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Another rabid fox? Reported descriptions don’t match

An aggressive and potentially rabid fox attacking residents in North Downtown has worried people for the past week. Police say a fox acting suspiciously on March 14 was captured and put down, but did not appear to be the same fox originally reported.

“We just want our neighborhood to be safe,” says Sarah Peaslee, who lives on First Street NW, across from one of the two victims who police say was bitten by the first aggressive fox.

The victim was carrying groceries from her car around 6pm March 7 when a fox approached her and bit her leg several times, according to police.

“She yelled and screamed and couldn’t get the fox off her,” Peaslee says. Eventually, a neighbor walking his dog passed by and the dog scared the fox away. The victim was taken to UVA and treated with rabies shots. Peaslee says her neighbor was finally feeling well enough to go back to work March 14.

While police are still searching for the original fox, neighbors speculate that it has died and at least one has reported seeing a fox enter a storm drain near Grove Street. Some are worried that other animals could be feeding on its body and spreading disease, according to Peaslee.

Animal control officer Casey Breeden says she can’t know if the original fox was rabid without testing, but, in her experience, small rabid animals only live about two or three days.

“He just kind of stared at me for a while and then he would fall over,” Breeden says about the behavior of the original fox. “I went down to pick something up and he charged right at me.”

The fox evaded capture, according to police. The second fox’s remains have been taken to the health department for testing.

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Longo’s legacy: Cameras coming to a mall and cop near you

Much to the dismay of a local civil libertarian, outgoing Charlottesville Police Chief Tim Longo will finally get the surveillance cameras on the Downtown Mall he’s long desired.

Hardware estimates fell from their previous high of $300,000, and the police surveillance system nine years in the making has finally won the support of City Council. In a February 16 voice vote, Council asked Longo to seek proposals after he said public cameras might cost less than $74,000.

“This is way less,” said Councilor Kristin Szakos. “It eases a lot of my objections.”

But cost isn’t the end of the objections.

“The key here, and what our City Council should be considering is: How can we protect the rights of citizens?” says John Whitehead, founder of the Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit that wages legal battles to protect civil liberties.

However, because courts routinely rule that there’s no expectation of privacy in public places, Whitehead concedes that cameras are coming—and at a price beyond the $74K in hardware and $1,200 in monthly operating costs.

“People will start being very careful about what they say in public,” says Whitehead, noting that lip-reading software can now decipher the dialogue from silent recordings.

But not everyone shares Whitehead’s concerns. “When you’re in a public space, there is no privacy anymore,” says merchant Joan Fenton, a longtime advocate for the cameras and co-chair of the Downtown Business Association.

Still, Whitehead worries that the ensuing images could be used to blackmail someone or find their way into civil litigation such as divorce proceedings. He also doubts that Charlottesville citizens would remain willing to chalk their anti-government protests on the First Amendment monument under the gaze of a government camera.

“These things,” says Whitehead, “are going to alter our behavior.”

In his recent pitch for 36 cameras perched on light poles spanning the eight blocks between the Omni hotel and the nTelos Wireless Pavilion, Longo tried to assuage such concerns.

“We have no desire or expectation of going in to randomly view images without any specific law enforcement purpose,” Longo said. “We would go to these images in the aftermath of an event in an effort to help us solve an incident that has already occurred.”

There’s little doubt that surveillance cameras led to the capture of Jesse Matthew, the man who pleaded guilty last week to murdering University of Virginia student Hannah Graham, who crossed paths with Matthew on the Downtown Mall in 2014. Those cameras, however, were private.

“I would argue for cameras—private cameras first, public cameras second,” says Mary Loose DeViney, whose store’s video footage helped identify Matthew.

DeViney says her store, Tuel Jewelers, freely feeds low-resolution imagery directly to the police department, but she says she’d cease the flow if she were to learn of improper snooping. She contends that leaving cameras in private hands saves money and provides a useful check on government abuse.

“The devil’s in the details,” says DeViney.

A year ago, Longo, who retires May 1, promised to develop, in consultation with civil rights organizations, policies on the storage and use of the ensuing images. But Whitehead’s Rutherford Institute reports it has not been consulted, and a reporter’s question to Longo about the status of such consultations went unanswered by press time. (Citing time constraints, Longo declined to be interviewed for this story, except by e-mail.)

