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From the 12/6/05 Toledo Blade:

 

PHOTOS: Navarre, Smith

 

PHOTO: Mayor-elect Finkbeiner with police chief and fire chief

 

TOLEDO POLICE

Finkbeiner vows to replace chief of police Navarre with Smith

Mayor-elect’s plan elicits threat of legal showdown

By IGNAZIO MESSINA

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Mayor-elect Carty Finkbeiner has not taken office yet, but already is stirring up controversy with an announcement yesterday that he will replace the chief of police.  Mr. Finkbeiner, during a news conference at his campaign headquarters, said police Chief Mike Navarre will be replaced by Capt. Jack Smith, a 33-year veteran of the department and commander of the Scott Park district station.  He also said that Fire Chief Mike Bell would be retained as head of that department.

 

But soon after the mayor-elect’s announcements, an attorney with the Toledo law firm of Shumaker, Loop and Kendrick faxed a letter to media outlets that Chief Navarre would remain the city’s top cop — regardless of Mr. Finkbeiner’s wishes.  Chief Navarre could not be reached for comment last night.  His attorney Tim McCarthy said the mayor does not have the power to dismiss the chief.  “The chief of police does not serve at the pleasure of the mayor, and may only be terminated for just or reasonable cause,” Mr. McCarthy said.

 

According to the city charter, the mayor may suspend the police or fire chief and could then present a case for dismissal to the Civil Service Commission.  Mr. Finkbeiner said he offered Chief Navarre a position as deputy chief working under Captain Smith and that he was disappointed the offer was not accepted.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051206/NEWS16/51206001/-1/NEWS

 


From the 12/7/05 Toledo Blade:

 

City charter, legal opinion at odds over firing issue

1994 ruling seems to support Navarre

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Mayor-elect Carty Finkbeiner cannot "discharge without cause" the city's police or fire chief, according to a legal opinion by his own city attorney more than a decade ago.  Still, it's not the only word on the topic. There's plenty of them in the Toledo Municipal Code and the Toledo Charter, and they seem at odds with one another.

 

Mr. Finkbeiner announced this week he was going to appoint Capt. Jack Smith, a 33-year Toledo police veteran, as police chief.  The move would bypass Chief Mike Navarre, who was appointed by then-Mayor Finkbeiner in 1998.

 

The chief's firing could spark controversy on City Council.  Councilman George Sarantou said blaming the chief for the handling of the riots is "a flimsy excuse," and questioned why Mr. Finkbeiner intended to retain Fire Chief Mike Bell who, he said, was intimately involved in planning the public safety response to the neo-Nazi march.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051207/NEWS16/512070432/-1/NEWS

 

  • 4 months later...

I think that, overall, law enforcement handled the "riot" decently

  • 2 months later...

From the 6/15/06 Toledo Blade:

 

 

Finkbeiner backs off anti-gang proposal

Plan to target parents lacked council votes

By TOM TROY

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Mayor Carty Finkbeiner yesterday said he has withdrawn the proposed parental responsibility ordinance, a tool the chief of police had hoped to use this summer to fight gang activity.

 

The mayor and police Chief Jack Smith, along with the Board of Community Relations and the Youth Commission, promised to tackle gang and youth crime this summer while creating positive opportunities for children.

 

Mr. Finkbeiner said he lacked votes on council to pass the parental responsibility ordinance. He said he would decide in the fall whether to resurrect the ordinance.

 

...

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Oops....

 

PHOTO: Toledo Mayor Carty Finkbeiner, left, announces Mike Navarre’s return as Toledo police chief.  ( THE BLADE/ANDY MORRISON )

 

PHOTO: Saying he was ‘treated in a way I will not accept,’ Jack Smith resigned yesterday as chief and returned to the rank of captain.  ( THE BLADE )

 

RESIGNATION AND REPLACEMENT

Smith out, Navarre in as Toledo police chief; shuffle triggered by blowup with mayor

By CHRISTINA HALL and ERICA BLAKE

BLADE STAFF WRITERS

 

A confrontation yesterday between Toledo police Chief Jack Smith and Mayor Carty Finkbeiner led to the chief’s resignation and the mayor selecting the former chief as his permanent replacement. 

 

The heated discussion that led Chief Smith to resign his position and return to the rank of captain occurred in the mayor’s office during a morning meeting about the city’s gang situation.

 

Hours later, former Chief Mike Navarre — whom Mr. Finkbeiner replaced six months ago — accepted the top police job effective immediately.

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060628/NEWS16/60628013/-1/RSS10

 


From same:

 

Smith joins parade of staff who have fled volatile mayor

By TAD VEZNER

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

During a televised debate two weeks before last year’s mayoral primary, candidate Carty Finkbeiner touted how he’d stay fit following heart surgery the year before.  Healthy eating, regular exercise, and “never losing my temper,” he pledged.  “Well,” he then added, “two out of three isn’t bad.”  The joke drew a knowing laugh.

