Federal Charges for Vegas Police Officer in Body-Camera Case

ABC News

A former Las Vegas police officer seen via body-camera video in a bloody confrontation while arresting a woman last year has now been indicted on federal charges, accused of a civil rights violation and lying about his use of force.

The U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday said that a federal grand jury in Nevada indicted Richard Thomas Scavone on charges that he violated the woman’s civil rights by using excessive force and for obstruction of justice for falsifying the police report where he claimed she was resisting arrest.  

If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison and $500,000 in fines.

Scavone was put on paid leave shortly after the Jan. 6 incident. Scavone was then terminated from the department on Sept. 10, Officer Michael Rodriguez, a spokesman for the Vegas police.

The Clark County District Attorney initially filed a misdemeanor battery charge against him in March. But Scavone’s defense attorney, Josh Tomsheck, said he expects the District Attorney’s case to be dismissed at the next status hearing on Jan. 20, the same day Scavone will appear in federal court.

“Our position is the charges and federal indictment don’t match the facts in the case and that Mr. Scavone is looking forward to rigorously defending himself,” Tomsheck said.

The district attorney’s office couldn’t immediately provide information on the case.

The incident happened last year on the morning of Jan. 6, when the woman was initially stopped on suspicion of prostitution outside of a hotel one block west of the Las Vegas Strip. After a scuffle that left her face bleeding, she was arrested for loitering for the purpose of prostitution, littering and resisting a police officer.

Scavone had said on the initial arrest report that the woman was combative and pulling away from his grip. The officer also said that she was reaching around her bra area, which threatened his safety.

But a detective who investigated the woman’s complaint of excessive force reported inconsistencies between Scavone’s version of the events and what the body-camera video showed. According to the detective’s March 12 report, the woman was put in handcuffs within a minute of the officer getting out of his vehicle. She was then seen on video being thrown to the ground, grabbed by the neck and slammed by her head on the hood of the patrol car three times.

Police have declined to make the video available. But the detective who investigated Scavone reported that the officer made at least four misleading or false statements surrounding his claim that the woman was resisting arrest, used unreasonable and excessive force and didn’t have probable grounds to arrest her. The investigation report also quotes the woman as saying to Scavone: “You’re abusing me for no reason.”

The charges against the woman have since been dropped, as the report said she was not read her Miranda rights when she allegedly admitted to being a prostitute.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/federal-charges-vegas-police-officer-body-camera-case-36253388

3 thoughts on “Federal Charges for Vegas Police Officer in Body-Camera Case

  1. they will pay her, and he will get his pension and be working security for a large company before its all said and done
    probably end up making 2x the money he is now with less responsibility and exposure

  2. I thought what happens in Vegas stays there.
    Not when the Feds are involved.
    With all the money she’s gonna get paid from the lawsuit.
    I guess she found the right John. Unfortunately it was a Cop.

    The moral of the story is:
    If you’re a hooker in Vegas don’t litter.
    It could get your face smashed and it could cost you your career.

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