I feel comfortable speaking for your next chief”—Longo assured Council on the topic of snooping—“that it would not be a policy consistent with law enforcement best practices.”

While mall cameras move forward, body cameras have already arrived. Just as the push for mall surveillance preceded the Matthew-Graham murder investigation, Longo has told Council that the department’s push for body cameras was already in the works before last year’s spate of taped police shootings of unarmed Americans.

“We have not chosen to go down this path in light of national events,” Longo told Council. “We actually started going down this path because our in-car camera system was manufacturer discontinued, and we couldn’t get it fixed.”

A City Hall official provided a reporter with a five-year contract showing Charlottesville will spend $272,357 for 100 body cameras and related software, hardware, training and storage. Longo told Council the system will be deployed by late spring or early summer.

Whitehead, who has written two books on the expansion of government surveillance, predicts that mall cameras may succeed in invading privacy without actually reducing crime.

“They displace crime to areas where there are no cameras,” says Whitehead. “So if you’re going to be effective in these programs, eventually you’re going to have to have cameras on every street corner.”

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Police seek help finding attempted abductor

A female victim reported to the Charlottesville Police Department that a man in a small silver extended cab pickup truck attempted to abduct her on February 27 at 12:28am in the 700 block of Rockland Avenue.

She said she was walking from her vehicle to her house when the man pulled up beside her, stopped his truck and told her to get in. When she responded with a “negative answer,” the man got out of his truck and grabbed her by her arms, according to police.

The victim fought back and the man fled the area. He is described as a white male, approximately 5’10” tall and between the ages of 45 and 55. He has white hair, cut in either a crew cut or a flat-top, a salt-and-pepper mustache and a scruffy beard. On the night of the attempted abduction, the victim says he was wearing a dark shirt, possibly black or dark blue.

His truck is described as not a full crew-cab with four doors and not brand new, but not old. The victim was unable to provide police with any license plate information.

She sustained minor scratches to her arms, but did not seek medical attention. Charlottesville police ask anyone with information related to the attempted abduction to call Crime Stoppers at 977-4000 or the CPD’s main office at 970-3280.

Lieutenant Steve Upman says there are no new details.

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Streets closed due to roof collapse

Around 2pm Monday, the Charlottesville Fire Department responded to a call about a possible roof collapse at 206 W. Market St—the site of a proposed private club.

Battalion Chief Richard Jones says the department arrived, checked the power inside the building and sent officials from Neighborhood Development Services up in the fire truck’s bucket lift to view the top of the building and evaluate whether or not the roof will collapse.

NDS will take over from there, with the help of the building contractor, according to Jones. But to an excited young boy who stopped to see the fire truck in action, he didn’t mince words.

“We’re going to go up there on top of that building and make sure it doesn’t fall down,” he said.

Josh Rogers and his business partners talked to C-VILLE about the club, Common House, earlier this month.

“The roof is completely caved in now,” Rogers says, adding that he and his team are currently meeting to discuss possible remedies. His focus is to prevent any further damage and to make sure surrounding people and businesses are protected, but in light of things, he says, “We’re obviously going to move forward after this setback.”

Charlottesville police are currently directing traffic around what the city has called an “unstable structure” and have closed Market Street from Old Preston to First Street. Second Street is being closed from High Street to Water Street.

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SWAT talk: Number of standoffs is ‘out of the norm’

The overall goal of any SWAT team is to save lives, says Lieutenant Steve Upman with the Charlottesville Police Department. The January 5 standoff between city, county and university police and a suspected bank robber marked the second standoff of the year.

“The two callouts over the last few days are out of the norm for Charlottesville,” Upman says, adding that the city and county have their own SWAT teams, but they have a mutual aid agreement to help each other out when needed. Both teams were at each incident this year.

According to Upman, SWAT members are specialists trained as a team to handle incidents that require additional tactics and weapons beyond the realm of a regular police officer, such as barricaded people, hostage situations, dignitary protection, sniper situations, high-risk search warrants and high-risk arrest warrants. He says the use of these specially trained teams has been proven to reduce the risk of injury or death to suspects, citizens and police officers.

