From tales about a footloose dog to a burglar's reports of mysterious screams, tips are pouring in on the hot line set up in the O.J. Simpson murder case.
Simpson attorney Robert L. Shapiro said Wednesday that the toll-free telephone line established by the defense had recorded 250,000 calls in a week.
''It's beyond belief,'' Shapiro said.
Simpson has also offered dlrs 500,000 for information leading to the arrest of the ''real killer.''
''We're hearing from every psycho and every crazy person,'' said Bill Pavelic, an investigative consultant working with the Simpson team. ''But if I get one call in a hundred that's a good lead, it's worth it.''
A Santa Barbara woman called police and the hot line suggesting that Nicole Brown Simpson's white Akita could have carried a bloody glove from the murder scene to Simpson's estate two miles (3.2 kilometers) away.
She suggested tests of the glove to see whether the dog's saliva was on it. So far, neither police nor defense lawyers have requested the tests.
A Maryland woman has called the hot line repeatedly, telling of dreams in which she sees another killer. To her frustration, lawyers haven't called her back.
Investigators for the defense and the police are looking into many of the tips in the June 12 slayings of Simpson's former wife and her friend Ronald Goldman.
''There's people that are giving us theories, there's psychics, that kind of thing,'' Detective Dennis Payne said. ''And then there's people who have information. We're checking it all out.''
Some officers said they are concerned defense lawyers will present a huge number of tips to police, then argue that the investigation wasn't thorough if all aren't tracked down.
One caller who identified himself as a burglar said he was casing homes in the neighborhood the night of the slayings. He said he heard a woman scream and saw two white men fleeing the crime scene about the time of the killings.
The burglar said he isn't interested in the reward money.
''I just want to straighten this out,'' he told the Los Angeles Times, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
January 8, 1995, SUNDAY, ALL EDITIONS
SLEUTH
BYLINE: BY TOM MURPHY
SECTION: SUNSHINE MAGAZINE, Pg. 8
LENGTH: 2522 words
JOHN McNALLY WAS AN OFF-DUTY NEW YORK POLICE detective on his way to visit his daughter Deborah in the hospital one winter night in 1969, when he spotted a robbery in progress at a liquor store near the Holland Tunnel. He pulled his car over and strolled into the store as if he were a customer.
A man with a pistol was standing behind a counter while a second man emptied one of the cash registers. When the robber moved to a second register, McNally suddenly drew his service revolver and stuck it under the man’s chin.
The other gunman whirled around and aimed his .32 at McNally, but his pistol misfired.
“Put down your gun if you want your friend to live,” McNally shouted.
The man tossed his gun to the floor.
“John was never off duty,” says Stan Kochman, an ex-NYPD cop and private investigator from New Jersey.
Kochman admits he’s not an impartial observer. As private investigators, he and McNally worked numerous cases together, including the Claus von Bulow appeal, masterminded by Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz in 1985. After being convicted of attempting to murder his wife, heiress Martha “Sunny” von Bulow, with injections of insulin, Von Bulow was granted a new trial. The second jury found him not guilty.
“McNally was a legend in the police department,” Kochman recalls. “He wasn’t intimidated by anything.”
McNally has been a private investigator now for 22 years. Since 1983
he and his partner, Pat McKenna, have been based in West Palm Beach,
though McNally still maintains an office in New York City. During this
time, they have worked for many of the most prominent criminal defense
attorneys in the country.
Unlike his famous clients, very little is known about McNally, who was
born in Brooklyn in 1933. He usually makes every effort to avoid the
media, though that proved impossible when he stepped off a plane in Los
Angeles last July to head the investigation for the O.J. Simpson
defense team.
Every reporter within shouting distance wanted an interview. Time
magazine, grasping for information, published a story headlined: “Who
Are These Guys, Anyway?'’
The article painted a less-than-flattering portrait of McNally, but a
very different image emerged when the PI finally agreed to an interview
with Sunshine in Los Angeles, in between tracking down crucial evidence
for Robert Shapiro, Simpson’s lead attorney.
IT IS A BRIGHT SATURDAY afternoon at a Bel Air hotel on Sunset Boulevard, and McNally and McKenna are relaxing at a poolside table, their cellular phones close by. McNally, whose hair and beard are gray, could be a finalist in the annual Key West Ernest Hemingway look-a-like contest.
He makes it clear that he wouldn’t have agreed to the Sunshine interview if it wasn’t a favor for F. Lee Bailey, the flamboyant Palm Beach defense attorney who gave McNally his start in the private-investigation business and was responsible for McNally joining the Simpson team.
Throughout the interview, McNally refuses to embellish his exploits and offers only sparse information about his personal life.
He grew up in Brooklyn, attended a Catholic high school and enlisted in the Navy at 17. When he was discharged from the service, he joined the New York police department. He moved up quickly through the ranks and became the youngest man in the department to make detective first-grade. In 1964, he was credited with helping to break one of the most famous jewel robberies in American history.
That was the year Miami man-about-town Jack “Murph the Surf” Murphy and two companions broke into Manhattan’s Museum of Natural History and stole the Star of India - the largest sapphire in the world - along with other priceless jewels.
Tapping his sources on the street, McNally learned that a group of out-of-town men had been spotted partying at a local hotel.
“I ran down the lead the same day,” McNally says, “and turned the information over to the FBI.”
Two days later, the FBI arrested Murph the Surf in Miami and recovered the Star of India.
After receiving 22 commendations during his career, McNally retired from the NYPD in 1971.
The following year, he was referred to F. Lee Bailey, who had come to New York on a murder case involving two brothers named Jacobson. Bailey asked McNally to check out a rumor that the prosecution was planning to coach a witness during a mock trial scheduled to take place in an empty courtroom over the weekend.
Posing as a janitor, McNally put on old clothes and mopped his way into the courtroom where the witness was being questioned. The next day in court Bailey asked the witness if she had been coached in her testimony. When she said no, Bailey informed the prosecution that McNally could verify the witness was lying. Bailey won the case, and he and McNally began their long association.
Since being licensed as a PI in 1972, McNally has worked almost exclusively for elite criminal defense attorneys. Though he won’t discuss his fees, they are substantial. He doesn’t advertise, and never had to perform such mundane tasks as domestic surveillance.
“I started out at the top,” he says. “Lee was my jump-off point.”
