gold, founder of the law firm The Ticket Clinic, said the officers committed perjury when they told the same story in a deposition under oath.

Vilas was charged with DUI and a traffic violation, but the state attorney's office dropped the charges, saying the video raised questions about the officers' account of the crash.

"I was very shocked especially hearing the language they used," Vilas said. "I was in disbelief that they would do so much to cover a fender bender."

Vilas had to spend two nights in jail and missed a semester at Georgetown University, where she is studying international economics, because she wasn't allowed to leave the state while free on bail.



Add a Comment
by idontbuyit August 14, 2009 3:53 AM EDT
fact: police perjure themselves ALL THE TIME. unlike the previous two intelligent posters here, most of the public insists on staying ignorant of this fact regardless of the scores of stories such as these that expose them. they've been doing it for years, people. police misconduct is the rule, NOT the exception: "Veteran Hollywood Police Officer Dewey Pressley said he hated lying. But if bending the truth a little would keep a fellow officer out of trouble, well, he was all for it." <--LYING IS IN THEIR JOB DESCRIPTION, get it??? i'm always amazed at how the public so readily deceives itself when it comes to the abuse of power and authority by public figures. man never seeks to shine a light on his evil deeds or nature does he, so why is it such a shock???
Reply to this comment
by rablady August 6, 2009 6:42 PM EDT
It goes without saying that everyone involved should be fired. Does anyone know what the penalty is for making false charges if it's a citizen? How about for a cop? There's also the matter of the wrong insurance company would be paying out dough for the cops' lies and her rates may well have shot up because of their misdeeds and cover-up. Corruption by cops is disheartening, but it's their incredible misuse of tasers -- and the resulting injuries and deaths that has most appalled me. It seems to me communities exercise too little control of "their" own police depts.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 August 6, 2009 5:19 PM EDT
So now a story where the police lie to ruin someones future, in order to escape responsibility for a minor incident, finally surfaces with accompanying video to back it up.

Kind of like what I call the "Rodney King scenario," this happens so often that it was bound to be caught on video sooner or later.

Now it will be interesting to see what happens to the cops who committed perjury, as well as the other cops who planned it.

The saddest part is that now the cops will have learned from this to lie off camera, and find other ways to continue their corruption.
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