The justice system teaches an uppity
Mexican a lesson he will never forget
PHOENIX (By Michael Lacey, Phoenix
NewTimes) March 13, 2003 — Have you ever
gotten behind the wheel and done a
California roll
—
you know, slowing to a
crawl but not coming to a dead stop at a
marked intersection? Of course you have.
Luciano Arriaga Jr., 35, was accused of
this minor moving violation. It cost him
10 years in state prison. No time off
for good behavior, no possibility of
parole. He has to serve the entire 10.
The Phoenix police officer responsible
for this miscarriage of justice is
Officer Warren Poole, a former member of
the SWAT team. Officer Poole lied about
the traffic violation in his initial
report. The cop admitted in court that
he could not even see the stop sign in
question. The traffic ticket was thrown
out of court.
Then the justice system got down to the
serious business of teaching an
uppity Mexican a lesson he and his
family will never forget.
Prosecutors at one point offered Arriaga
a sweet deal: no jail time, just
straight probation. All he had to do was
admit he had assaulted a police officer.
But Arriaga refused to accept a plea
agreement if he had to confess guilt for
something he said he didn't do.
It is February 6, 2002, and Arriaga
drives his blue pickup truck to his
girlfriend's house. They are going out
to breakfast, but she's not ready. In
fact, she's only just gotten out of bed
and tells her boyfriend that it will be
at least an hour before she can be seen
in public.
So Arriaga drives around the corner
heading to a body shop. He has completed
a couple of years of study in junior
college, but a university degree isn't
his thing. Although he tows vehicles for
cash, his passion is car restoration. He
sells auto parts for classic Chevys and
is known far and wide. You can find his
ad in Hemmings Motor News, the
bible for people who drive collectibles.
Officer Poole, however, doesn't know any
of this. For all he knows, the subject
of his attention is a cholo, a
gangbanger, a drug dealer. One thing's
for sure: He's a Mexican in the barrio.
It is almost 9 a.m.
Officer Poole has so many versions of
what happened next that your head spins
trying to keep track. There is the
version he tells the other officers who
arrive on the scene. There is the
version he tells two hours later to a
detective investigating the incident.
There is the version repeated to the
grand jury. There are the versions that
are spun out in three separate
courthouse venues
—
two trials and
traffic court. All of the scenarios
vary, and all begin with a lie.
Poole began by claiming that Arriaga
rolled through a stop sign at Third
Street and Grant. This lie builds to a
crescendo that culminates in tragedy.
Poole told Detective Ricky Newberry that
after the California roll, he observed
Arriaga fleeing the scene, speeding
away. He informed the detective that
Arriaga was going "over 25 mph."
The level of alarm in Poole's story is
startling. But it is all wrong.
Poole was new to this neighborhood and
his ignorance fueled his paranoia. Of
course Arriaga was going over 25 mph;
the speed limit is 35.
Whether his years spent handling the
tension on the SWAT team or his
unfamiliarity with a barrio in the
shadow of Bank One Ball Park are to
blame, Poole's mind is flushed with
drama.
"In my opinion, he was trying to move
out of the neighborhood at a pretty good
clip," Poole told Detective Newberry.
"Even before I activated my lights, he
was already beginning to turn into an
alley. At that point, I was becoming
concerned that it might be a bailout
situation."
Arriaga parks his car, gets out and
starts toward Miranda Brothers Body
Shop, a place where he has done business
for years. But this is not what Poole
sees.
"He is beginning to walk away and it is
my impression that as soon as he got to
the residence, which backs up to the
east side of the alley, I am thinking a
foot pursuit," Poole explained to
Newberry.
"He begins walking away, and I confront
him and I say, I need to talk with you.'
As I recall, he turns around and kind of
squares off on me. He is facing me. I
said, I need to talk with you,' and then
it was my impression that he was getting
ready to run. He wasn't going to be
compliant. I reached out and grabbed him
and that is when the struggle ensued."
Every single instinct and suspicion of
Officer Poole's is wrong.
There are two stop signs between Third
Street and the alley, not one. Poole, as
we already know, cannot even see the
first sign. By Poole's own account,
Arriaga comes to a complete and legal
stop at the second sign, hardly the
behavior of a suspect on the run.
Arriaga does not flee the scene. In
fact, he is driving under the speed
limit. He has driven fewer than three
blocks with two stop signs. He does not
abandon his car or "bail out." He parks
the vehicle and walks toward the body
shop before the officer turns into the
alley or activates his lights. And he is
walking, not running. When the officer
calls out, Arriaga stops and turns
around.
But to Poole, the Mexican is "squaring
off," and the six-foot, 200-pound cop
immediately takes the five-foot-six,
140-pound Arriaga to the ground. It is
not so difficult.
Officer Poole never asks for a driver's
license.
He does not ask for registration.
He does not ask for proof of insurance.
He does not inform Arriaga that he is
suspected of committing a driving
infraction.
He does not tell Arriaga that he is
under arrest.
Just like that, BOOM! Both men are on
the ground.
Based on what? Based on a remarkable
level of mind reading, according to what
Poole told the investigating detective.
"You could tell just by looking at his
body that he was not going to be
cooperative," Poole told the detective.
"You could tell looking at somebody if
they are going to be compliant. . . . He
had that look like he was going to run
or fight. He was thinking. He was
looking at me, and he was thinking. He
couldn't figure out what he was going to
do. In my mind, I was thinking, he has
that look in his eyes that says, Can I
run fast enough, or is this guy going to
catch me?' He was looking at me and you
could tell in his eyes as they were
darting around, as he was looking at
me."