INTERVIEWS WITH THE ATTORNEYS McNally has worked for bring a sharper portrait of him into focus. There is a remarkable degree of consistency in their feelings about the investigator, who, they say, is the best in the business.
Fred Hafetz, a longtime lawyer and a former chief of the criminal
division in the U.S. Attorney’s Office, has used McNally’s services for
more than 20 years. He met the PI in the early ’70s, when Hafetz was
representing a defendant in a murder case and needed to locate a
witness.
“All we had was a nickname and a little information about the
neighborhood,” Hafetz remembers. “I turned the information over to John
on Friday. On Saturday he found the man. Amazing.”
What comes across repeatedly is McNally’s ability to find witnesses and
to get them to talk. When asked how he does it, he shrugs, saying, “You
have to work to get them on your side. I try to take that extra step.
Other PIs might interview someone by phone. I like to do it face to
face.”
McNally’s world is not the slam-bang stuff of TV heroes like Tom Selleck of Magnum P.I. or James Garner of The Rockford Files. There are no car chases or shootouts. McNally has a gun license in both Florida and New York, but he seldom carries a weapon.
Not that there haven’t been a few tense moments.
Gerald Alch was a criminal defense attorney for 34 years before becoming a district court judge in Massachusetts. In the mid-’70s he was working a murder case in Indiana, and McNally was along as his investigator. When Alch received an anonymous death threat, McNally insisted that as a precaution they trade motel rooms.
“When you have a private investigator who’s willing to take a bullet
for you, it’s pretty hard not to have confidence in him,” Alch says.
Barry Slotnick, a New York attorney who in 1984 hired McNally to
investigate the case of subway gunman Bernhard Goetz, tells a story
that illustrates McNally’s ability to get the kind of information that
can prove vital during a trial.
In 1980, Slotnick was defending two young Hasidic Jews charged with attempted murder. Searching for a key witness for the prosecution, McNally moved seamlessly through the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, a mixed-race neighborhood where Hasidic men wear black formal garb and full beards. Finally, he found the witness and interviewed him. When he briefed Slotnick, McNally said he was certain the witness had been smoking marijuana during the incident he claimed to have seen.
Dubious, Slotnick told McNally it hadn’t been mentioned in the police report.
McNally shrugged. “Well, I guess they didn’t pick up on it.”
When Slotnick questioned the witness in court, he asked the man if he had been smoking marijuana at the time, and the witness said yes. Then Slotnick asked him if he was able to see the event while he was smoking.
“Yeah, man,” the witness said. “Marijuana makes me see better.” Slotnick’s clients were acquitted.
AT THE HOTEL ON SUNSET BOULEVARD, McNally and McKenna are drinking out of cans of beer from their cooler, and McNally is feeding potato chips to a squirrel that has scampered up to the table.
What does he think about the Time magazine article that quoted an assistant U.S. Attorney as saying McNally was a confidant of Gambino crime-family members? The question clearly irritates the PI.
“If I work for five different lawyers, am I the confidant of five different defendants?” he asks rhetorically. “No. It’s because of the lawyers I work for.”
Lee Bailey, coming to McNally’s defense, says, “If John were a confidant of the mob, I wouldn’t be introducing him to any of my clients.”
When Judge Gerald Alch is asked the same question, he reacts in disbelief. “You’ve heard of the impossible dream? That’s the unleapable stretch. John has the ability to get the job done without ever crossing the ethical or moral line. He never gets that line blurred.”
According to Time magazine, McNally does have his detractors, but it is difficult to put a name to such sources as “a high-ranking member of the NYPD” or verify the statement that “law-enforcement sources” told Time that McNally was the target of an FBI investigation.
When asked about the Time story, an FBI spokeswoman said that the
agency would not confirm or deny any investigation, past or present.
She added, however, that the “law-enforcement source” mentioned in Time
was not the FBI.
The news that McNally and McKenna were working for O.J. Simpson’s
defense team was not warmly received by a group of California private
investigators, and a complaint was filed by the Los Angeles County
Criminal Investigators Association. Their law firm sent McNally and
McKenna a cease-and-desist order, stating that they were not licensed
to operate in California.
McNally flips open a thick, three-ring binder and jabs at a page.
“I called Sacramento (the state capital) when I first got out here and was told I did not have to have a California license to work a particular case,” he says with heat in his voice. “I called a second time to confirm that and I was told the same thing.”
When asked if there were any other investigators involved on the Simpson case, McNally nods his head.
“Yeah,” he says. “We have an ex-LAPD sergeant named William Bill Pavelic acting as a consultant.”McNally smiles at McKenna. “We are that ‘army of investigators’ you keep hearing about.”
McNALLY HAS HAD HIS SHARE of personal tragedies. His son, John, was killed in a car accident in New York in 1981. Devastated, McNally and his wife, Elaine, left New York for South Florida, and bought a condo in Jupiter, where McNally took a two-year hiatus from his work. Elaine died in 1992.
Today, McNally devotes himself to his private-investigation business, which has grown dramatically since he moved to Florida. Over the years, he has built up a network of PIs he calls on when he’s too busy to handle a case himself. Using this network, he was able to put together a team to investigate the country’s first toxic-dumping racketeering case in 1990.
New York attorney Michael Walsh represented one of the corporations
charged with the illegal dumping of medical waste. McNally set up
surveillance teams to follow hospital employees to determine who was
actually dumping the waste products.
The information that McNally’s team uncovered convinced the jury that
it was hospital employees, either intentionally or negligently, who
were improperly disposing of tons of toxic waste.
In this case, as in many others, McNally got little credit for turning a case in the client’s favor.
“It’s not important for John to take credit for a lawyer’s success in the courtroom,” Walsh says. “I like to think of him as the stealth detective.”
F. LEE BAILEY HAS LONG BEEN an advocate of the value of a top-flight investigator. “I’m a great believer in the notion that if your investigator is good enough, almost any lawyer will do,” he says.
Bailey devoted a section of his 1982 book, To Be A Trial Lawyer, to the responsibilities and skills of a PI. The attorney believes that an investigator must try to ensure that the lawyer he’s working for gets no surprises during the trial.
McNally agrees.
“It’s just as important to find out the bad stuff as the good stuff,” he says.
To do this, McNally puts a witness at ease, then obtains a statement without the subpoena power of the police.
