Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Tom Perez: Fontana, California. California: Another horrific 'Confessions from Hell' (not from Chicago!) post, this one from CNN's Senior Crime and Justice Correspondent Rachel Clarke and Simon Prokupecz: CNN: This one relates to police investigators who "used a man's dog to force a confession," and, if not cruel enough, they pressured him to confess a murder which never happened. Read on…"The officers called for reinforcements, first a sergeant and then detectives. More questions were asked, and Perez agreed to go to the police station to try to help figure out where his dad might be. At this stage, no one is alleging the police had done anything wrong. An elderly man was missing. His son called for help but often veered into tangents, talking about the work he was doing in the house, or the dog’s diet. The police needed more information. It was what happened next that became more and more disturbing. While detectives questioned Perez, police sought a search warrant Det. Robert Miller asked Perez to accompany officers to the Fontana Police Department, a single-story building in a downtown municipal campus dotted with palm trees. There, in the early evening, Perez first entered the interrogation room, what he now calls “their little box of horrors.”



PUBLISHER'S NOTE: This Blog is interested in false confessions because of the disturbing number of exonerations in the USA, Canada and multiple other jurisdictions throughout the world, where, in the absence of incriminating forensic evidence the conviction is based on self-incrimination – and because of the growing body of  scientific research showing how vulnerable suspects are to widely used interrogation methods  such as  the notorious ‘Reid Technique.’ As  all too many of this Blog's post have shown, I also recognize that pressure for false confessions can take many forms, up to and including physical violence, even physical and mental torture.

Harold Levy: Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog:

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PASSAGE  ONE OF THE DAY:  "Perez remembers the first 90 minutes or so of questions with Miller and other officers as polite and reasonable, eliciting information about where his father might have gone. He said he was focused on giving ideas for where his father could be — with his brother, his daughter, or a friend. That same evening, officers were getting a search warrant for the Perez home, the men’s phones and their vehicles. By the time Perez’s father had been gone for about 24 hours and a second interrogation began with Miller, the tone had changed. Crime scene investigators took photographs of what they thought was blood evidence, and a cadaver dog named Jet brought by a sheriff’s volunteer alerted to the possible scent of human remains in an upstairs bedroom, police reports show. Miller questioned Perez until the early hours of the morning on August 9, and a DNA swab was taken from the man now considered a suspect at 4:41 a.m. It was a second night with little or no sleep for Perez. Miller wrote in a police report that Perez had been told he was free to leave, and other officers said later he was not under arrest. But the many hours in the interrogation room painted a different picture."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "“Where can you take us to show us where Daddy is…?” Guthrie asked Perez. “Thomas could never do anything like this … but that’s not the issue.  The medication, it took over, and we need to find Daddy right now.”

Later, Perez asked for medical attention. “But… I need, I needed attention.”  Janusz replied: “No you don’t.” This was the point where the detectives clearly crossed a line, according to Jeff Noble, an expert in police procedure who reviewed the case at the request of Perez’s lawyer as part of the civil action. “It begins with a six or seven-hour interrogation by Det. Miller, then Janusz and Guthrie put him in their car and start driving him around and take him to different places so he can identify where this body is,” Noble told CNN. “And during that drive they are suggesting things that he may have done to his father. They’re telling him that his father is dead. They’re telling him they know where his father’s body is at, and when he’s asking for medication or to go to the hospital, they’re telling him no, they’re denying him access to those things.”


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PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY:  "Police badgered Perez about his father, saying, ‘You killed him’ Janusz and Guthrie returned to the interrogation room later in the afternoon of August 9, seen in the video reviewed by CNN. Janusz said Perez could end up owing the city up to a million dollars in restitution for not helping the police locate his father. Guthrie said, “He’s missing because you killed him.”

Then they brought in Margo, the family dog, and said she was suffering because she had witnessed the murder. “It did happen. It did happen.  You killed him, and he’s dead,” Guthrie told Perez. You know you killed him …  You’re not being honest with yourself.  How can you sit there, how can you sit there and say you don’t know what happened, and your dog is sitting there looking at you, knowing that you killed your dad?  Look at your dog.  She knows, because she was walking through all the blood.” Time and again they asked Perez to imagine what could have happened. If he responded with a suggestion, they took that as fact. Thomas said he grabbed a pair of scissors and went over to the couch and stabbed his dad."


