SENTENCED
FOR CIVIL RIGHTS VIOLATIONS
WASHINGTON
- Trennis Swims, a former officer with the Memphis Police Department
(MPD), was sentenced Wednesday in federal court in Memphis to 18 months
imprisonment following his conviction on civil rights violations. After
release from prison, Swims will be on federal supervised release for
one year.
At his guilty plea on May 3, 2007, Swims admitted that in 2006, while
on duty as an MPD officer, he surreptitiously stole cash from two drivers
he pulled over and searched. Specifically, during separate traffic stops
in September 2006, defendant Swims ordered the victims out of their
vehicles and patted them down, removing personal items from them during
the search. Defendant Swims then stole money from the victims before
returning their personal items and releasing them.
"Law
enforcement officials have a special duty to protect the rights of people
in the communities they serve, not to prey upon them," said Rena
J. Comisac, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division
of the Department of Justice. "This kind of official misconduct
undermines the noble work of our nation's law enforcement officers,
the majority of whom carry out their duties with dedication and honor.
The Department of Justice will not hesitate to prosecute police officers
who misuse their positions of authority to victimize others."
The Civil Rights Division is committed to the vigorous enforcement of
every federal criminal civil rights statute, such as those laws that
prohibit the willful use of excessive force or other acts of misconduct
by law enforcement officials. The Division has compiled a significant
record on criminal civil rights prosecutions. During the past six years,
the Department of Justice has prosecuted 25 percent more color of law
cases and convicted nearly 50 percent more defendants for official misconduct
than during the preceding six years.
This
case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant
U.S. Attorney Steve Parker from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Memphis
and Trial Attorney Jonathan Skrmetti from the Civil Rights Division
prosecuted the case.