Miami attorney Jay Hogan has known McNally since the PI moved to Florida 13 years ago.
“John can talk to a guy in a candy store or a penthouse or the CEO of a corporation,” Hogan says. “He seems to be the kind of man who invokes trust from all kinds of people.”
On his first contact with a witness, McNally identifies the law firm he’s working for and then presents his calling card.
“I’ll ask if they’ve read the police report that has their statement
in it,” he explains. “If they say no, I’ll give it to them. You’ve got
to give a little to get a little. Often they’ll finish reading the
police report and tell me, ‘That’s not what I said.’ Then I’ll ask, ‘So
what did you say?’ ”
McNally tries to form a bond of trust with the witness that lasts
throughout the trial. Sometimes an attorney will ask him to go back to
a reluctant witness and persuade him to testify. In a case like this,
McNally says that the best approach is to appeal to the witness’ sense
of fair play.
“With each witness, I have to be as good as my word,” he says.
IT’S APPROACHING 4 O’CLOCK, and McNally announces that he has to meet someone in Malibu and excuses himself to get ready. Pat McKenna stays at the table to talk about the man he is assisting in the Simpson case.
McKenna has a master’s degree in criminology and is a former corrections-parole officer who came to Florida from Calumet City, Ill., in 1978. He has traveled to Europe and South America on investigations and worked such high-profile assignments as the IRA Stinger-missile case in West Palm Beach in 1990 and the William Kennedy Smith rape saga in 1991. He and McNally have been associates for more than a decade.
McKenna is tanned and looks fit.
“I’m 46 and can’t keep up with the guy,” he says about the
less-than-svelte McNally. “John is always thinking, always on his toes.
He never rests.”
McKenna admits he is in awe of McNally, even though they sometimes
argue and challenge each other about tactics. McKenna talks of how
proud he was when, as a notary public, he was asked to perform the
wedding ceremony for McNally’s daughter, Eileen, in Jupiter. He also
mentions McNally’s generosity.
“John could have had the William Kennedy Smith case, but he gave it to me,” McKenna says.
He frowns, trying to come up with a fitting way to express admiration for his friend and mentor.
“I’ve learned a lot on my own, but when I’m with John, I know I’m working with the master,” he says. “It’s like a painter being asked to work with Michelangelo.”
TOM MURPHY is a freelance writer. He lives in Boca Raton.
Associated Press Worldstream
July 21, 1994; Thursday 20:15 Eastern Time
BYLINE: MICHAEL FLEEMAN
SECTION: International news
LENGTH: 437 words
DATELINE: LOS ANGELES
A top investigator for former football star O.J. Simpson has been portrayed in court papers as a bitter ex-cop with a vendetta against a former Police Department colleague assigned to the sports legend’s murder case.
Yugoslav native Zvonko ‘’Bill'’ Pavelic gave up a generous pension package when he quit the department 18 months ago after nearly 20 years on the force. He contends he was forced out because he had complained about racism and corruption in the department.
‘’I was sick and tired of watching innocent people get framed, especially members of minority groups, and that includes African-Americans and Mexicans,'’ Pavelic, a Croat born in the former Yugoslavia, told The Associated Press. ‘’I was disturbed about officer-involved shootings, and how they covered up the incidents.'’
William Bill Pavelic, who has sat in court behind Simpson, was hired to review the police investigation in the case, looking for mistakes, violations of LAPD policy and skeletons in investigators’ closets.
Simpson, 47, is charged with murder in the June 12 stabbings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson, 35, and her friend Ron Goldman, 25. He faces a Friday arraignment.
Court papers describe Pavelic as angry, bitter and paranoid.
‘’Pavelic thought there was a big conspiracy among the supervisors at Southwest Detectives and command staff officers of LAPD who were ‘out to get him,”’ prosecutors wrote in a case in which the defense was considering calling Pavelic as a witness.
In recent days, the Simpson camp has leaked unflattering details about Detective Mark Fuhrman, who testified at a preliminary hearing that he found a bloody glove at Simpson’s estate.
The defense was reportedly going to argue that Fuhrman planted the glove. However, an internal police investigation has concluded that scenario is virtually impossible, unidentified police sources told the Los Angeles Times.
Many of Fuhrman’s defenders suspect Pavelic was responsible for revealing details to the media of a 1983 lawsuit that portrays Fuhrman as racist and violent.
Pavelic makes no secret of his hatred toward the LAPD, and Fuhrman in particular.
A review of his personnel file suggests, however, that Pavelic enjoyed a successful career. He strongly defended his reputation, pointing to 175 commendations he received.
But his career apparently took a turn for the worse in his latter years, when he started openly criticizing command staff, including former Chief Daryl Gates.
Pavelic retired in 1992 on a service-related disability pension of half pay, claiming his working conditions aggravated his health.
Associated Press Worldstream
July 28, 1994; Thursday 16:54 Eastern Time
SECTION: International news
DATELINE: LOS ANGELES
From tales about a footloose dog to a burglar’s reports of mysterious screams, tips are pouring in on the hot line set up in the O.J. Simpson murder case.
Simpson attorney Robert L. Shapiro said Wednesday that the toll-free telephone line established by the defense had recorded 250,000 calls in a week.
“It’s beyond belief,” Shapiro said.
Simpson has also offered $ 500,000 for information leading to the arrest of the “real killer.”
“We’re hearing from every psycho and every crazy person,” said Bill Pavelic, an investigative consultant working with the Simpson team. “But if I get one call in a hundred that’s a good lead, it’s worth it.”
A Santa Barbara woman called police and the hot line suggesting that Nicole Brown Simpson’s white Akita could have carried a bloody glove from the murder scene to Simpson’s estate two miles (3.2 kilometers) away.
She suggested tests of the glove to see whether the dog’s saliva was on it. So far, neither police nor defense lawyers have requested the tests.
A Maryland woman has called the hot line repeatedly, telling of dreams in which she sees another killer. To her frustration, lawyers haven’t called her back.
Investigators for the defense and the police are looking into many of the tips in the June 12 slayings of Simpson’s former wife and her friend Ronald Goldman.
“There’s people that are giving us theories, there’s psychics, that kind of thing,” Detective Dennis Payne said. “And then there’s people who have information. We’re checking it all out.”
Some officers said they are concerned defense lawyers will present a huge number of tips to police, then argue that the investigation wasn’t thorough if all aren’t tracked down.