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STORY: "Police use a man's dog to try to force a confession," by  Senior Editor Rachel Clarke and Simon Prokupecz, published by CNN, on September 5, 2024.  "Shimon Prokupecz is an award-winning journalist, and CNN's senior crime and justice correspondent. Based in New York, he principally covers law enforcement national news stories, where his standout reporting has garnered accolades and acclaim from the Emmy's, Peabody's, and George Polk Awards."Shim


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GIST: "Tom Perez called the local police non-emergency line to report his elderly father missing. Thirty-six hours later, Perez was on a psychiatric hold in a hospital, having been pressured into confessing he killed his dad and trying to take his own life.

His father was alive and there had been no murder.

No one told Perez. Instead, police continued investigating him, looking for a victim who did not exist.

That was six years ago, in August 2018. His hometown of Fontana, California, paid $900,000 to settle his claims against the police, but Perez says no one from the city has ever apologized. Nor is there any indication there was an internal investigation into why detective after detective, supervisor after supervisor, allowed the questioning of Perez to continue for hour after hour.

Since then, many of the police officers involved have been promoted. And Perez feels there has still been no explanation for why he was treated so badly.

CNN became aware of this story when the settlement was publicized. We obtained some interrogation videos and spent weeks poring through records and interviews, many of which have not been made public because of a protective order, to try to ascertain what led to what one expert in policing called “one of the most disturbing things I’ve seen.”

Perez and the city of Fontana reached their settlement this spring after he filed a civil suit accusing the police of false imprisonment and due process violations, among other offenses. The suburban city, about an hour’s drive east of Los Angeles, admitted no wrongdoing in the settlement and “vigorously denies” that any state or federal laws were broken.

Both Tom Perez and his father — who has the same name and is nicknamed “Papa Tom” — sat for exclusive interviews with CNN. The police officers who interrogated the younger man for 17 hours have not responded to CNN’s requests for comment.

Police responded to the Perez home and soon became suspicious


The Perez father and son live together in a three-bedroom, cream-colored house with a tile roof in a cul-de-sac of homes built around a golf course. Back in 2018, they were planning to sell the property and were packing up their things and completing some improvements. A contractor, the younger Perez was doing most of the work himself.

The two men had ended up sharing a house after Perez split from his wife and his father, also separated, found he wasn’t suited to the rules of a senior citizen community. They muddled along together, getting on each other’s nerves, but never for too long. Both held real estate licenses, they said, though they lived largely separate lives, with their own interests and friends. But they both adored their dog — a fluffy Husky-Border Collie mix called Margo — cooking her special meals and sharing her care.

For the Perezes, the trauma is still so raw that they have trouble talking to each other about what happened. “We haven’t reached that point,” the younger Perez said.

On August 7, the father, then aged 71, left the home with Margo to check the mailbox down the street, or so his son thought. A few minutes later the dog came back. The older man did not.

Perez, then 53, said he wasn’t overly concerned as his fiercely independent father knew many people around the area, where they had lived for years, and would often make visits without saying where he was going. But when he still hadn’t come home by the following afternoon, Perez called the non-emergency police line in case someone reported seeing his father.

“I just want to know that if there’s an elderly man walking in the neighborhood or sometimes he maybe got disoriented … let me know, it may be my father. That’s it,” he told CNN.

The community service officer who took the call, Joanna Piña, said she felt something was off.

“He didn’t seem very worried about his father missing and he kept rambling off to different topics that was not about the missing person report,” she recalled four years later in a legal deposition taken for Perez’s civil case for damages.

Are you sure you didn’t argue with your dad?


Cpl. Sheila Foley, while at Perez's house

Piña and her supervisor, Cpl. Sheila Foley, went to follow up at the Perez home, where both seemed taken aback by the state of the house, according to footage from body cameras. They saw possessions piled up and construction work going on.

“You didn’t do it in a manner that would be somewhat normal,” Foley said to Perez when he described removing a wall unit from the older man’s room. She followed up: “Are you sure you didn’t argue with your dad?” On body camera footage, Perez told them he was tired as he stumbled over some of his words and tried to explain why he kept on working after his dad had left and why his dad’s possessions were in a messy heap.

The officers called for reinforcements, first a sergeant and then detectives. More questions were asked, and Perez agreed to go to the police station to try to help figure out where his dad might be.

