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News (Media Awareness Project) - US DC: Negligence Found In Informant's Death
Title:US DC: Negligence Found In Informant's Death
Published On:1999-10-19
Source:Washington Post (DC)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 17:39:32
NEGLIGENCE FOUND IN INFORMANT'S DEATH

Civil Verdict Goes Against D.C. Police; Man Was Killed During Starbucks Probe

The D.C. police department and four of its officers were found negligent
yesterday in the death of informant Eric Butera, who was fatally beaten and
robbed while working in the Starbucks triple-slaying investigation.

A jury in U.S. District Court also found that the police officers violated
Butera's civil rights in their handling of his undercover work. The verdict
capped an eight-day civil trial in which an expert witness said the actions
by police violated national standards, as well as D.C. police regulations.

Butera's mother, Terry Butera, filed the $115 million civil suit against the
police, alleging that detectives put him in an extremely dangerous situation
and took few if any precautions. Soon after returning the verdict, the
jurors began hearing evidence to help them assess damages. Terry Butera was
among the first witnesses, testifying that she has been determined to find
out exactly what happened to her son ever since his death on Dec. 4, 1997.

"This is probably the most emotionally and physically crippling experience a
person can ever go through," she said of her son's slaying. "It doesn't seem
to get better. It doesn't seem to go away. There is no closure."

Eric Butera, 31, a waiter who was trying to overcome a history of drug
abuse, had gone to police with information concerning the July 1997 slaying
of three people at a Starbucks coffee shop in Northwest Washington. Butera
told police that he had overheard people talking about the slayings that
summer when he bought drugs in a row house in a crime-ridden block in
Southwest Washington.

Police gave Butera $80 in marked money and took him to the house, hoping he
could purchase crack cocaine. Detectives believed that if he bought drugs
there, they would be able to get a warrant to search the row house and
possibly turn up leads in the Starbucks slayings.

The plan fell apart for many reasons, according to James Bradley Jr., a
former D.C. official who testified as an expert witness for Butera's family.

Bradley said police failed to keep watch on Butera, failed to equip him with
surveillance or warning equipment and failed to set a time limit on the drug
buy. Butera was attacked by three men as he left the row house, robbed of
the $80 and kicked to death. It wasn't until 40 minutes later that the
officers working with him discovered what had happened, and that was only
after a neighborhood resident saw Butera on the ground and called 911.

The four officers involved--Lt. Brian McAllister, Sgt. Nicholas Breul and
Detectives Anthony Brigidini and Anthony Patterson--testified that they took
precautions but wanted to avoid having anyone find out that Butera was
working for them.

Three people have been convicted of criminal charges in Butera's slaying. It
turned out that his information was of no use in the Starbucks case,
according to authorities. A suspect with no ties to the row house is charged
with those killings.
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