 

In the mayor’s prior two terms, which began Jan. 1, 1994, at least 15 people left because of differences with him — beginning with then-police Chief Marti Felker, who resigned Jan. 1, 1994, saying the mayor would not “discuss the issues” of how best to provide police protection.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060628/NEWS16/60628016/-1/RSS10

 


From same:

 

In career of ups, downs, Navarre rising once again

By JOSHUA BOAK

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Mike Navarre’s career as Toledo police chief had survived the most delicate of situations.  There was the shooting of a black man by a white officer, the Easter Sunday death of two girls hit by a passing SUV that contained an open beer can and an allegedly sober driver, and a publicly released homemade videotape of a police officer beating a man into submission with a baton.

 

All of that occurred during Chief Navarre’s first 12 months on the job.

 

The 28-year police veteran now appears to have survived the whims of Mayor Carty Finkbeiner, who first promoted Mr. Navarre to chief in 1998, demoted him to assistant chief in January, and repromoted him to chief yesterday.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060628/NEWS16/60628017/-1/RSS10

 

This reads like something out of Louisiana, not Ohio (or Michigan).  :-o

From the 7/1/06 Toledo Blade:

 

Navarre glad to be back

Police chief enjoys post's challenges, rewards

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Heads are still spinning about this week's Toledo police chief shake-up.  And one question is on everyone's mind: Why did Chief Mike Navarre return to the job from which he was bumped six months ago by his boss, Mayor Carty Finkbeiner?

 

"It's a job I've always enjoyed. It's rewarding and challenging. I was interim executive director of the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council, a position I really wasn't qualified to hold," the chief said.  "The fact of the matter is, at times, it was very boring. It was not the type of job I was suited for. Of all my options, I'm too young to not work, and I have a freshman in high school."

 

Chief Navarre, 50, returned to his old job after former Chief Jack Smith had a blowup with the mayor at a meeting Tuesday, stepped down as chief, and returned to the rank of captain.  Hours later, the nearly 29-year veteran received a call from city hall asking him if he'd be interested in the top cop spot.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060701/NEWS16/607010388/-1/RSS10

 

  • 10 months later...

All from the 2/22/07 Blade:

 

 

PHOTO: Police take Robert Jobe, 15, into custody yesterday. He is expected to be charged in the fatal shooting of a city detective this afternoon. ( WTVG CHANNEL 13 )

PHOTO: Detective Keith Dressel

 

NORTH TOLEDO TRAGEDY - UPDATED

"Cooperating witness" hid gun for Toledo teen accused of killing officer

By CHRISTINA HALL and CLYDE HUGHES

BLADE STAFF WRITERS

 

A person who took a suspected murder weapon from a 15-year-old teen accused of killing a Toledo police officer is a "cooperating witness" and may not be charged, Toledo Police Chief Mike Navarre said this morning.

 

Chief Navarre said the person, whom he declined to identify, took the gun from Robert Jobe, 15, and hid it in an area near the Willis B. Boyer museum ship in the early morning hours after the shooting yesterday.

 

The chief said a final decision on charges will rest with the Lucas County prosecutor's office.

 

...

 

More at:

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2 suspects had run-ins with officers in the past

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Until June, police hadn't heard of Robert Jobe. But in the last eight months, the skinny kid known as "Bobby White" had chalked up at least four arrests, including one in December after police found him with a 22-caliber handgun.

 

Today, the barely 15-year-old kid is expected to be charged in the murder of vice and narcotics Detective Keith Dressel. A conviction could send him to prison for the rest of his life.

 

"I was very upset when I saw his picture. I broke down and cried for him and his mother. He's just a kid," said neighbor Glenda Monhollen, adding that she's praying for the boy, the officer, and the families.

 

...

 

More at:

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Detective Dressel loved work with police, family says

By TOM HENRY

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Toledo police Detective Keith Dressel grew up in Ottawa Lake, Mich., a quiet, little blink-and-you'll-miss-it community just north of the Ohio-Michigan line.

 

Ottawa Lake is a rural community within the reaches of Toledo. Many kids who grow up there yearn for a taste of the city.

 

Detective Dressel, 35, was no exception. While he never forgot his peaceful roots in rural Ottawa Lake, where parents Larraine and Mike Dressel raised him, he went into law enforcement because he wanted to make a difference in Toledo.

 

...

 

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Laws provide for detective's family

'This is the least we can do for ... an officer who puts his life on the line,' chief says

By JOSHUA BOAK

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

State and federal laws should help provide for the care of the family of Toledo police vice Detective Keith Dressel, who was slain on duty yesterday.

 

Mr. Dressel's wife, the former Danielle Durham, 32, and two children, ages 6 and 4, should continue to receive his base salary, according to the nonprofit Ohio Concerns of Police Survivors.

 

"I think that this is the least we can do for the family of an officer who puts his life on the line every single day," Police Chief Mike Navarre said last night. "He goes out to protect this community not knowing whether he's going to return to see his family."