At this stage, no one is alleging the police had done anything wrong. An elderly man was missing. His son called for help but often veered into tangents, talking about the work he was doing in the house, or the dog’s diet. The police needed more information.

It was what happened next that became more and more disturbing.

While detectives questioned Perez, police sought a search warrant

Det. Robert Miller asked Perez to accompany officers to the Fontana Police Department, a single-story building in a downtown municipal campus dotted with palm trees. There, in the early evening, Perez first entered the interrogation room, what he now calls “their little box of horrors.”

Perez remembers the first 90 minutes or so of questions with Miller and other officers as polite and reasonable, eliciting information about where his father might have gone. He said he was focused on giving ideas for where his father could be — with his brother, his daughter, or a friend.

That same evening, officers were getting a search warrant for the Perez home, the men’s phones and their vehicles.

By the time Perez’s father had been gone for about 24 hours and a second interrogation began with Miller, the tone had changed.

Crime scene investigators took photographs of what they thought was blood evidence, and a cadaver dog named Jet brought by a sheriff’s volunteer alerted to the possible scent of human remains in an upstairs bedroom, police reports show.

Miller questioned Perez until the early hours of the morning on August 9, and a DNA swab was taken from the man now considered a suspect at 4:41 a.m. It was a second night with little or no sleep for Perez. Miller wrote in a police report that Perez had been told he was free to leave, and other officers said later he was not under arrest.

But the many hours in the interrogation room painted a different picture.

TIMELINE: PEREZ AND THE POLICE

  • August 7, 2018, 9:30 p.m.: Father goes for a walk
  • August 8, 2:30 p.m.: Tom Perez calls Fontana police
  • August 8, evening: Perez goes to police station and is questioned
  • August 9, morning: Perez is driven around Fontana by detectives
  • August 9, afternoon: Interrogation continues, with Perez’s friend and dog being brought in by detectives
  • August 9, evening: Perez’s sister calls police to say father is alive and well
  • August 9, evening: Perez is taken to a psychiatric unit for evaluation
  • August 13, afternoon: Perez released from the hospital and reunited with his father

When detectives David Janusz and Kyle Guthrie started their shifts on August 9, they were asked to take over the questioning of Perez. Guthrie, in a 2023 deposition from the civil case, described a quick meeting with their lieutenant who said, “something to the fact that they believed Thomas — or Mr. Perez — had killed his father and they had asked Janusz and I to interview him regarding the complaint.”

There was “a feeling” among police that Perez had killed his father, Janusz agreed in a deposition in October 2022 for the same civil case.

The two detectives took Perez to a coffee shop and then drove him around town for hours. They went to a donation box where some of his father’s clothes had been taken, and to housing tracts where new homes were being built, apparently looking for where a body could have been dumped. At one point, while at a pond water hazard on a golf course, Perez asked if bodies floated, Janusz said in the deposition.

The detectives also used the driving time to berate Perez, suggesting he had hurt his father — perhaps under the influence of medication he was taking for conditions including high blood pressure, depression, stress and asthma, according to a review of body camera footage by US District Judge Dolly Gee, who was assigned to review Perez’s civil case.

“Where can you take us to show us where Daddy is…?” Guthrie asked Perez. “Thomas could never do anything like this … but that’s not the issue.  The medication, it took over, and we need to find Daddy right now.”

Later, Perez asked for medical attention. “But… I need, I needed attention.”  Janusz replied: “No you don’t.”

This was the point where the detectives clearly crossed a line, according to Jeff Noble, an expert in police procedure who reviewed the case at the request of Perez’s lawyer as part of the civil action.

“It begins with a six or seven-hour interrogation by Det. Miller, then Janusz and Guthrie put him in their car and start driving him around and take him to different places so he can identify where this body is,” Noble told CNN. “And during that drive they are suggesting things that he may have done to his father. They’re telling him that his father is dead. They’re telling him they know where his father’s body is at, and when he’s asking for medication or to go to the hospital, they’re telling him no, they’re denying him access to those things.”

The city rejects that allegation. “Mr. Perez requested and was given his medication during his detention,” a statement to CNN said.

Perez told CNN he thought the officers were taking him to the train station to check any surveillance video that could have shown where his father had been headed, but then they changed direction.

“All they did was have me out in dirt fields today looking for bodies … they got me all brainwashed,” he said later that day in the interrogation room. “Where is dad, where’s dad, where’s dad?”