John Whithead, president of the Rutherford Institute and author most recently of Battlefield America: The War on American People, has spent a lot of time examining the use of SWAT teams in America.

“In 1985, there were 3,000 SWAT team raids in America,” he says. “Now there are over 80,000.”

A large portion of SWAT team activations are for “marijuana and victimless crimes,” and Whitehead says “people are getting shot and getting hurt.” He references the 2010 killing of 7-year-old Aiyana Jones after a Detroit SWAT team launched a grenade into her family’s apartment, broke down the door and started shooting. Members shot her while she was asleep on the couch and later learned they were in the wrong apartment.

But “in certain situations, they’re very appropriate,” he says, like in hostage situations or when a suspect, like a bank robber, could be armed.

The CPD’s SWAT team, which works part-time, was activated five times in 2015, Upman says.

The Downtown Mall’s Union Bank & Trust was robbed January 4, and city spokesperson Miriam Dickler says police obtained a search warrant January 5 for a house located at 504 Sixth St. SE, where the robber was allegedly staying. While police were on their way to the house, a 911 call came through for a report of domestic violence at the same address, she says.

When police arrived at the scene four out of five people were able to exit the house, but one refused and remained inside—the suspected bank robber later identified as Cole Franklin Nordick.

A number of city, county and university police blocked off the street and surrounded the entire area around 1:30pm. Police and city and county SWAT teams made telephone contact with Nordick, and he threatened harm to anyone who tried to enter the home, police say. About two hours into the standoff, police began shooting tear gas into the Sixth Street home. One bystander reported counting at least 12 shots, with more fired afterward.

Homeowner Marcus Shifflett was not pleased with having dozens of tear gas rounds lobbed into his property during the standoff.

“Everything in that house will be ruined,” he said during the incident. “Furniture, clothes, everything.”

Bystanders gathered on a nearby sidewalk, and cars slowed when they passed the commotion. Many had cell phones out, filming the action.

Around 4:25pm, Nordick emerged from the front door of the home, hands in the air and holding a cell phone and a cigarette, and wearing a white T-shirt and sunglasses. He was arrested for armed bank robbery and taken to the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail where he is being held without bond.

Nordick has arrest records dating back to 1996, with at least two charges for petit larceny, multiple probation violations and drug charges.

On his Facebook page, Nordick says he studied locksmithing at a trade school.

The city delayed school buses for nearby Clark Elementary School, as well as some buses from Walker Upper Elementary, Buford Middle School and Charlottesville High.

During the standoff, Shifflett said he suspected Nordick was blockaded in the windowless bathroom where the gas wouldn’t reach him.

“I don’t know what [the tenants] are going to do tonight,” Shifflett said on the day of the incident. “They’re going to have to find a home. They don’t have no place to go.”

Just two days earlier, Charlottesville resident and Internet celebrity Bryan Silva blockaded himself inside his home on Jefferson Park Avenue for several hours while SWAT members attempted to coax him outside. He eventually exited the house without incident and was arrested for abduction and possession of a firearm by a felon.

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SWAT standoff: Local Internet celeb behind bars

Not one to shy away from a camera, a Charlottesville man and Internet celebrity had a more somber cameo than he’s used to during January 4 video appearances in Charlottesville General District Court and Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court.

A day after a police standoff, which lasted several hours and required the presence of a SWAT team, 25-year-old Bryan Silva was denied bond until he meets with his attorney. At the first hearing, Judge Robert Downer asked Silva at least twice if he was previously out on bond for other charges, but the wavy, brown-haired Silva said he wasn’t sure.

Silva said he has, however, met with a probation officer and taken two anger management classes for pending assault charges from October.

When the judge asked where he was employed, Silva answered, “Facebook,” and said he has more than 1.5 million followers.

In his most recent arrest, Silva is charged with abduction and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Since 2009, he has been charged with assault, shoplifting or altering the prices of merchandise, destruction of property and possession of marijuana in Charlottesville, and in Albemarle and Orange counties.

Police say Silva’s 17-year-old girlfriend left his home on Jefferson Park Avenue Sunday and went to the house of a neighbor, who called the police. The victim told police Silva held her against her will and threatened her with a handgun. She said he also threatened to shoot the police.