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070222/NEWS03/702220413/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains photos. All stories from the 2/23/07 Blade:

 

 

NORTH TOLEDO TRAGEDY - UPDATED

Widow of slain Toledo detective thanks community for support

BLADE STAFF

 

The wife of a slain Toledo police officer — struggling to fight back tears — said this morning she was thankful for widespread support from his fellow officers and the city, and that she was honored her husband’s memory would be preserved.

 

“I just want to thank everybody in the community for their tremendous support,” Danielle Dressel, 32, said during a news conference with Toledo’s mayor and police chief.

 

“I can’t tell you how much it’s helped me,” she said. “I can’t tell you how much it means to me his memory is bring honored as it is.”

 

...

 

More at:

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Lack of evidence kept teen on streets, prosecutors say

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

A Toledo teen appeared in Lucas County Juvenile Court yesterday, accused of killing a police detective. And with Judge James Ray's brief explanation of the system, so began a process that could send Robert Jobe to prison for the rest of his life.

 

Handcuffed and wearing the dark green jump suit provided by the detention center, the boy sat quietly throughout the brief hearing. He was flanked by defense attorney Ann Barones and his mother, Diane, who kissed him when he was escorted in by deputies.

 

The 15-year-old said few words, answering Judge Ray's question about whether he understood the process with a simple, "Yes, I do, your honor."

 

...

 

More at:

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Suit accuses 3 city police of excessive use of force

 

A Toledo police sergeant and two other officers have been accused in a civil lawsuit of using excessive and unreasonable force and unlawfully entering the home of a central-city man last summer.

 

Jack Colbert, 45, claims that Sgt. Richard Moreno entered his residence at 939 Woodstock Ave. and that the sergeant shocked him with a Taser after Mr. Colbert, according to the lawsuit, witnessed Officers Andre Cowell and Lon Woodard assault a man who had been stopped in front of the plaintiff's home for a traffic violation.

 

The three officers, police Chief Mike Navarre, the city, and the police department were named as defendants in the lawsuit, which was filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Toledo.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070223/NEWS02/702230387/-1/NEWS

 

Links may contain photos. All from the 2/24/07 Blade:

 

 

NORTH TOLEDO TRAGEDY

Widow of slain Toledo detective grateful for support

Relatives offer thanks for respects

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Danielle Dressel held back tears yesterday as she thanked the Toledo community for its outpouring of support after the death of her husband, slain vice Detective Keith Dressel.

 

“He was a hero to me as my husband, and to my children,” the 32-year-old widow said during a news conference at Government Center.

 

Detective Dressel was shot once in the chest during a struggle early Wednesday in the north end after he and two other vice detectives stopped Robert Jobe, 15, and 19-year-old Sherman Powell for a curfew violation and suspected drug activity.

 

...

 

More at:

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Church-to-cemetery funeral will be less than 5-mile route

 

More details about slain Toledo police vice Detective Keith Dressel’s funeral were released yesterday, including the under-five-mile route of the procession from a Temperance church to the small, country cemetery where he will be buried.

 

Ohio Lt. Governor Lee Fisher, Attorney General Marc Dann, and Toledo Bishop Leonard Blair are among those planning to attend.

 

Three people are expected to speak at the 11 a.m. funeral Mass inside Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, where mourners will be spread throughout the length of the building in the sanctuary, church hall, and gymnasium.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070224/NEWS03/70224001/-1/RSS

 

Both links contain photos. Both from the 2/25/07 Blade:

 

 

DRESSEL FUNERAL 11 A.M. MONDAY

Community mourns slain Toledo detective

Visitation under way for officer killed in line of duty

By ERICA BLAKE

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

TEMPERANCE - A steady stream of mourners filed through the Bedford Funeral Chapel yesterday to pay their respects to slain Toledo police Detective Keith Dressel.

 

Some of the people knew the 35-year-old vice squad detective. Many did not.

 

Thousands are expected to visit the funeral home.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070225/NEWS18/302250008/-1/RSS09


GRAPHIC: Juvenile crime and punishment

GRAPHIC: Total delinquency cases

 

Lucas County youth crime up; jail time down

Detective’s slaying renews concern about violent juvenile cases

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Last week’s deadly shooting of a Toledo vice detective — allegedly by a 145-pound kid nicknamed “Bobby White” — trained a spotlight on Lucas County’s juvenile courthouse downtown.

 

It has been more than a decade since a story of teen violence has triggered so much community anger. Johnnie Jordan, who killed his stepmother with a hatchet and burned her body in 1996, remains locked away in an adult prison.

 

Since then, a panic over a rise in gangs and young thugs has subsided. So, too, has thoughtful, public discussion of juvenile crime.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070225/NEWS03/70225002/-1/RSS

 

Links contain photos. All from the 2/26/07 Blade:

 

 

Tearful honor guard prepares for officer's funeral

By JC REINDL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

TEMPERANCE — When Toledo police Officer Keith Carr slips on his uniform’s pair of spotless white gloves this morning and marches past the casket of his friend and former patrol partner, vice Detective Keith Dressel, he will battle to restrain his emotions and tears.