One caller who identified himself as a burglar said he was casing homes in the neighborhood the night of the slayings. He said he heard a woman scream and saw two white men fleeing the crime scene about the time of the killings.
The burglar said he isn’t interested in the reward money.
“I just want to straighten this out,” he told the Los Angeles Times, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“Guilty of Incompetence” is a hard hitting book, that will expose the facts instead of fiction, and take you behind the scenes to see how LAPD and LADA helped create the OJ Simpson “race card”, covered up the existence of suspect “Charlie”, mismanaged the investigation and botched the “Trial of the Century”.
In 1991, Bill Pavelic established himself as the foremost insider critic of racism and corruption in the LAPD.
Bill Pavelic has been the subject of many articles nationally and internationally for speaking out against and exposing racism that he personally witnessed as a LAPD Detective.
On June 30, 1992, Bill Pavelic sent the following letter to the Los Angeles Sentinel concerning the institutionalized racism, corruption, and sexism, of the LAPD under Chief Daryl Gates’ leadership.
To: Los Angeles Sentinel Opinion Section
As a 19 year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department, I am elated that Chief Gates was forced into retirement. His corrupt managerial style, coupled with his inflammatory and intemperate public comments, have done irreparable damage to the City of Los Angeles and its police department.
Daryl Gates and his close associates are suffering from a disease called megalomania……an exaggerated belief in their own greatness and that of the organization. In order to maintain a mythical status of being “the best law enforcement agency in the world” the LAPD management developed a bunker mentality and consciously impeded and retarded investigations or inquiries which reflected poorly on the organization. The “us against them” mentality required faulty analysis which was oftentimes based on pseudo reasoning, clever fallacies and distorted or manufactured evidence.
The disciplinary system under the leadership of Daryl Gates lacked consistency, uniformity and equality and sent a deplorable signal to others on the force, that it is OK to falsify official investigations, violate the LAPD manual, discredit the Code of Ethics and be dishonest as long as you are a member of management or have friends at the top who will protect you even when prima facie evidence of a crime is clearly evident.
Chief Gates has failed to hold accountable personnel under his control who were acting under the color of law and were exercising illegal direction under the guise of official authority. In no sphere of public life is this practice more repugnant than in law enforcement. Chief Gates, who morally bankrupt the Los Angeles Police Department, forgot, or never knew, that true leadership can be gained only by an intolerance of wrong doing…and…unless we all abide by the highest standards among ourselves, we have no business enforcing the law upon others.
Chief Gates used the Internal Affairs Division to intimidate those officers who dared to speak out against Los Angeles Police Department’s institutionalized racism, corruption, sexism, mismanagement, promotional cronyism and other sensitive issues. If the Internal Affairs Division didn’t get these “disloyal” police officers, like the Russian KGB, the organization could always count on the Medical Liaison Unit to send these officers to the Department shrink…to certify them as functionally crazy.
Under the leadership of Chief Williams, respect for individual dignity will once again become an integral part of the Los Angeles Police Department’s philosophy…a philosophy that will be based on the principles of professionalism, reverence for the law and harmony between the police and the community it serves.
Respectfully,
Bill Pavelic, Southwest Division
ABC NEWS
January 30, 1997
SHOW: ABC GOOD MORNING AMERICA (7:00 am ET)
FORMER LEAD SIMPSON INVESTIGATOR VISITS GMA
GUESTS: BILL PAVELIC
BYLINE: ELIZABETH VARGAS
SECTION: News
HIGHLIGHT: RESPONSE TO LANGE AND VANNATTER
ELIZABETH VARGAS, Host: As we said earlier, former LAPD detectives Phil Vannatter and Tom Lange were guests on our show yesterday. Today -- and they were emphatically defending the integrity of their investigation, we must say. Today, we are going to speak with Bill Pavelic. He was the chief investigator of the OJ Simpson criminal trial, civil trial, and the custody case involving his two young children, Sydney and Justin. Bill Pavelic joins us this morning. Welcome, thank you for being here.
BILL PAVELIC, Former Simpson Lead Investigator: Thank you.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Former detectives Lange and Vannatter took on the air -- were on the air -- concede they made mistakes, but they emphatically deny framing OJ Simpson. Why are you so sure that, in fact, they did?
BILL PAVELIC: In fact, their book even substantiates that premise even more. They basically falsified the affidavit, the search warrant affidavit. The information that they provided to the judge in order to get the search warrant was basically fabricated. They lied to the judge by informing her that OJ Simpson left on an unscheduled flight, thus leaving them with the impression -- leaving her with the impression that he was fleeing California. They did not tell her that they scaled the wall. They told her that they recovered the glove while securing the evidence. And as you know from the trial, that's absolutely incorrect. I could go on, but I don't think we have the time.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: But even if we grant, even if we were to accept everything you just said on face value, which clearly detectives Lange and Vannatter deny and do not, you were an LA police officer for 19 years yourself. What you are suggesting is a conspiracy of such an enormous scope. They would have had to have planted Mr. Simpson's blood at Bundy. They would have planted Mr. Goldman's blood in Mr. Simpson's Bronco, planted Nicole's blood and Simpson's blood at the Rockingham estate. It goes on and on, and it seems fantastic to many people.
BILL PAVELIC: Yes, it does. But if you look at the facts, even Judge Ito supported our premise, and that is that Vannatter, for all intents and purposes, was dishonest. If Vannatter was dishonest, his partner obviously is just as culpable as Vannatter. What we found in this book, in fact, is, that Vannatter was shopping for a favorable prosecutor, in this case, Marcia Clark. Vannatter contacted Marcia Clark before he obtained the search warrant or the affidavit, completed the affidavit for the search warrant, before he went to Judge Lefkovitz (ph). So now we learn from his book that the prosecutor had a much bigger role in this conspiracy than we initially thought.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Well, let's get to the specifics of what they said yesterday ...
BILL PAVELIC: Sure.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: ... on our air, for example. For -- the first thing they said was that Mr Simpson was not acting like an innocent man. As one of the proofs, pieces of proof of that, they played the following tape. It's an audiotape from the Bronco chase. Let's listen to it very quickly.
Det TOM LANGE: (on phone) And nobody's going to get hurt.
OJ SIMPSON: (on phone) I'm the only one that deserves ...
