Cop Probably Kills Two Men - Then Warrants Are Issued For Their Arrest Because They Missed Court!
What do two men, which have been missing for over a decade in Florida, have in common?
The answer is one potentially lethal cop.
Terrance Williams has been missing from Collier County (Naples) since 2004. Felipe Santos since 2003. Both men went missing after an unfortunate encounter with a former Collier County Sheriff’s deputy, Steve Calkins.
Felipe Santos went missing in October of 2003. According to records, Santos was driving to work when he was involved in a minor accident. Deputy Calkins was assigned to work the accident and promptly arrested Santos for driving without a license and for not having insurance. Witnesses saw Deputy Calkins arrest Santos, placing him in the back of the patrol car, and then driving away.
Later that day, Santos’ boss contacted the jail to bail him out. However, official records showed that Santos had never been arrested or booked into jail. When questioned about the missing person, Deputy Calkins said that he ‘changed his mind about arresting Santos’ and ‘decided to drop him off at a nearby convenient store’. The Sheriff’s department investigated the incident, but in true police fashion, Deputy Calkins was cleared of any potential wrong doing.
Nobody knows for sure what happened that day, other than Santos and Deputy Calkins. Rumors began to circulate as people began questioning what could have happened. . Many people speculate that the Sheriff’s Deputy killed Santos and disposed of his body somewhere. But as time went on, memories of Santos’ disappearance quickly faded away – Until another man went missing after having contact with Deputy Calkins.Terrance Williams went missing in January of 2004 – only 3 months after the mysterious disappearance of Santos.
After not hearing from Williams for a few days, his family filed a missing person’s report with the sheriff’s department. After filing the report, the family was able to determine that William’s vehicle, a Cadillac, was towed at the request of Deputy Steve Calkins. However, no incident report was filed by Deputy – nothing was ever mentioned about towing the vehicle, any arrest, or any contact with Williams for that matter.
Williams’ vehicle had been towed from a nearby cemetery because it was obstructing traffic. Williams’ mother, Marcia, contacted the cemetery’s employees and found out they had witnessed her son’s encounter with Deputy Calkins.Deputy Calkins was caught lying about the incident.
Below is a partial transcript with Deputy Calkins and Dispatch:
Dispatcher: I hate to bother you on your day off but this woman’s been calling us all day. You towed a car … Monday, a Cadillac, do you remember it?
Calkins: Uhh, no.
Dispatcher: Do you remember? She said it was near the cemetery.
Calkins: Cemetery?
Dispatcher: And the people at the cemetery are telling her you put somebody in the back of your vehicle and arrested them and I don’t show you arresting anybody.
Calkins: I never arrested nobody.
Deputy Calkins, a 17-year veteran of the Sheriff’s department, was fired. He appealed this termination, but his dismissal was upheld. He has not been charged in the disappearances of Williams or Santos. And though he claims he is innocent in both cases, it’s worth noting that at least one polygraph test showed that he was being deceptive.
During one polygraph test, the examiner asked: “After you dropped Terrance at the Circle K, did you have any further contact with him?” Calkins said no. According to the lie detector test, he failed that question.
Other examples of the Deputy lying concerns his conversation with dispatch. He told dispatcher Jolicoeur he was investigating an abandoned car (“signal 11”), even though his later statement indicates Williams was driving it when he stopped him. Calkins later called another dispatcher, gave Williams’ date of birth, and asked for a background check. Calkins said he was alone. But investigators came to strongly doubt his story, because where would he have gotten the date of birth? Not from the car, because it had no registration. Not from Williams, because he wasn’t by the car anymore. Even more troubling, the date of birth that Calkins gave was not Williams’ real birth date, but a false one Williams previously gave out when in trouble.“I might have been a little sloppy, I might have been a little lazy, and for that I’m truly sorry,” Calkins told investigators in a sworn statement on March 30, 2004, that was among his last acts as a Collier County deputy. “But I honestly believe that I have not lied about anything.” /source/
OMG! If i imagine myself in such a situation face to face with this man i feel so fucking scared! U understand exactly? This maniac with the badge hunted for black men. He took them to his car and then they disappeared. OMFG! U see? What does this mean?! No matter u adult healthy man u can easily become a victim of such racistass killercop, who got the real force and the feeling of total impunity for his actions. Damn! Spread this message #StayWoke
#Police #Cops #KillerCop #BlackLivesMatter #Justice
#StayWoke
This need a Boost AF
(via brightnessdavar)