 

Mr. Carr is one of 11 members of the Toledo Police Department’s Honor Guard who are scheduled to perform funeral honors at today’s church and burial ceremonies for Mr. Dressel, who was fatally shot Wednesday in a scuffle while working undercover.

 

The funeral will begin at 11 a.m. in Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, 8330 Lewis Ave., and continue with a procession to St. Anthony’s Cemetery on Erie Road between Douglas and Secor roads.

 

...

 

More at:

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Dressel's death struck a nerve for Bill Boyle

Ex-patrolman wounded in ’62 lost brother, partner on duty

By MEGHAN GILBERT

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Officers Walter Boyle, left, and Donald Brown — Bill Boyle’s brother and police partner — died from gunshot wounds.

 

Unlike many Toledoans who heard last week that a Toledo police office had been shot and killed, Bill Boyle knew exactly what the other officers at the scene were going through.

 

He had been there himself — in 1962.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070226/NEWS03/70226002/-1/RSS

 

Link contains many photos. From the 2/27/07 Blade:

 

 

FUNERAL OF A FALLEN HERO

Thousands salute slain Toledo police officer

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

TEMPERANCE — “Dispatcher to Unit 812 ... Unit 812. Dispatcher to Unit 812 ... 812.

 

“Dispatcher to Detective Keith Dressel on all channels ... Dispatcher to Keith Dressel on all channels.

 

“Attention all units. Detective Keith Dressel has answered his final call.”

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070227/NEWS03/302270015/-1/RSS

 

From the 2/28/07 Blade:

 

 

RESPONSE TO DETECTIVE'S SHOOTING

Toledo mayor revives proposal to hold parents liable

Goal is to prevent youth crime

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

A day after the burial of a Toledo detective who was allegedly killed by a teenager, Mayor Carty Finkbeiner reintroduced an ordinance that would hold parents and legal guardians accountable for their children's behavior.

 

"Questions have been asked a lot the last week: Why was a 15-year-old out at 2 a.m.? Why was [the teen] armed with a gun?" the mayor said during a news conference yesterday.

 

Detective Keith Dressel, 35, was shot once in the chest with a 38-caliber handgun, the bullet perforating his heart. Police say the shooting occurred during a struggle with Robert Jobe, 15, after undercover vice detectives stopped the teen and a 19-year-old companion, Sherman Powell, in dense fog early Feb. 21 for a curfew violation and suspected drug activity.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070228/NEWS03/702280421/-1/RSS

 

From the 3/2/07 Blade:

 

 

NORTH TOLEDO

Powell faces 6 charges in drug bust; police claim he had cocaine on night of officer's slaying

By MARK REITER

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

The alleged companion of Robert Jobe, a 15-year-old charged with fatally shooting a Toledo police officer last week, was indicted yesterday on multiple criminal counts related to the murder case, including drug charges.

 

Sherman Powell, 19, was indicted by a Lucas County grand jury on four felony charges — carrying a concealed weapon, possession of crack cocaine, trafficking in cocaine, and obstructing justice — and two misdemeanors — obstructing official business and resisting arrest.

 

Police said Mr. Powell, of 722 Bush St., was with young Jobe when they were stopped in the early morning hours of Feb. 21 by vice Detective Keith Dressel and two other undercover officers in North Toledo.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070302/NEWS03/703020406/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains several photos. From the 3/18/07 Blade:

 

 

SPECIAL REPORT

Officer Dressel's killing occurred on 'just a night'

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

When Danny Fleenor stepped into the fog after midnight for his short walk home, the 17-year-old turned back one last time toward his two friends.

 

Relaxing on a set of stairs inside the front doors of a North Toledo duplex, Robert Jobe, 15, and Sherman Powell, 19, were sharing a dirty bottle of whiskey.

 

A typical night, the teen said.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070318/NEWS03/70318001/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains a photo. From the 4/1/07 Blade:

 

 

Grieving relatives battle police in East Toledo

Toledo man's body found by meter reader on Mott Avenue

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

A somber scene in East Toledo turned violent briefly yesterday when a dead man's grieving relatives scuffled with police investigating his apparent shooting death.

 

At least four people were arrested at the Mott Avenue house where the body of Ricardo Horton, 28, whose last known address was 727 North Michigan Ave., was found about 9 a.m. yesterday by a meter reader.

 

She noticed the body inside the rear door of 1401 Mott, police said.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070401/NEWS03/704010325/-1/RSS

 

Link contains photos. From the 4/12/07 Blade:

 

 

Police: Teen admitted shooting of Toledo police detective Keith Dressel

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

As Detective Keith Dressel lay dying along a North Toledo street, his partner struggled to comfort him, sort out the chaotic past moments, and determine where in the dense fog the gunman might have run.

 

All the while, 19-year-old Sherman Powell, a suspected drug dealer and companion to the accused killer, struggled in handcuffs nearby, Detective William Bragg testified yesterday.