Det TOM LANGE: No, you don't deserve that.
OJ SIMPSON: I'm going to get hurt.
Det TOM LANGE: You do not deserve to get hurt.
OJ SIMPSON: Ahhh ...
Det TOM LANGE: You do not deserve to get hurt. Don't do this.
OJ SIMPSON: All I did was love Nicole. That's all I did was love her.
Det TOM LANGE: I understand.
OJ SIMPSON: I love everybody. I tried to show everybody my whole life that I love every body.
Det TOM LANGE: We know that, and everybody loves you.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Mr. Simpson says on this tape, "I'm the only one who deserves to get hurt. I loved Nicole too much." To detectives Lange and Vannatter, they say that sounds like a grieving guilty man.
BILL PAVELIC: Well, he is a grieving not-guilty man. What he is referring to is obviously not the crime itself, but the fact that he eluded authorities, and went to the grave, and was suicidal. The interpretation that the -- Lange and Vannatter are putting out is that somehow this has to do with the crime itself, and that is totally incorrect.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Any question why Mr. Simpson didn't say, "I'm innocent of these crimes"? Why he didn't say -- talk more about Nicole's death?
BILL PAVELIC: In fact, he did say that. Not only did he maintain his innocence, but he also said, in various discussions that same day, that he was being framed by the police. I would like to submit to you, why didn't Vannatter and Lange put the contents of all -- the entire tape in a follow-up report or a supplemental report? You're not going to find that. And the reason you're not going to find it is because there's a problem with this tape. First of all, what probable cause did they have to tape record this conversation? Second of all, they're totally contradicting their initial premise, which was that he was fleeing again, trying to leave the public with the impression that he was somehow -- with the goatee and the mustache, that he was going to run away.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: But it does bring up an interesting issue. Why, in fact, if he was just going to his wife's grave, or why, in fact, he was only going to commit suicide or contemplating that horrible thought, would he have a disguise and $8,000 cash with him?
BILL PAVELIC: Well, first of all, he had a disguise. Why would he take his passport with no disguise? I mean, it's ludicrous to assume that he was trying to disguise himself in order to flee, but yet he took the passport that doesn't have the disguise. I mean, it just doesn't make sense.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: All right. They also introduced detectives Lange and Vannatter, they say there was new evidence that was never introduced at the criminal or civil trial, and they talked about it yesterday on our show. I've got another clip I'd like you to listen to.
Det TOM LANGE: We had a witness at the airport that initially, interestingly enough, came to the defense and said, "Listen, I was at the airport a little after 11:00. I saw OJ Simpson there with his arm buried in a trash container, and then it went to a small flight bag on top. He zipped it closed, and he walked inside." The day after -- the day of the murders, this fellow reported this to the defense, and they never shared it with us. It was nine months later when this man followed up on this revelation with us.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Did you investigate this man who says he saw OJ Simpson disposing contents of the -- of a bag?
BILL PAVELIC: First of all, first of all, let me just say something about Detective Lange here. We don't have an obligation to turn over discovery material to him. Discovery material would be turned over to the prosecution. If the prosecution did not let him see it, that's their business. We did turn over that information. As far as his interpretation, what happened is, their interpretation is completely different from ours.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: And the other evidence about supposedly OJ Simpson got a gift of knives just days before the murders?
BILL PAVELIC: Again, you have to ask yourself, why didn't they introduce this man? Why didn't they call him to testify? His contention is that it was the prosecution that didn't want to do it. This is a question that should be posed to the prosecution. As far as we're concerned, the gentleman that he is referring to was contacting tabloids, was trying to sell his story, has changed the version of his story, and he is -- he was not reliable.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: To many people in this civil trial in particular, the most damning evidence against OJ Simpson is this series of photographs showing him wearing Bruno Magli shoes, the kind of shoes that left a footprint at the murder scene. Do you still believe that first photograph printed in "The Enquirer" was indeed doctored, was a fake?
BILL PAVELIC: Unlike the plaintiffs' witnesses, I will not comment on an issue that the jury in the civil case is adjudicating. I think it would be improper. I'm still subject to the rules and regulations and the gag order that was issued by Judge Fujisaki.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: All right. Then without commenting in specific on this evidence, do you think that overall, this civil trial has been a fair trial for Mr. Simpson?
BILL PAVELIC: I would prefer to answer that question after the adjudication. And I think you may find it rather surprising.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: There have been many have been -- who have felt that Mr. Simpson has been subjected to double jeopardy. Those who support him feel that he's already been through this once, that in the civil trial, he is -- has been -- all this has been brought out against him again, we're getting this new evidence. Do you feel the same way? Do you feel sympathetic that way?
BILL PAVELIC: Let me just make a comment that I don't see the rage in America with regards to Mark Fuhrman making a living, who is a convicted perjurer. I don't see groups demonstrating against him. He is given an opportunity to make a living. So if we're talking about double standards here, I think there are double standards with regards to the way they look at OJ versus Mark Fuhrman. And in this case, only one person was convicted, and that was Mark Fuhrman.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: You still have a good relationship with OJ Simpson. You still speak with him regularly.
BILL PAVELIC: Yes, I do.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: How is he holding up through this trial?
BILL PAVELIC: I'm sure it's very difficult for him, but I think the fact that he has his children, he's content with that, and he knows this is an uphill battle. This is only round two in a 15-round fight. I'm sure that there will be some additional rulings.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Round two, that means it sounds like if he loses, he'll appeal.
BILL PAVELIC: I expect the appeal to go. I don't expect him to lose in this case.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: You expect him to win in the civil trial.
BILL PAVELIC: I think we're going to have to wait for the jury, and we may be just as surprised here as we were in all the others.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: In the criminal trial, OJ Simpson repeatedly professed his innocence, repeatedly pledged to find the real killers of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman. You were the man put in charge of that. What have you found about who might have killed these two people?
BILL PAVELIC: It's interesting that you ask that question. I don't recall anybody asking Mr. Jewell, "If you didn't plant the bomb in the -- in Atlanta, who did?" In this particular case, Mr. Simpson did authorize me to conduct an investigation. I will not comment on the investigation. I want to maintain the integrity of the investigation. And unlike the prosecution in the criminal case, I'm not about to rush to judgment.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Bill Pavelic, thank you for coming in, interesting speaking with you this morning.