Police brought in a friend of Perez’s to help elicit a confession

The detectives took Perez back to the Fontana police station in the middle of the day of August 9 and returned him to the interrogation room. Perez told CNN he asked for a lawyer or to go home and was refused both, contrasting with assertions from officers that he was not under arrest and could leave.

Perez did ask to see a friend and business partner, Carl Peraza. But before Peraza was allowed in, detectives recruited him to their side.

The officers indicated that what they needed me to do most was try to get an exact location of where Tom not only buried his father, but also to confess that he murdered his father.

Carl Peraza, a friend of Tom Perez, during a deposition, describing what detectives asked of him

“The first two officers, Janusz and the other officer with the shaved head (Guthrie), they took me to the hallway again and then they told me that, wow, that Tom is going to be detained for murder,” Peraza said in a February 2023 deposition. “Then they went into some detail as to they had overwhelming evidence with blood everywhere,” he said.

The detectives told him they had video of Perez dumping clothing with blood on it. “They said there was a location where they believed the body was buried, and that they were going to dig it up…

“The officers indicated that what they needed me to do most was try to get an exact location of where Tom not only buried his father, but also to confess that he murdered his father.”

Peraza said later that he did not understand how it was possible that the elder Perez was dead or that his son could have killed him, but he tried to help the police.

CNN has viewed 8 hours and 30 minutes of video showing what happened next.

Peraza told his friend the police had evidence against him. Perez knew that police are entitled to lie in interrogations and said so, but Peraza kept on.

“It’s blood everywhere, in the garage, in the truck,” he said.

“I can’t figure this out. That’s what I don’t understand, Tom. They have evidence, they have … there’s the garage, truck … and your dad missing. I mean, Tom, could it, could it have happened?”

When the detectives came back into the room, Peraza said he heard them say that Perez had killed his father, but he never heard Perez agree.

After they left Perez alone, Peraza told the officers he had tried to help but still couldn’t understand how there had been a murder, even if the evidence was there. At that point he heard an officer say the evidence was “circumstantial.”

“That was another shock to me,” Peraza said at his deposition. “It went from ‘overwhelming’ to ‘circumstantial’ and I was even more confused. I wanted to go in and let Tom know, after I just drove him to try to confess, that it was circumstantial, not overwhelming as I was told.”

He was not permitted to talk to Perez again that day.

Police badgered Perez about his father, saying, ‘You killed him’

Janusz and Guthrie returned to the interrogation room later in the afternoon of August 9, seen in the video reviewed by CNN.

Janusz said Perez could end up owing the city up to a million dollars in restitution for not helping the police locate his father.

Guthrie said, “He’s missing because you killed him.”

Then they brought in Margo, the family dog, and said she was suffering because she had witnessed the murder.

“It did happen. It did happen.  You killed him, and he’s dead,” Guthrie told Perez. You know you killed him …  You’re not being honest with yourself.  How can you sit there, how can you sit there and say you don’t know what happened, and your dog is sitting there looking at you, knowing that you killed your dad?  Look at your dog.  She knows, because she was walking through all the blood.”

Time and again they asked Perez to imagine what could have happened. If he responded with a suggestion, they took that as fact.

Thomas said he grabbed a pair of scissors and went over to the couch and stabbed his dad.

Det. David Janusz, in his incident report

At one point, when the detectives had already discussed whether there had been a fight with a stick and broken bottles, and whether Perez had run over his father with a truck, they asked if it was plausible that the younger man had stabbed the older one.

“What about the scissors?” Janusz asked.

“That’s possible,” Perez replied. “Possible?” Janusz followed up. “It’s plausible,” Perez allowed. “Did you stab him?” Guthrie asked. “I didn’t think that I did,” Perez said.

By then it was about 24 hours since Perez had gone with the police to the station and close to two full days since he had seen his father.

The detectives went through more scenarios, but Perez made no clear confession.

Yet in his report of his investigation dated August 31, 2018, Janusz wrote this:

“Thomas said he grabbed a pair of scissors and went over to the couch and stabbed his dad. He said if he was enraged he probably stabbed him a lot. Thomas said after his dad was stabbed, his dad went upstairs to the bathroom. Thomas heard him fall so he went up there and saw his dad lying on the ground of the bathroom not waking up. He said he slapped him in the face a few times, but he still wouldn’t wake. Thomas’ dog came in the bathroom and so he tried getting the dog out of the bathroom because there was blood everywhere. Once he got the dog out, he then wrapped up his dad’s body in the green shower curtain and transported his body down the stairs and into the garage. He then put his dad’s body in the back of his truck.”