Officers went to Silva’s residence in the 2500 block of JPA and made contact with him by telephone. Silva, who posted first-hand videos of the standoff to his mass of followers, would not cooperate and refused to leave his home. The SWAT team joined police because of the presence of a firearm and Silva’s alleged threats.

Eventually, police shot tear gas into Silva’s home and he emerged, hands in the air and pants around his ankles. He was then taken into custody. Police seized a handgun from his residence.

In one video of the standoff, he can be seen drinking a clear liquid from a Grey Goose bottle and bopping up and down while spewing profanity and phrases such as “gettin’ money.” The video is accompanied by the caption, “Broke fufu lames and I are not the same.” The video had 2,089 likes and nearly 1,400 shares at press time.

He got even more likes—3,276, to be exact—on a minute-long video he took of the police outside his house, in which he makes lewd comments about the officers and brags about his “drop top Mercedes Benz.”

Silva told the judge at his first bond hearing of the day that he would be able to afford his own attorney. At his second hearing, Silva said his current attorney Scott Goodman will represent him, though he hadn’t been able to contact him about his most recent arrest. He was appointed temporary counsel.

Silva is probably most well-known for his appearance on Comedy Central’s “Tosh.0,” in which he spends the day with comedian and host Daniel Tosh, who prompts Silva to discuss how he gained his following and pokes fun at Silva’s well-known 2014 video in which he filmed himself shirtless in front of a mirror, singing and making gun noises (hence the word he coined, “gratata,” which is supposed to sound like a gun firing and has been imitated by his followers).

His next hearing will be February 11 at 1pm in Charlottesville General District Court, followed by a Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court appearance on February 19 at 11am.

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UPDATED: Suspect taken into custody after 6th Street standoff

“Everything in that house will be ruined,” homeowner Marcus Shifflett said when police began shooting what appeared to be tear gas into a 6th Street Southeast home he rents to a tenant. “Furniture, clothes, everything.”

The Downtown Mall’s Union Bank and Trust was robbed January 4, and city spokesperson Miriam Dickler says police obtained a search warrant January 5 for a house located at 504 Sixth St. SE, a few blocks away from the bank, where the robber was allegedly staying. While police were on their way to the house, a 911 call came through for a report of domestic violence at the same address, she says.

When police arrived at the scene four out of five people were able to exit the house, but one refused and remained inside—the suspected bank robber later identified as Cole Franklin Nordick.

A number of city, county and university police blocked off the street and surrounded the entire area around 1:30pm. Police and city and county SWAT teams made telephone contact with Nordick and he threatened harm to anyone who tried to enter the home, police say. About two hours into the standoff, police began shooting tear gas into the 6th Street home. One bystander reported counting at least 12 shots, and more were fired afterward.

A police K9 on the scene rapidly wagged its tail and whimpered after some of the shots.

Bystanders gathered on a nearby sidewalk and cars slowed when they passed the commotion. At least five people had cell phones out, filming the action.

Around 4:25pm, Nordick emerged from the front door of the home, hands in the air and wearing a white T-shirt. He was arrested for armed bank robbery and taken to the Charlottesville Albemarle Regional Jail where he is being held without bond.

Nordick has arrest records dating back to 1996, with at least two charges for petit larceny, multiple probation violations and drug charges.

On his Facebook page, Nordick says he studied locksmithing at a trade school.

The city delayed school buses for nearby Clark Elementary School, as well as some buses from Walker, Buford Middle School and Charlottesville High.

During the standoff, Shifflett said he suspected Nordick was blockaded in the windowless bathroom where the gas wouldn’t reach him.

“I don’t know what [the tenants] are going to do tonight,” Shifflett says. “They’re going to have to find a home. They don’t have no place to go.”

 

UPDATED 1/6 at 9:30 with information identifying the suspect.

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Your right to know: Police help you interact with police

Amid a worldwide trend of alleged over-policing and law-enforcement scrutinization, the Charlottesville Police Department and the city’s Office of Human Rights hope a pocket-sized pamphlet they’re distributing will be a saving grace when it comes to interacting with cops.

The pamphlet, called Your Rights and Responsibilities, is available at a multitude of local venues, including City Hall, several churches and schools. Topics range from what to do if you’re stopped for questioning or in your car, or if you’re questioned about your immigration status.