BILL PAVELIC: Thank you, have a good day.
ELIZABETH VARGAS: Thanks, same to you.
Author is a legal asvisor and content writer
City News Service
July 27,
2001 Friday
BYLINE:
By TERRI VERMEULEN KEITH, City News Service
DATELINE:
LOS ANGELES
A
millionaire businessman acquitted of charges that he sexually assaulted nine
women, seven of whom allegedly were drugged, said today that the allegations
have been "a devastating experience."
"The
nightmare is over, absolutely. I'm looking forward to just relaxing and going
back to work, and salvaging a lot of the money that I've lost and just looking
forward to a new life and getting married and having a family," John
Gordon Jones said at a downtown news conference.
Jones
spent more than two years in county jail without bail until a Long Beach
Superior Court jury acquitted him yesterday of 29 charges, including
kidnapping, rape of an unconscious person, rape by use of drugs and sexual
battery.
The
46-year-old owner of Worldtech Computer in Encino, which he had helped to run
from jail, maintained that he had been "wrongfully accused."
"They
falsified documents, they hid documents. There was prosecutorial misconduct
that was just to an unbelievable, devastating state," the businessman
said.
"Well,
what happened is the District Attorney's Office wanted to have a GHB date rape
case, and they wanted to go ahead and prosecute me no matter what the truth
was.
"They
went ahead and they got these women to go ahead and say false allegations
against me, with blackouts that never existed, by lying. When these women wanted
to back out, I believe that they forced them to go ahead with their
stories," Jones said.
One of
Jones' lawyers, Milton Grimes, said his client is "thinking very seriously
of suing the county for false imprisonment because of the incompetent investigation
in this case."
"Nine
different women caused this man, this man here, to sit in jail wrongfully for
793 days over two years with wrongful allegations," Grimes said.
On behalf
of the district attorney, Sandi Gibbons said her "office will not be commenting
on such silly allegations that aren't true anyway."
The woman
whose allegations launched the case against Jones claimed he had date-raped her
and that she got home after spending the night with him and believed she had
been drugged, Grimes said.
"Well,
when she was tested the next day, it turned out that she had snorted a
considerable amount of cocaine, which would definitely inhibit or prohibit or
keep anyone from being knocked out, so this is the young lady that started this
avalanche going," the defense lawyer said.
He noted
that the jurors cleared his client after taking a field trip to Jones' home.
"Once
the jury went out to the residence of Mr. Jones and viewed it, they had no
doubt of his innocence because the descriptions of some of the women were that
they were locked in bedrooms that turned out to have no locks on the
doors," Grimes said.
Another
of Jones' lawyers, Richard Sherman, said his client became the "poster boy
for date rape."
"He
was a rich man, he was a prominent man in the business community and they took
him into custody. They never investigated the allegations of the first victim,
the alleged victim. Had they done that, they would have realized that he didn't
do that and that she was not telling ... a true story," Sherman said.
Jones
said he learned that "county jail is very rough," and that he was
jumped and beaten up while on the county jail bus.
"It
has been a devastating experience with tremendous loss of income. And it took a
lot of praying and a man like Milton Grimes and (private investigator and
former LAPD detective) Bill Pavelic and Mr. Sherman to prove my
innocence," he said.
Jones and
his lawyers said they believed the case was motivated by his wealth and the
prospect that the women might get hefty legal judgments in civil lawsuits if he
had been convicted.
The women
"started coming forward" with the allegations after the District
Attorney's Office went to the media in December 1998 and "asked are there
any victims out there who have been victimized by the alleged millionaire
limousine rapist?" Grimes said.
"I don't think there'd be any charges if I didn't have any money, there would have been no charges, absolutely not," Jones said.
Jones,
who had faced the possibility of consecutive life prison sentences if
convicted, said he spent his first night of freedom in more than two years at a
gathering with his mom and some of his friends.
"It's
like starting all over again, really. Just driving the car was amazing,"
he said, adding that he plans to go back to work next Monday at his company,
which sells laser jet cartridges and office products nationwide.
"Basically, I'm just happy to be free."
The case
against two other people indicted along with Jones in April 1999 on a much
smaller number of charges is under review given the jury's verdict in Jones'
case, according to the District Attorney's Office.
Pina
Marie Colapinto and Lawrence Elliott are awaiting trial next month in downtown Los Angeles.
“...Bill Pavelic was especially proud of his street sense. He had been one of the few (LAPD) Caucasian cops; he liked to tell friends, who understood how things really worked in the black community. He got so deep into it that he saw things, he was certain, through nonwhite eyes. He discovered that African-Americans and dark-skinned immigrants of all backgrounds had a lot to fear from the LAPD. When the department couldn't prove something, some cops had no problem framing people who couldn't fight back. Pavelic complained loudly, and soon enough he was seen as disloyal. Before long, he was out...”
"...I know (LAPD)
Robbery-Homicide Division. I've actually seen them frame innocent people. You can't take anything for granted..."
“...Pavelic studied the LAPD's
crime-scene logs. He called friends at LAPD to see what else he could learn. He
put in twenty-hour days, and finally what happened in the early hours of June
13 started to come together...”
“...Pavelic got a call from an
officer on another matter. As they spoke, he realized that the cop was
connected to the Simpson investigation. He said the department thought there
was more than one killer. The wounds suggested each victim was murdered with a
different weapon. Goldman's injuries indicated he had fought fiercely before he
died...”
“...Pavelic felt that there was no
private investigator in town better at living inside the collective mind of the
LAPD than himself. He was an expert on the department's rules and procedures.
He'd been on the force for eighteen years, won hundreds of medals,
commendations, favorable incident reports...”
“...It was Pavelic who gave them
their first real hope, however elusive: He saw corruption in the police
casework...”
“...Under any circumstances, Pavelic
would have looked for it. His career with the LAPD had ended in angry
protest. In 1984, Pavelic had testified
against fellow officers who killed a fleeing suspect. One cop was fired,
another suspended for six months.
Pavelic assumed he was stigmatized forever. But by 1990, he'd made it to
supervising detective in the Southwest Division. Then he got in trouble again.
His men were investigating a date
rape at USC when their bosses began showing a heavy-handed interest. Pavelic, his partner, and their immediate
supervisor eventually concluded that then-chief Daryl Gates and a deputy chief
were listening to the suspect's father, a prominent lawyer with influence
inside the department.