It takes us longer to scan this
mind-reading exercise than it took Poole
to decide to physically assault Arriaga.
Asked by Detective Newberry how quickly
he grabbed the suspect, Officer Poole
responded by snapping his fingers. Just
like that.
The interview with Detective Newberry
occurred two hours after the incident.
Poole told two other cops at the scene
something else entirely.
"Officer Warren Poole reported that when
Arriaga exited his vehicle, he ignored
repeated requests to cooperate by [not]
producing proper identification and
vehicle documentation . . . [it became]
necessary to physically restrain him
until the documentation was obtained and
verified," wrote patrolman James Corey.
Put on the witness stand, Poole admitted
that he never asked for any paperwork.
Yet a third version of the confrontation
was offered by Sergeant Ronald Vasquez,
who said Poole told him that the suspect
ran into the body shop and that the
officer tackled him from behind.
There was no flight or tackling,
however, according to what Poole told
Detective Newberry: "I then just reached
out and grabbed him and he tenses up and
it was an active aggression."
In the courtroom, Poole changed his
story again, saying this time that
Arriaga had initiated the brawl.
". . . He came out and punched me, or
pushed me," testified Poole. "You know,
he assaulted me. He pushed me . . . I
grab him from behind. If you get behind
them, it's a good way to control them."
Defense attorney Martin Lieberman asked
about the new story.
Question: "You never told Officer
Newberry that he pushed you, correct?"
Answer: "I did not say it in those
words, that is correct."
Officer Poole did not say it in those
words or in any other words.
On one point, Poole is consistent
through all of the various reports,
depositions and testimony.
"To be honest with you," Poole told the
courtroom, "the thing I remember the
most is just him asking me, What do you
want me to do? Why are you doing this?'"
"Did you respond?" wondered the judge.
"I did not," answered Poole.
By all accounts, Officer Poole was on
top of Arriaga, whose face and stomach
were on the ground. The Mexican was
struggling, but was pinned beneath the
cop who was trying to subdue the unruly
suspect with a choke hold.
Arriaga will later tell anyone who will
listen that he thought he was going to
black out and die.
Arriaga then did something he will
regret the rest of his life.
Lying flat on the ground, choking, with
the 200-pound Poole on top of him,
Arriaga reached out, grabbed a piece of
two-by-four that littered the alley,
swung it backward over the top of his
head and clipped the police officer in
the skull.
The movement was so awkward and,
frankly, feeble that even Poole recalled
he was "clumped" on the head.
Nonetheless, Arriaga had assaulted a
police officer with a deadly weapon. It
will take six stitches to close the cut.
"I was going to shoot [Arriaga] in the
base of the neck where the skull sits on
the spine," Poole told the detective. "I
was all prepared to start shooting him
in the head, and then the stick falls
away."
Arriaga is finally subdued and
handcuffed when other officers respond.
He does not have guns, drugs, large sums
of cash, gang tattoos or outstanding
warrants. The paperwork on his car and
his license are all in order.
Poole's various versions of the traffic
stop were defended in court by an expert
witness, another cop, who said the
inconsistencies in his stories are what
happens in "the fog of war."
The same expert claimed that there was
nothing irregular at all in the physical
way Officer Poole dealt with this
traffic violation. This isn't about a
California roll, it's about a war.
Poole himself explained his conflicting
accounts of the arrest to the jury in
words that were both sympathetic and
mystifying: "I had just been through a
traumatic experience, and I had a lot of
things coming at me. And it's like
trying to take a drink of water out of a
fire hose. . . . The memories won't
change, but what you remember will."
In the end, the jury found Luciano
Arriaga Jr. guilty of aggravated assault
of a police officer with a deadly
weapon. He pulled a mandatory sentence
of 10 years, six months.
In the end, all the policeman's lies and
all of his brutality were wiped away by
Officer Warren Poole's memory of how he
felt as Arriaga was put safely into a
squad car.
"It was good to be alive."
The judge, who was required to give
Arriaga the stiff sentence under state
sentencing guidelines, filed a 603 L
notice with the courts – which announced
that he believes the prison term is
excessive. This allows Arriaga to file
an appeal with the Board of Executive
Clemency.
I know you are reading this and asking
yourself: What was Arriaga thinking? Why
would anyone, under any circumstance,
strike a cop?
You must understand that these events do
not happen in your neighborhood, but
they do in Arriaga's. And it is naive to
think it is only the police who
overreact. Twice, as a kid, Arriaga had
run-ins with the cops that ended in
arrest.
Yet while each incident was relatively
trivial – drag racing and the suspicion
of graffiti-painting – in both instances
Arriaga was overcharged with aggravated
assault. Because the arrests go back
more than 10 years, the judge in the
most recent case kept them out of the
trial.
But the history, on both sides of the
law, was on everyone's mind on the
morning of February 6, 2002.
Surely you remember the publicity
surrounding teenager Eddie Mallet, the
double amputee who died in a similar
police choke hold in 1994. The jury in
the wrongful-death lawsuit came back
with the largest civil judgment ever
against the Phoenix Police Department,
$50 million.
Eddie Mallet was a kid who hadn't
committed any crime, either, when he was
stopped. He still ended up dead. Because
he liked customized Chevys, Eddie and
Luciano were good friends. Luciano spoke
at Eddie's funeral.
He carried the casket that held Eddie
Mallet's body.
And on February 6, 2002, in an alley in
downtown Phoenix, Luciano Arriaga Jr.
thought he was next.