 

“Keith is laying on the ground breathing pretty hard, so I put [Mr. Powell] down, and I’m trying to console Keith. You know: ‘Come on. What’s going on? You all right?’ Because I’m trying to do whatever I can, but this guy is still moving around. I’m trying to keep one hand on him and be with Keith,” Detective Bragg recalled.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070412/NEWS03/70412006/-1/RSS

 

Link contains a photo. From the 4/13/07 Blade:

 

 

GRAPHIC: Toledo's 2006 crime drop

 

Homicide up, overall crime down in city

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

A spate of slayings in September helped Toledo's homicide total jump last year, but it didn't hurt the city's overall crime statistics, which dropped 4.5 percent.

 

"We are doing a phenomenal job of protecting the citizens of the city," Mayor Carty Finkbeiner said yesterday when he and Public Safety Chief Mike Navarre released the 2006 crime totals. "We will continue to work to reduce crime in 2007."

 

Overall crime reports dropped from 27,776 in 2005 to 26,534 last year.

 

...

 

More at:

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From the 4/19/07 Blade:

 

 

Patrolman may lose job over alleged misconduct

2 sex accusations while on duty cited

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

A Toledo police officer under investigation for accusations of sexual misconduct with two women while on duty has been recommended for termination.

 

The recommendation about Officer John Harris III came from Assistant Chief Don Kenney after an administrative hearing earlier this month on more than a dozen departmental charges that included multiple counts of dishonesty, subversive conduct, and insubordination.

 

The recommendation was approved by Chief Mike Navarre and needs final approval by city Safety Director Dave Moebius.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070419/NEWS03/70419023/-1/NEWS

 

From the 4/28/07 Blade:

 

 

Tree planted in memory of slain police detective

 

An oak tree was planted yesterday in the Civic Center Mall between Toledo police headquarters and the Lucas County jail downtown in memory of slain Toledo police Vice Detective Keith Dressel.

 

About 150 people, including Police Chief Mike Navarre and Mayor Carty Finkbeiner, attended the short ceremony. The detective’s widow, Danielle, and their son, Noah, 4, were the first to shovel dirt into the hole where the tree was planted across from the Toledo Police Memorial Garden, the chief said.

 

...

 

More at:

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Link contains photos. From the 5/16/07 Blade:

 

 

PHOTO GALLERY

* Dressel case photo gallery

* Dressel funeral photo gallery

 

NORTH TOLEDO SLAYING

Toledo teenager’s trial as adult debated; judge approves mental exam

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Accused of killing a police detective, a 15-year-old teenager sat in the middle of a Lucas County juvenile courtroom yesterday as attorneys around him painted starkly different versions of his past, his mental health, and — most importantly — the danger he poses to the community.

 

With a defense attorney’s brush, the picture was of a scared kid called “Bobby” who battled drug addiction, a sometimes chaotic home life, and the grief of his father’s death just a few years ago — an image that might be supported by at least two mental health professionals.

 

But to prosecutors trying to convince visiting Juvenile Court Judge James Ray that Robert Jobe should be tried as an adult, the teen is a manipulative drug user given to dangerous impulses.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070516/NEWS02/70516001/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains photos. From the 5/19/07 Blade:

 

 

ALSO

* View the North Toledo shooting incident gallery.

 

Slain Toledo officer's badge retired at emotional ceremony

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Toledo police badge No. 679 will never be worn by another officer.

 

And the last one to wear it will never be forgotten.

 

The badge slain Vice Detective Keith Dressel wore as a uniformed officer was retired yesterday during an emotional Toledo Area Police Memorial Service to remember fallen officers in northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan.

 

...

 

More at:

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Link contains photos. From the 5/20/07 Blade:

 

 

Strong support system lifts Toledo police detective’s widow

Danielle Dressel presses on after tragedy

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Danielle Dressel has been tugged in many directions since her husband, Keith, was killed working as an undercover vice officer in North Toledo.

 

Fund-raising events. Awards dinners. Her children’s needs. Her husband’s grave.

 

But there’s one spot she hadn’t been to — until Thursday night.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070520/NEWS03/70520001/-1/RSS

 

From the 5/22/07 Blade:

 

 

TOLEDO POLICE DEPARTMENT

Terminated officer will return to duty

 

A Toledo police officer terminated after the department said she lied about an on-duty injury is to be reinstated, according to an arbitrator who upheld an appeal by the police union.

 

Sheila Cook, 53, is to be reinstated with credit for continuous service from June 29, when she was terminated, through the date of reinstatement, arbitrator Paul E. Glendon wrote in a decision Friday.

 

Ms. Cook, who was a nearly 14-year veteran, is to be paid all wages she would have earned if she had not been terminated.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070522/NEWS16/705220371/-1/RSS10

 

From the 6/2/07 Blade:

 

 

City's harbor patrol being beached as police ranks shrink

By TOM TROY

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

The Toledo Police harbor patrol likely will stay on shore this summer and its staff reassigned to street duty as the department begins coping with a decline in uniformed officers.