None of that happened.

But in the interrogation room, Perez was exhausted, confused and beginning to believe perhaps it had. He broke down, wailing, trying to tear his hair out and ripping open his shirt.

The detectives, seeming to have convinced Perez he had killed his father while in some kind of fugue state, suggested he apologize to his father. “I’m sorry dad,” he said. “I had no idea. I love you.”

To his sister, he offered, “I didn’t mean to take your daddy away. I have no idea. I still don’t understand.” These apologies, along with Perez’s responses to scenarios put forward by the police, became what the police called a confession.

When you’re threatening somebody by telling them that they’re going to have to pay up to a million dollars in restitution by not telling you what had occurred, telling them you’re going to have to euthanize their dog if you don’t confess – that is not edging closer to the line, that’s leaping over the line.

Jeff Noble, police procedure expert

Perez threw up in a trash can. The detectives kept pushing for details, but all Perez could say was, “I don’t know.” When left alone, he says he tried to take his own life with his shoelaces.

Judge Gee said the detectives’ tactics “indisputably led to Perez’s subjective confusion and disorientation, to the point that he falsely confessed to killing his father, and tried to take his own life.”

Detectives suggested the beloved family dog would be euthanized

Perez told CNN he has seen parts of the interrogation video but has no wish to relive what he calls the cruelty of the officers who turned his life upside down.

“I no longer could see in color,” he said of the early evening of August 9, when he mentally and physically broke down. It was 28 hours since he had called police, nearly two days since he had seen his father, and he had not taken his medicine or had much sleep or food.  “I was seeing everybody in black and white and then I felt physical pain, like an electric shock, and it went from head to toe.”

He said there came a time when he did believe his father was dead, though he still couldn’t fathom that he could have been responsible. And then the detectives pushed again, telling him about a dog who witnessed a murder and was so traumatized it had to be put down and suggesting the same thing could happen to Margo.

“She’s traumatized, she has PTSD,” Guthrie said.

Perez remembered: “I was still hanging on, dealing with that loss until they told me they’re going to kill my dog too.”






Even among all the other transgressions, that stands out to Noble, the veteran former police officer and expert on procedure.

“When you go over the line and you engage in deceptive action that would cause an innocent person to confess to a crime they didn’t commit, that’s where the line is crossed,” he said.

“And certainly, when you’re threatening somebody by telling them that they’re going to have to pay up to a million dollars in restitution by not telling you what had occurred, telling them you’re going to have to euthanize their dog if you don’t confess — that is not edging closer to the line, that’s leaping over the line.”

As a third team of detectives rotated into the interrogation room, Margo the dog was taken to a shelter in a neighboring county and turned in as a stray.

And shortly before midnight on August 9 — some 33 hours after he called police to keep an eye out for his father — Perez was committed to a hospital psychiatric unit to be detained for an evaluation after telling officers he wanted to kill himself.

Father found, but police still don’t drop the case

But by this time, at least one of the detectives in Fontana knew that the elder Thomas Perez was alive and well. His daughter had spoken to Miller earlier in the evening while her brother was still in the interrogation room, saying the missing man was at Los Angeles International Airport waiting for a flight to visit her in Oakland, California.

Airport officers met him at the gate and asked him to wait to speak with Fontana officers. They detained him and read him his Miranda rights, even though he was suspected of no crime.

“They picked me up, they read me my rights and my mind’s going, ‘What’s going on?’,” the elder Perez told CNN. “They put me in the car, put me in the back seat and they started to explain the situation … and I still had no idea what they’re talking about.”






He had gone to visit his brother and then stayed with a friend, he said. He knew nothing about the search for him until he called his daughter. She had bought him a plane ticket to visit her in Northern California before that trip was cut short by the arrival of the Fontana police.

The father was even put in the same interrogation room just vacated by his traumatized son, he told CNN, later recognizing a blanket he saw on the floor that had been used by the younger man. He said he was given scant information.