Pavelic and his men protested publicly.
And Bill raised similar charges again before a "people's tribunal"
when activist groups held hearings on the LAPD after the Rodney King
beating. Pavelic told the crowd that
lying and covering up were the norm in the department. That earned him a desk job. In 1992, he and
the brass reached an accommodation. He
took a disability pension for asthma and chest pains. He told one doctor he'd
rather spend time in a gulag than go back to work...”
“...When
Shapiro called, Zvonko "Bill" Pavelic was in his basement office at
home in Glendale,
cut off from everything. Pavelic finished his investigations that way. He
isolated himself with his computer and his tapes from mid-morning till midnight
or later. He allowed himself only one break, for dinner with Maria and the
kids. He was proud of his tight, loyal family.
That was one reason he worked at home in the big house that Maria kept
so well...”
“...Robert
Shapiro called just before eleven P.M. They'd worked together three years.
Pavelic liked the lawyer's style-intellectual, highly organized, well prepared.
Shapiro's particular genius, he thought, was laying a foundation so solid that
the case was a winner no matter who presented it. They had won every case
they'd worked on...”
“...Would
Pavelic like to join the defense team in the Simpson case? Shapiro asked.
"Are you available?" Naturally Pavelic said yes. He apologized
because he couldn't make Shapiro’s first meeting the next day. But he shifted
into gear mentally while he was still talking. He'd need Maria to clip
newspapers. He knew he had to identify the documents already being generated in
the case. The prosecution's discovery file would undoubtedly be
voluminous..."
“...Bill
Pavelic met Robert Shapiro at his office in Century City.
Elegantly appointed with original art, Baccarat and Lalique crystal. Polished
and expensive, like its occupant. Then they moved to a conference room. Their
forty-five-minute meeting ranged over the entire case. Nothing would be easy, Shapiro said. An
arrest might be coming soon. He needed the investigator to do what he did best,
run parallel with the police detectives and figure out how they saw things;
then, as soon as possible, move their own investigation ahead of them. As
always, the first days were the most important...”
“...His
one experience with O.J. Simpson was part of his police history. When Simpson
was one of the runners carrying the Olympic torch before the 1984 games in Los Angeles. Pavelic was assigned to protect VIPs. He and
Simpson had talked briefly in the special seating section. Around that time,
the International Olympic Committee's Life President, Lord Killenin, nearly
died choking on his food. Pavelic had saved his life and he thought Simpson
might remember the incident...”
“...
He put his background to work as a private investigator and learned to make his
computer think like a cop. That was why he was so concerned with early
discovery material. If you took the documents, the crime reports, the logs, the
affidavits and connected them to each piece of evidence, then considered how
each cop might view it, then you could make a pretty good guess where the
department was going with the case. You could see who'd like one thing, who
favored another. Sometimes you could see their destination and arrive there
ahead of them...”
“...As
an ex-cop, he drew on his knowledge of what the police do at a crime scene.
They don't always go by the book. They cut corners-some officers more than
others-but their reports make them sound like Boy Scouts. Pavelic knew how to read between the lines of
police verbiage and find the hidden stories in the photographs the D.A. had
turned over...”
“..Pavelic
knew that Robbery-Homicide, the elite corps of detectives from LAPD, would be
assigned the case when it became known that Simpson's ex-wife was involved...”
“...As a private investigator, Pavelic was particularly good at following law enforcement paper trails. He was immediately suspicious of the lack of specifics in the Bundy and Rockingham reports. Pavelic's red alert signals flashed as he studied Phil Vannatter's affidavit for the Rockingham search warrant.
No
indication who found the bloody glove. Nothing about going into Kato Kaelin's
room. Very little information about the murders at Bundy. Nothing about
climbing the wall. Vannatter's affidavit said they learned, after talking to
Arnelle and Kato, that Simpson had left on an "unexpected" trip to Chicago. More important,
the information about Arnelle and Kato was a handwritten addition to the typed
affidavit. Had the judge or someone else asked a question during the hearing
that prompted Vannatter's addendum? Bill knew they'd called Cathy Randa and
learned from her that Simpson's trip was a planned business trip. The detective
had misrepresented the facts about the departure in order to obtain the search
warrant. O.J.'s departure was not "unexpected." Vannatter knew that.
Pavelic knew then that Vannatter had been forced into a further material
omission, the omission of the fact that they had scaled the wall at Rockingham
before obtaining the search warrant. He
also noticed that the affidavit said that Simpson took the flight "in the
early morning hours of June 13, 1994." That expanded the window available
for the killings. The cops further "observed" the glove on the back walkway
"during the securing of the residence." Whether intentional or not,
the language suggested that the LAPD investigators had assumed at once they had
a crime scene.
Vannatter wrote that "scientific investigation" confirmed that human blood was found on the Bronco. Pavelic knew that at the time he wrote the affidavit, only a routine presumptive test had been done.
Detective Vannatter had more than twenty years on the force, but his affidavit was amateurish. Why had he omitted so many damaging details? Pavelic suspected that the LAPD was rearranging things and embellishing information. Vannatter and Lange, for example, had failed to log themselves out of Bundy when they went to Rockingham. The police logs showed them signing out at ten A.M. as if they'd never left Nicole's condo.
He
also noticed that the criminalists didn't list how many samples of each
bloodstain were taken. A deliberate omission? No doubt in Pavelic's mind.
A
few days before the preliminary hearing, Shapiro received a twenty nine-page
memo outlining every mistake Pavelic saw...”
“...The
week before, only two days after the Bronco chase, Pavelic had put together a
memo for Shapiro asking for sixty-eight pieces of LAPD paperwork, ranging from
communication tapes and follow-up investigative reports to the watch
commander's daily reports. He also requested the table of contents for the
murder books, which contained virtually everything the detectives had...”
“...Earlier
in the week, when Mark Fuhrman said he had found the glove, Pavelic was
stunned. This was the guy who found the glove? That night Pavelic went to his
computer. By now he had a program in place that tracked every individual
involved in the case: what evidence each person looked at, what reports each
one filed...”
He couldn't find a single LAPD report identifying Fuhrman as the cop who found the glove. Not even the search warrant affidavit. As far as you could see in the paperwork, Fuhrman hadn't noticed the blood on and in the Bronco. He hadn't gone over the wall, hadn't interrogated Kato Kaelin. In fact, he hadn't been at Rockingham that morning.