 

Police Chief Michael Navarre said yesterday that he is shutting down the harbor patrol, which has three full-time staff, pending a final staff review.

 

"They're going to be back in cars, assigned to street duty," the chief said.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070602/NEWS03/706020383/-1/NEWS

 

First link contains photos. Both from the 6/8/07 Blade:

 

 

NORTH TOLEDO MURDER

Jobe cleaned his gun after killing, court told; hearing recessed until Monday

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

In the hours after 15-year-old Robert Jobe shot and killed a Toledo police detective, he went to a friend’s house and cleaned his gun with alcohol, according to testimony today in Lucas County Juvenile Court.

 

That, according to a clinical psychologist, is the kind of “sophisticated criminal behavior” that shows the juvenile justice system doesn’t have enough time before Jobe’s 21st birthday to rehabilitate him.

 

“In terms of adolescent development, he was pretty calm and cool, in being able to do all that after this highly-emotional shooting,” said Dr. David Connell, an expert witness called by prosecutors who are trying to have the teen stand trial as an adult for the shooting death of vice narcotics Detective Keith Dressel.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070608/NEWS02/706080410/-1/NEWS


PHOTO: Toledo police have not received any responses yet to the Patrol Vehicle Sponsorship Program. As illustrated at left, a company can have an ad placed on a police cruiser with a donation of $15,000 toward a new police vehicle. ( PHOTO ILLUSTRATION/TOLEDO POLICE DEPARTMENT )

 

Toledo police roll out 'marked car' ad plan to raise funds

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Just been arrested by Toledo police?

 

You might not have to look too far to find an attorney or bail bondsman - just glance at the rear quarter panel of the officer's marked cruiser.

 

As of Wednesday, 466 letters have been mailed to businesses announcing a "Patrol Vehicle Sponsorship Program."

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070608/NEWS03/706080411/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains photos. From the 6/9/07 Blade:

 

 

NORTH TOLEDO MURDER

Differing experts paint Jobe as scared kid, good liar

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

The decision about whether Robert Jobe should be tried as an adult for shooting a Toledo police detective to death wound through the field of clinical psychology yesterday as attorneys on both sides dissected the teenager's actions after the shooting.

 

That he cleaned his gun with alcohol.

 

That he munched on snacks during police questioning after his arrest.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070609/NEWS02/706090394/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains photos. From the 6/12/07 Blade:

 

 

JUDGE CITES CONCERN FOR COMMUNITY SAFETY

Jobe to be tried as adult

Teen won’t face death penalty in officer’s slaying

By ROBIN ERB

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Charged with the shooting death of a Toledo police officer, 15-year-old Robert Jobe will stand trial as an adult, becoming the youngest Lucas County resident in recent memory to face adult time if he’s convicted of aggravated murder.

 

Yesterday, just 20 minutes after retired Lucas County Juvenile Court Judge James Ray announced his decision to send the teenager to adult court, the youth was moved across Spielbusch Avenue and booked into the Lucas County jail on a $500,000 bond.

 

His arrival at the adult jail marked the end of a grueling process in juvenile court that stretched over three months to answer this question: Should the boy — who had turned 15 two weeks before the shooting — be tried as an adult or juvenile in the Feb. 21 death of Toledo police vice Detective Keith Dressel?

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070612/NEWS02/70612002/-1/RSS

 

Both links contain photos. Both from the 6/13/07 Blade:

 

 

ACCUSED IN DETECTIVE'S SLAYING

Jobe being held separately from adult prisoners

Policy isolates juvenile inmates

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Robert Jobe will be tried as an adult in the fatal shooting of a Toledo police vice detective, but the 15-year-old won't be spending time with the adult inmates in the Lucas County jail.

 

And if he's convicted, he won't be with adult inmates in a state prison until he's 18 and maybe not until he's 21.

 

The North Toledoan was booked into the county jail Monday after retired Lucas County Juvenile Court Judge James Ray ruled that the youth should be tried as an adult for aggravated murder in the Feb. 21 death of Detective Keith Dressel.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070613/NEWS02/706130432/-1/NEWS


Alleged Jobe associate Powell gets July trial date

 

The accused companion of a 15-year-old Toledoan charged in the fatal shooting of a Toledo police detective yesterday received a trial date in Lucas County Common Pleas Court.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070613/NEWS02/706130452/-1/NEWS

 

Link contains photos. From the 6/13/07 Blade:

 

 

ACCUSED IN DETECTIVE'S SLAYING

Jobe being held separately from adult prisoners

Policy isolates juvenile inmates

By CHRISTINA HALL

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Robert Jobe will be tried as an adult in the fatal shooting of a Toledo police vice detective, but the 15-year-old won't be spending time with the adult inmates in the Lucas County jail.

 

And if he's convicted, he won't be with adult inmates in a state prison until he's 18 and maybe not until he's 21.