“They were at the house, and they were looking over everything because they believed there was a murder that occurred there,” he said of what he was told. He said he was asked about his relationship with Perez and if it ever got violent, but was never told his son had been accused of killing him — either at the police station or when they took him home, breaking crime scene tape to let him into his house.

Meanwhile, no one told Perez his father was alive. Instead, he was in the psychiatric unit, thinking his father was dead, perhaps by his own hand, and that his dog was being killed too, also because of him.

Jerry Steering, Perez’s lawyer who helped him secure the settlement, said of the detectives: “They didn’t have the nerve to look him in the face. They didn’t have the nerve to tell him his dad’s OK.”

Perez’s father went to see him but was not allowed in for several days, the younger man said.

“They left me in that mental anguish and to just suffer continually and then they put the block on the phone so that I can’t receive the calls,” Perez said. “I suffered that way for three days.”

When he saw me, he just stared at me and he said, ‘Dad, is that really you?’

'Papa Tom' Perez, recalling the meeting with his son as he was released from the psychiatric unit

Only when a nurse connected the pair on the phone did Perez say he finally learned his father was alive.

“She handed the phone to me, and I just dropped to the floor crying,” Perez said, his voice breaking, “because he was alive, and he said he’d been trying to call but they’ve been rejecting his calls.”

A week after his father went for that fateful walk, the pair were reunited when Perez was released from the hospital.

“When he saw me, he just stared at me and he said, ‘Dad, is that really you?’” the elder Perez said. “And I said, ‘Yes, it’s me,’ and he goes, ‘They told me you were dead.’ And I said, ‘No, no I’m here.’

“And then he walked slowly to me… and then we embraced, and we had tears in our eyes.”

After finding a microchip under her skin, the shelter determined that Margo was not a stray and contacted the Perezes to pick her up.

The Perezes say she came home with an injury and needed surgery for a torn ligament. While they were trying to help her, the police were still looking for a victim.

Detectives still believed there was a victim

Instead of abandoning the case after Perez’s father was found, Fontana police doubled down on their suspicions that someone had been hurt or killed in the house.

Police got permission to put a tracker on Perez’s truck. In a statement of probable cause applying for the warrant, Miller referenced blood in the house and how a cadaver dog alerted officers to something.

“It is believed by myself and other detectives involved in this investigation that there is a possible victim that has not yet to be located (sic),” wrote Miller, the first officer to question Perez, on August 15.

“(Y)our affiant, along with other FPD detectives believe there is still an outstanding deceased victim possibly related to a homicide,” he wrote.

Evidence photos from the scene show apparent drops of dried blood that Perez attributed to previous accidents. But at a deposition in his civil suit in October 2022, he was shown what Shel Harrell, a lawyer for the City of Fontana, said was an evidence photo of a door in his home with what appeared to be blood on it.

Perez said it looked to be his door, but said there were no red marks on it when police officers showed up.

Harrell asked if he was saying that Fontana officers were lying when they said it was there, to which Perez answered, “Yes.”




In a court document in support of Perez’s civil claims, the police expert Noble noted that the photo was not mentioned in any police reports or relied on to get search warrants.

And while samples of suspected blood were taken from the sofa where Janusz wrote Perez had stabbed his father and from elsewhere in the house, no case has been brought against him or any other victim found. Noble wrote that no positive identification of blood was ever made. The elder Perez told CNN the samples had been identified as coming from a male, but that was all.

CNN asked Harrell about the photo of supposed blood evidence and other matters. Harrell did not respond to CNN’s questions. Instead, he said the videos CNN has viewed are subject to a protective order and should not be published.

Harrell, whose office is counsel to the city of Fontana, asked CNN to return any video it had, unaired.

Officers involved were later promoted

To the judge who allowed Perez’s lawsuit to proceed, leading to the settlement, some of the police actions went too far — even if some initial suspicion could be justified.

“Perez’s mental state, among other factors, made him a vulnerable individual,” Judge Gee wrote. “He was sleep deprived, mentally ill, and, significantly, undergoing symptoms of withdrawal from his psychiatric medications. He was berated, worn down, and pressured into a false confession after 17 hours of questioning. (The officers) did this with full awareness of his compromised mental and physical state and need for his medications.”

Perez had filed his complaint in August 2019, a year after the events, and settled with the city of Fontana for nearly $900,000 in the spring of 2024, after some of his claims were dismissed.