The
Bundy crime-scene log listed Fuhrman arriving at 2:10 A.M., leaving at ten A.M.
Period. At Rockingham, he was logged in at 5:l5 the following afternoon and
left at 7:10 P.M.
If
the logs were to be believed, Fuhrman had never left Bundy to go to Rockingham
with Vannatter, Lange, and Phillips. He hadn't returned to point at the Bundy
glove while a police photographer snapped a picture. He didn't take a Polaroid
of the Bundy glove to Rockingham so Vannatter could make a comparison. The man
who wasn't there.
Pavelic
started to put the facts together. Robert Deutsch, a lawyer Pavelic knew,
called him that night. "Bill, do you realize who this Fuhrman is?"
"I guess I don't." Fuhrman had been part of the Britton case, which
Deutsch and Pavelic had worked together. A black man armed with a knife had
robbed and brutally beaten people at automatic teller machines on L.A.'s West Side in 1988.
Fuhrman was part of a CRASH Unit stakeout team that spotted Joseph Britton
threatening someone with a knife at an ATM. Britton ran. He claimed he tossed
the knife over a hedge before the cops chased him down. The CRASH team said
Britton waved the knife at them.
They
shot him six times. Most of the bullets came from Mark Fuhrman's gun. Britton
claimed that Fuhrman walked back to the hedge to get the knife and dropped it
beside him. "Are you still alive, nigger?" he sneered at the wounded
man. Britton went to prison and sued the LAPD for using excessive force.
Fuhrman was that cop. Once reminded of the connection, Pavelic remembered that
the Britton incident was just one item in a hefty dossier.
Years
earlier, Pavelic had checked out everyone on the CRASH team and found pure gold
under Fuhrman's name. The detective had filed for a disability pension in
September 1981. He wanted out because of stress. The records said that a
department psychiatrist had given him a temporary medical leave a month before
he filed. The detective complained that he was getting angrier and angrier at
"low-class" people, notably Latino and black gang members-angry
enough to kill someone. In one of the interview summaries, a doctor reported
that Fuhrman used the word "nigger."
Pavelic
knew that in April 1982 the Workers Compensation Appeals Board had judged
Fuhrman temporarily disabled and given him time off. But a year later the Board
of Pension Commissioners looked at a thick stack of contradictory psychiatric
reports and concluded Fuhrman should go back to work.
"I'm
going to need the pension reports and Fuhrman's psychological profiles,"
Bill told his friend. Deutsch was happy to send them to Shapiro.
Some
therapists wrote that Fuhrman shouldn't carry a gun. Others felt he was
exaggerating the street trouble he saw in hopes of bailing out of a job he
didn't like with a golden parachute. The LAPD had an unusually large number of
officers applying for stress pensions in those days. It was getting expensive.
The force wasn't about to let anyone out easily. Fuhrman appealed the Pension
Board judgment to Superior Court. That put his psychiatric evaluations on the
public record.
Bill
also began hearing from LAPD friends who had watched the preliminary hearings.
"Please be advised that several LAPD police officers and detectives have
contacted me and are eager to help O.J.," he wrote in a memo to Shapiro.
"If there is one common denominator in these phone calls, it is that Mark
Fuhrman is a pathological liar."
Of
course, nothing is ever simple in an investigator's life. Pavelic began to
suspect that the LAPD was sending him disinformation. Anything to make the
defense waste time and money.
A letter signed "Blue" from a writer claiming to be a black LAPD lieutenant advised O.J. to hire Johnnie Cochran, and concluded: “All stops are being pulled in your case. Strings are being pulled across the country. The L.A.P.D. and the D.A. do not want to lose your case, so beware. I know for a fact that lies are being blended into your case."
In 1991, Bill Pavelic established himself as the foremost insider critic of racism and corruption in the LAPD.
Bill Pavelic has been the subject of many articles nationally and internationally for speaking out against and exposing racism that he personally witnessed as a LAPD Detective.
On June 30, 1992, Bill Pavelic sent the following letter to the Los Angeles Sentinel concerning the institutionalized racism, corruption, and sexism, of the LAPD under Chief Daryl Gates’ leadership.
To: Los Angeles Sentinel Opinion Section
As a 19 year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department, I am elated that Chief Gates was forced into retirement. His corrupt managerial style, coupled with his inflammatory and intemperate public comments, have done irreparable damage to the City of Los Angeles and its police department.
Daryl Gates and his close associates are suffering from a disease called megalomania……an exaggerated belief in their own greatness and that of the organization. In order to maintain a mythical status of being “the best law enforcement agency in the world” the LAPD management developed a bunker mentality and consciously impeded and retarded investigations or inquiries which reflected poorly on the organization. The “us against them” mentality required faulty analysis which was oftentimes based on pseudo reasoning, clever fallacies and distorted or manufactured evidence.
The disciplinary system under the leadership of Daryl Gates lacked consistency, uniformity and equality and sent a deplorable signal to others on the force, that it is OK to falsify official investigations, violate the LAPD manual, discredit the Code of Ethics and be dishonest as long as you are a member of management or have friends at the top who will protect you even when prima facie evidence of a crime is clearly evident.
Chief Gates has failed to hold accountable personnel under his control who were acting under the color of law and were exercising illegal direction under the guise of official authority. In no sphere of public life is this practice more repugnant than in law enforcement. Chief Gates, who morally bankrupt the Los Angeles Police Department, forgot, or never knew, that true leadership can be gained only by an intolerance of wrong doing…and…unless we all abide by the highest standards among ourselves, we have no business enforcing the law upon others.
Chief Gates used the Internal Affairs Division to intimidate those officers who dared to speak out against Los Angeles Police Department’s institutionalized racism, corruption, sexism, mismanagement, promotional cronyism and other sensitive issues. If the Internal Affairs Division didn’t get these “disloyal” police officers, like the Russian KGB, the organization could always count on the Medical Liaison Unit to send these officers to the Department shrink…to certify them as functionally crazy.
Under the leadership of Chief Williams, respect for individual dignity will once again become an integral part of the Los Angeles Police Department’s philosophy…a philosophy that will be based on the principles of professionalism, reverence for the law and harmony between the police and the community it serves.
Respectfully,
Bill Pavelic, Southwest Division