Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Coincidence Or Crime?

Three people involved in the Otto Zehm case become victims themselves.

Joe O'Sullivan
Otto Zehm
Otto Zehm
Otto Zehm

The burglars emptied Tom Clouse’s home and swiped a big Ford F-250 pickup from his driveway. They took his late uncle’s WWII sidearm. They stole the jewelry of his late wife.

The perpetrators didn’t just steal big-dollar items. They combed through everything. Took tools from the basement. Bic lighters from a utility drawer.

“The house was in complete shambles, every counter, drawer and cabinet had been gone through,” says Clouse, a reporter for the Spokesman-Review since 1999.

Clouse isn’t just any reporter, though. He led the Spokesman’s coverage of Otto Zehm’s death at the hands of Spokane police and the subsequent trial and conviction of Officer Karl F. Thompson.

Clouse is also one of three people connected with the Zehm case who have had suspicious incidents at their homes.

While Clouse was in Yakima covering Thompson’s trial in October, a neighbor called him concerned: Clouse’s truck was missing, and the back door to his house was open.

After filing his stories, Clouse returned to Spokane. By the door where he usually enters his home was an open copy of the Spokesman-Review, displaying one of Clouse’s own articles.

“It was the front page, above-the-fold story about Karl F. Thompson’s testimony,” Clouse says. “It’s clear whoever left that was sending a message.”

The burglars, Clouse says, came in through a basement window and left gloves on the scene.

“One of the so-called burglars took a block of cheese and was gnawing on it and left it in the basement,” Clouse says. “I asked the police to take it as evidence, and they refused.”

Clouse hoped law enforcement could obtain a DNA sample from the cheese. The Federal Bureau of Investigation asked Clouse to preserve the cheese as evidence, he says, but agents never came to retrieve it. Spokane police say they retrieved fingerprints from his house, but because of a backlog, they’re still waiting to send them out for processing.

Civil attorneys Jeffry Finer and Breean Beggs — both involved in the Zehm case — have also experienced incidents involving their homes.

Beggs, 49, has represented Otto Zehm’s family since 2006, shortly after Zehm died after being beaten and hog-tied by Spokane police.

One day in June 2010, while Beggs was attending a pre-trial hearing for Thompson, Beggs’ wife came home to find their basement flooded. The water came from a line outside the house that had been cut in what Beggs says was no accident.

“There was no way that would be sliced without someone intentionally doing that,” says Beggs.

“It was right during the hearing that it broke, and no one was home,” he adds. “Whether or not there was a connection there, I don’t know, but it was certainly troubling.”

Like Clouse, Beggs doesn’t want to speculate on whether he may have been targeted. “I don’t have enough evidence to make any conclusion,” Beggs says. “I would just say I’m concerned.”

Beggs reported the incident to the Federal Bureau of Investigation rather than filing a report with Spokane police.

Frank Harrill, a senior FBI agent based in Spokane, says the FBI is aware of the burglary at Clouse’s residence but declined further comment. He also declined to comment on the incidents involving Beggs and Finer.

The incident involving Finer happened even earlier. In March 2009, police reported a 911 hang-up call coming from Finer’s home, according to a Spokesman-Review article. Police entered the home without Finer’s permission to find it unoccupied. Neither Finer nor his wife was in town at the time.

That incident came about a week after Finer had filed the Zehm lawsuit against the city. The lawsuit remains on hold until the criminal trial is resolved, Beggs says.

Spokane Mayor David Condon says that he’s heard of the burglary at Clouse’s residence but not of any incidents involving Beggs or Finer.

Condon says he has not been made aware of the police department’s investigation into the burglary, and that without any evidence, he wouldn’t speculate on whether the incidents were an act of retribution against any of the three.

Beggs’ flooded basement sustained over $20,000 in damage.

Claims for the Clouse burglary amounted to $29,000 for the truck and $13,000 for the house’s contents.

Insurance covered all of these claims, but for Clouse, who last week mourned the second anniversary of his wife Christianne’s death, dollars don’t mean much.

“All of her jewelry, her mother’s jewelry and grandmother’s jewelry, including the wedding rings,” Clouse says. “You can’t really put a dollar value on that kind of stuff.”

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Very disturbing from top to bottom.

I encourage Mr. Frank Harrill of the FBI to become very aggressive in solving these crimes against these three upstanding and high profile members of our journalistic and civil rights defense community. The failure of the FBI to pick up the evidence from Mr. Clouse that they had asked him to hold for them is inexcusable but certainly requires a public response from Mr. Harrill.

This case needs to receive international attention as an example of the kind of official (if it occurred anywhere else in the world the US press would assume the police were complicit) repression and harassment meted out against those who stand tall in the face of police misconduct and coverups. If the FBI fails to aggressively pursue these highly disturbing cases, their resolve against police corruption and in favor of civil rights can rightfully be disputed in the strongest of terms.

We will anxiously await Mr. Harrill´s response. Just as Harrill spoke publicly at the East Central Community Center regarding the attempted bombing of the Martin Luther King March last year, he should also make clear statements about FBI involvement in the resolution of these targeted crimes against these three individuals and the communities they represent with their journalistic and legal work. Jan 26, 2012 | Reply to this comment

 

One of the continuing problems in Spokane regarding the Police department, is they have shown to be selective regarding witnesses, on all levels it exist in this city. And in making complaints regarding officer conduct to Spokane Police Ombudsman office, the reports come back, and statement is that there was not enough witnesses, even though the witnesses were directly pointed out to police officers involved. The picture I paint here, is regarding activists and people like the reporters, and attorneys mentioned, when we as individuals step up, whether through word or protest, all of a sudden, there is a time lapse, and the issue is not addressed, then the time passes away, the memories get distant, and if they ever manage to investigate, the witnesses are no more, or have left, or even do not want to talk anymore. Then for some unknown reason there becomes a targeting. Yes a targeting that can even be traced at times to the very AIM police website itself. There is some deep seated problems in this city, not just with the police department, but in other areas, like with certain businesses. Almost like a Mafia style setting where people are protected, and have to give no account all. Or they just pay a fine and it goes away like it never happened. It is however, like they are connected. As one who steps up for the first amendment, I would feel very strongly, that one who takes an oath to uphold the constitution would want to protect the first amendment, and the second, and the 4th and 5th and so on.

Serious attention should be paid to the bottom all the way to the top. Jan 30, 2012

 

 
 
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