 

The North Toledoan was booked into the county jail Monday after retired Lucas County Juvenile Court Judge James Ray ruled that the youth should be tried as an adult for aggravated murder in the Feb. 21 death of Detective Keith Dressel.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070613/NEWS02/706130432

 

Link contains a photo. From the 6/22/07 Blade:

 

 

FEBRUARY 21 SLAYING

Robert Jobe indicted in Toledo police detective's fatal shooting

Teen could face maximum of life in prison on 2 counts

By ERICA BLAKE

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

After a months-long process to determine whether he would stand trial as an adult, Robert Jobe entered the Lucas County Common Pleas Court system yesterday after being indicted on murder charges.

 

A county grand jury indicted the 15-year-old North Toledoan on one count each of aggravated murder and murder, each with a gun specification.

 

He is charged in the Feb. 21 shooting death of Toledo police vice Detective Keith Dressel.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070622/NEWS02/70622001/-1/RSS

 

Link contains a photo. From the 6/27/07 Blade:

 

 

Jobe pleads not guilty in Toledo detective's slaying

Judge sets a date for hearing but not for trial

By ERICA BLAKE

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Standing shackled between his two appointed attorneys and wearing the brown jumpsuit for inmates of the Lucas County Jail, Robert Jobe pleaded not guilty yesterday to murder charges in the death of a police detective.

 

The 15-year-old North Toledoan was arraigned on one count each of aggravated murder and murder, each with a gun specification. He is charged in the Feb. 21 shooting death of Toledo police vice Detective Keith Dressel.

 

Facing life in prison, the teen softly answered the questions posed by Judge Charles Doneghy of Lucas County Common Pleas Court and nodded briefly to his mother and brother before being led back to the jail. Judge Doneghy ordered a $500,000 bond and set a July 17 hearing date, but refrained from setting a trial date.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070627/NEWS02/706270412/-1/RSS

 

  • 2 weeks later...

From the 7/10/07 Blade:

 

 

Jobe's attorneys ask to suppress evidence

No attorney at scene of questioning

 

Attorneys for Robert Jobe, accused in the Feb. 21 shooting death of Toledo police vice Detective Keith Dressel, hope a jury will never hear some of the statements the 15-year-old North Toledoan made after his arrest.

 

David Klucas and Ann Baronas filed a motion yesterday in Lucas County Common Pleas Court to suppress statements the teen made Feb. 22 to police Detectives Kermit Quinn and James Couch. The motion said the teen requested an attorney "no less than four times" in response to his initial Miranda warnings and was never provided one.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070710/NEWS02/707100383/-1/NEWS

 

  • 2 weeks later...

Link contains a photo. From the 7/18/07 Blade:

 

 

Dressel family wants Jobe trial to remain in Lucas County

By ERICA BLAKE

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Robert Jobe should be tried for murder in Lucas County, not elsewhere in Ohio, according to relatives of slain Toledo Police Detective Keith Dressel.

 

The family members made their wishes known yesterday upon learning that Judge Charles Doneghy had set the trial for Oct. 29.

 

Although the Jobe trial is now scheduled for Lucas County Common Pleas Court in downtown Toledo, the 15-year-old's defense attorneys have filed a motion to have the venue changed to another locale.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070718/NEWS02/707180410/-1/NEWS

 

  • 2 weeks later...

Note to self:  Do not venture into Northwest Ohio!

I could be wrong, but it seems that you post stories about rioting and crime in Toledo and Athen's to brag about their raucus environments.

I could be wrong, but it seems that you post stories about rioting and crime in Toledo and Athen's to brag about their raucus environments.

 

OK.  That enough advanced warning to keep me out of the area!

C-dawg loves a good Caligula story.

  • 1 year later...

Man shot at midday outside bus station in downtown Toledo

Assailant attacks from passing car

Toledo Blade, May 10, 2009

 

With Toledoans edgy about cuts in police protection, another unthinkable act occurred Saturday: A 52-year-old man was shot multiple times in broad daylight at a busy downtown intersection.

 

The drive-by shooting happened outside the Greyhound station at North Michigan Street and Jefferson Avenue shortly after 12:30 p.m. The victim was identified as Abran Gonzalez, whose last known address was in Garland, Texas.

 

The suspect, identified by witnesses as a Hispanic male who was wearing a dark blue shirt, sped off in a burgundy 2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee and remained at large Saturday night. The license plate of the suspect's vehicle is EGD5626.

 

...

 

More at:

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090510/NEWS02/905100345/-1/rss

  • 9 months later...

Toledo police class put on hold over deficit; balanced city budget comes first, Bell says

Article published March 06, 2010

BY IGNAZIO MESSINA

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Plans to hire new Toledo police officers in 2011 to keep the force's numbers up may fall apart if Mayor Mike Bell's plan to eliminate a $48 million deficit this year is unsuccessful.  The mayor Friday suspended recruitment of new police officers who would have started training next year.