The settlement in this case was a business decision which was recommended by a federal court mediator to save the city further time, effort and expense.

City of Fontana statement

The city of Fontana, however, continues to deny that lines were crossed in the handling of Perez as a suspect.

A statement to CNN from the city attorney, Ruben Duran, said: “The settlement specifically included no finding of wrongdoing, nor any violation of state or federal law.” Duran said police “reasonably suspected a violent act had occurred” and that Perez was not isolated and was fed and given medication. He also said the investigation stopped when Perez’s father was found alive.

An earlier statement posted and later removed from the city website read: “The settlement in this case was a business decision which was recommended by a federal court mediator to save the city further time, effort and expense.” It ended: “City law enforcement leadership have developed many service enhancements to deal with mentally challenged individuals.” Duran has not responded to requests for more details on the enhancements.

Guthrie, who was not named as a defendant, said of Perez in his deposition: “I don’t think that what we told him would cause him emotional distress because as you can see in this interview, he’s not even upset. He didn’t even react to the fact that we made an assumption that his father was not living anymore.” He said he had not watched the video of the interrogation — where Perez’s emotional breakdown is clear — before being shown clips at the deposition.

Guthrie said using “a ruse” during interrogation was clearly acceptable. “I don’t think that the techniques we used on him are the reason why he admitted to killing his father.”

Months after the interrogation, Guthrie was named a 2019 Employee of the Year for the Fontana Police Department.





Guthrie is now a sergeant. So is Janusz.

And Michael Dorsey, the lieutenant who Guthrie says told him and Janusz that officers believed Perez Jr. had killed his father, has been promoted to captain and is now chief of police of Fontana, overseeing 188 sworn officers, according to its website.

Dorsey was not a named defendant in the civil suit. CNN asked him for comment and has not heard back.

Noble, the police expert who has run internal affairs investigations, said the multiple failures should have led to a full review and more training.

Noble said the video of the interrogation, especially the suggestion that Perez’s dog may have to be euthanized, should have been a call for action. “I can’t believe there’s a chief of police in the United States that would sit back and somehow say that’s OK.”

He said officers should have pulled each other back rather than joining in and that it was clear that a 17-hour interrogation went too far.

“This wasn’t an error or a misstep,” he said. “This is a series of gross departures from generally accepted standards.”

The detectives may have become overwhelmed during their investigation, he thought, to the point where they did believe there had been a homicide. “They formed that belief based on a bias of their investigation without reviewing all the facts or stepping back and really assessing what they actually had,” said Noble, who says he has been an expert witness in criminal and civil legal matters involving police procedure, misconduct and corruption.

“With that said, by repeatedly lying to him, by denying him basic needs, by this incredibly long, prolonged interrogation, they overstepped their bounds in a way that no reasonable officer should have done.”

Father and son are still grappling with fallout from the ordeal

Tom Perez, now 59, told CNN it’s taken years for him to begin to get over the trauma of what happened.

“I got to a point where I was afraid to even go get the mail anymore,” the younger man said, showing how he had had to rely on his father. “I was afraid to come out. I said I don’t know who might be there.”

The two men spoke to CNN recently at the home they still share. Perez said it was the first time they had talked so much together about each other’s experiences during the ordeal.





The older Perez said his son was so traumatized for a while that he couldn’t work or even answer his phone.

“Luckily my father was there to make sure that all the necessities were met,” Perez said. “And then I started to work my way out of the hole, knowing that it’s upon me to get myself out — along with some help, of course.”

The dog, Margo, died in February 2023, leaving a hole in the men’s lives. But father and son still have each other and are grateful for that.

“I helped him … at that time to get through that,” the elder Perez, now 77, said of his son’s trauma after his interaction with police. “We help each other.”

But if there is one overriding lesson Perez has learned, he says it is a negative one.

“Don’t call the cops.""

The entire story can be read at:

https://www.cnn.com/2024/09/05/us/fontana-pressured-murder-confession/index.html

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic"  section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

  • SEE BREAKDOWN OF  SOME OF THE ON-GOING INTERNATIONAL CASES (OUTSIDE OF THE CONTINENTAL USA) THAT I AM FOLLOWING ON THIS BLOG,  AT THE LINK BELOW:  HL:


    https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/120008354894645705/4704913685758792985

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    FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."
    Lawyer Radha Natarajan:
    Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;

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    FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!


    Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;
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