The idea for the pamphlet was formed by the Disproportionate Minority Contact task force a few years ago, says Charlottesville Police Captain Wendy Lewis, “so citizens and police know how to interact, and particularly for citizens to know what their rights are when they’re stopped by police.”

Charlene Green with the Office of Human Rights says she’s been working on the guide for two years, deciding how much information to include and to whom it should be directed.

“We wanted this to be placed in the hands of every citizen,” she, along with those at the police department, eventually decided. “The intent is that we want any kind of stop—if you have to be stopped—to be respectful and safe. Chances are higher that [that] will happen if people know what their rights are.”

According to the guide, “the first words spoken by either the police officer or the citizen involved in a stop may very well determine the tone of the encounter and sometimes, even the outcome.” If you’re stopped for questioning, it suggests staying calm without resisting or obstructing the police, even if you are innocent.

“You have the right to remain silent and cannot be punished for refusing to answer questions,” the pamphlet continues. It says you should tell the officer if you wish to remain silent.

Likewise, while you don’t have to consent to a search of yourself or your belongings, police are legally allowed to “pat down” your clothing if they suspect a weapon.

“You should not physically resist but you have the right to refuse consent for any further search after the pat down,” according to the guide. “If you do consent, it can affect you later in court.”

But not everyone agrees with the advice offered in the pamphlet.

“There are many people concerned about police stops, given the racially disparate local data,” says Emily Dreyfus, the community outreach and education director at the Legal Aid Justice Center. “It would be helpful if the brochure was more clear that police officers must have a reasonable suspicion that a person committed a crime before they can make a stop.”

Through a Street Smarts workshop, her organization, which will not distribute the pamphlets, helps people understand their rights when interacting with police. LAJC distributes a fact sheet it developed called Your Rights with the Police, and it also shares a brochure produced by the American Civil Liberties Union.

Charlottesville attorney Jeff Fogel says that information in the pamphlet isn’t presented clearly, and while police may be advising citizens of the wisest ways to interact, they aren’t necessarily teaching them their rights.

“The good part and the bad part of this seems to be the involvement of the police department in writing this,” he says. Fogel believes rights and responsibilities aren’t fairly distinguished in the pamphlet and some of the advice is downright bad.

For example, the pocket guide says “if you are not a U.S. citizen and an immigration agent requests your immigration papers, you must show them if you have them with you.” Fogel says he would advise against doing so and says the illegal immigrant with papers disproving his status could and should opt to remain silent.

Fogel agrees with Dreyfus that the pamphlet makes it unclear that police should only frisk someone if they have good reason to believe the person is armed and dangerous, and not just a hunch. But the brochure says police only need to suspect a weapon to initiate a pat down.

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Tsaye Simpson faces new charges

A man who was acquitted of a murder charge in May and was previously known for surviving a high-speed car chase on Rugby Road is now charged with assaulting a Charlottesville police officer.

Tsaye Simpson’s latest encounter with law enforcement came October 8 at approximately 12:40am when an officer allegedly smelled marijuana coming from a car he was following on the 700 block of Prospect Avenue and stopped the vehicle. While officers attempted to get the occupants to exit the vehicle, one noticed Simpson, 23, in the passenger side, reach into the rear floorboard, according Charlottesville Police spokesperson Lieutenant Steve Upman in a press release. After Simpson withdrew his arm, the officer saw the butt of a pistol on the floorboard.

Simpson would not comply when the officer ordered him to the ground, physically resisted the officer during the struggle and attempted to remove the officer’s gun from his holster, says Upman. The officer sustained minor injuries from the assault. Police then got Simpson under control and searched him, finding a concealed folding spring-assisted knife. After searching the vehicle, officers found a second firearm and other paraphernalia.

Simpson was charged with assault and battery on law enforcement, two counts of carrying a concealed weapon, possession or transporting firearms by a convicted felon, resisting law enforcement and obstruction of justice.

In May, Simpson was acquitted of all counts related to the October 2013 murder of Jarvis Brown, in which he had previously been charged with first-degree murder and given three weapons charges.

In 2009, Simpson, who was then a 17-year-old Charlottesville High School student, was arrested after a high-speed Rugby Road car chase, in which he catapulted the car into a house, fled the scene and caused over $100,000 worth of damages.