 

"Given the uncertainty for approval of certain measures designed to balance the 2010 budget, I have ordered recruitment for the police class to be suspended effective immediately," Mr. Bell wrote to Toledo City Council.  "Upon approval of a balanced budget by March 31st, I will then reconsider resuming the recruitment process," the letter said.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100306/NEWS02/3060386

  • 2 weeks later...

Bell sends layoff notices to 125 city police officers

Firefighter cuts on hold after talks with union

Article published March 16, 2010

By IGNAZIO MESSINA

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Toledo Mayor Mike Bell told 125 police officers yesterday they would be without jobs in 30 days unless his plan to balance a $48 million deficit with union concessions, a trash-fee increase, and higher taxes for a select few gets approval from City Council.

 

The same number of Toledo firefighters avoided getting layoff notices, the result of a last-minute negotiation that Mr. Bell called "positive" but refused to discuss.

 

The city would save $4.08 million - just 8.5 percent of the total budget deficit - by laying off the 125 police officers, plus $925,000 by canceling plans to hire 30 police recruits in September.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100316/NEWS16/3160413

TPPA, city agree on concessions that will avert 125 officer layoffs

Article published March 23, 2010

BY IGNAZIO MESSINA

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

The Bell administration and union leaders representing Toledo's police patrolmen reached a tentative agreement Monday night that includes concessions sought after by the city to help balance a $48 million deficit.

 

Dan Wagner, president of the Toledo Police Patrolman's Association, confirmed the agreement Tuesday morning but declined to offer any details.  "We still have to put it before our membership for a vote," Mr. Wagner said.  "The city would not agree to something unless it included concessions."  Mr. Wagner said the agreement would "insulate" officers from layoff.

 

The mayor sent 125 police officers 30-day layoff notices on March 15 but agreed two days later to at least temporarily rescind the notices.  There are currently 590 sworn officers on the force, but that number is expected to drop to 584 by April 15 because of retirements.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100323/NEWS16/100329893

Uh, Oh.  This doesn't look good for Toledo.

 

Toledo police union votes against pact with city

Article published March 25, 2010

 

Members of the Toledo Police Patrolman's Association have voted against a contract with the city that called for 3 percent pension pickups and overtime deferrals. 

 

The proposal, which would have cost officers $65 more in their paychecks every two weeks, would have avoided layoffs among the ranks.  Notices were sent to 125 police officers last week that they would be laid off to help balance a $48 million budget deficit.  The layoffs were later rescinded pending discussions with the city.

 

The vote was 222 against the agreement and 198 for the pact.  The union membership voted Wednesday and Thursday on the proposal.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100325/NEWS16/3250402


 

Bell rejects TPPA offer to hold re-vote on concession deal

Article published March 26, 2010

 

Mayor Mike Bell has rejected an offer from the Toledo police officers' union to hold a re-vote on $2.4 million worth of concessions that the mayor wanted to balance the 2010 budget.

 

In a letter to Dan Wagner, president of the Toledo Police Patrolman's Association, dated Thursday, Mayor Bell said he would decline the offer of a re-vote.  "Time is of the essence due to the city's March 31, 2010, deadline to have a balanced budget," the mayor said.  "Accordingly we do not consent to the union's request to re-vote the issue of the [proposed contract]."

 

The union membership on Thursday defeated, by a vote of 222-198, a package of temporary concessions that had been negotiated by its leadership with the administration.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100326/NEWS16/3260370

Toledo City Council approves balanced budget, imposes cuts for most unions

Article published March 30, 2010

By IGNAZIO MESSINA

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Toledo's 2010 fiscal crisis was crunched into a balanced budget last night by a majority of city councilmen who approved a higher monthly trash collection fee, higher taxes from some, and forced concessions on many city employees.

 

The Bell administration took office in January with a predicted $48 million deficit and the current spending plan now predicts a $487,534 surplus for 2010 and does not require any city layoffs, which the mayor had previously proposed for 125 firefighters and 125 police officers.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100330/NEWS16/100339961

 

Looks like the circus isn't finished in Toledo yet...

 

Judge denies Toledo police union's request for restraining order

Article published March 31, 2010

By ERICA BLAKE

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

A Lucas County Common Pleas Court judge Wednesday afternoon denied a request by the Toledo Police Patrolman's Association that he temporarily halt forced concessions ordered by Toledo City Council.  After a lengthy hearing, Judge James Jensen denied the union's request for a temporary restraining order, ruling that he did not have jurisdiction over a matter that he felt should be heard by the State Employee Relations Board because the matter is an unfair labor practice.

 

At issue is whether the city can impose concessions on union members including union employees paying the 10 percent share of their pension contribution and making contributions to their health-care costs based on a sliding salary scale.

 

The union argued in the complaint that the current contract does not allow the city to "reopen and/or in any way to unilaterally modify, alter, or change" the collective bargaining agreement.  The complaint further said that the union filed a grievance Tuesday after the city refused to meet with the TPPA.  The city's refusal to arbitrate the grievance is a violation of the contract and Ohio law, the lawsuit said.

 

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100331/NEWS16/100339947

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