Monday, March 23, 2009

DISGRACED FORMER ATLANTA COP C.J. DAVIS GETS JOB BACK DESPITE HER ROLE IN MAJOR CHILD PORN COVERUP!!! AT LEAST 5 OTHER ATLANTA COPS IN ON COVERUP!!!

Police Major Gets Job Back
Botched sex crimes case cost 2 detectives and a crime analyst their positions, but Atlanta’s Civil Service Board has reversed one dismissal
By Tim Eberly
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
October 11, 2008

A former Atlanta police major who was fired last summer for her involvement in a botched sex crimes investigation is getting her job back. Atlanta’s Civil Service Board, which has the power to reinstate a city employee’s job, reversed the termination of former Maj. Cerelyn “C.J.” Davis, according to documents detailing the board’s decision.

“She cried. She’s happy,” Davis’ attorney, Mary Huber, said of her client after learning the news Friday afternoon. “She’s very emotional about it. We’re delighted. It’s the right result.” (Atlanta Police Mentality - it's right to reward a cop for lying and covering up child pornographers?)

Atlanta Police Chief Richard Pennington would not comment on the ruling, police spokesman James Polite said Friday. Davis and two other police employees, Sgt. Tonya Crane and crime analyst Randolph Ory, left the department after Pennington released the findings of an investigation into a mishandled sex crimes case involving Crane’s husband, Terrill Marion Crane. Federal authorities indicted Terrill Marion Crane in November on charges of producing child pornography after Atlanta police provided them with sexual photos of Crane and underage girls. But Atlanta police were given the photos in 1999 and took no action.

The city’s investigation found evidence indicating that Davis told two detectives not to look into the case. Davis was demoted to lieutenant and later fired, Ory was fired and Crane resigned. The Civil Service Board, however, determined that one of the detectives who worked under Davis and blamed her for the botched case, James Guyton, offered “inconsistent” testimony. The board also found that both detectives who said they were told not to look into the case, Guyton and Bobby Render, “pointed the finger” at supervisors “in an attempt to give themselves clean hands,” the document states. (Were Guyton and Render disciplined? Probably not!)

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