‘They’re Definitely Cooking The Books’ — Philly’s Hidden Homicides

Submitted by Steven Z

Via Big Trial

When police responded to a July 1st radio call about a shooting on the 2100 block of North Lambert Street in North Philadelphia, they found Albert Chestnut Jr., a 67-year black male, with two gunshots in the head.

Medics transported Chestnut to Temple University Hospital where he was admitted in critical condition. He died two days later.

The cops arrested a suspect on gun charges, as well as aggravated assault, in an investigation that was said to be continuing. But instead of classifying Chestnut’s death as an “M” for murder, police marked it “S” for “suspicious.”

A veteran commander who looked over the the police report about the death of Chestnut said it was a mistake. “This is a murder. It should not be an ‘S’ job,” he said. “This is absolutely 100 percent a homicide.”

“They’re definitely cooking the books,” agreed one veteran detective. “At least 50 percent of them [suspicious deaths] are really homicides, and that’s being generous.”

The murder rate in Philadelphia — already the second-highest in the nation among the ten largest cities — is on a  record pace this year with 255 murders as of Aug. 2nd. That’s a 34 percent jump over this point in 2019, when we had only 190 homicides. At that monthly rate, the city will hit 437 murders for the year, the highest number since 2006, when the city racked up 406 murders. The all-time record, which could be broken this year if the weather stays hot, is 497 murders in 1990.

Along with a record number of murders, the number of dead bodies being classified by the cops as “suspicious” is also on the rise. So far this year, there have been a reported 97 deaths classified as “suspicious,” which kept them out of the homicide total. While the department faithfully tracks homicides, it does not publish annual statistics for suspicious deaths.

About the rising number of suspicious deaths this year, the veteran commander said, “Most are definitely being used to hide homicides.” He speculated that of the 97 suspicious deaths, as many as 80 of the cases marked “S” are probably murders.

We’ve already told you about the death of Albert Chestnut Jr. Let’s take a look at three other cases marked S this year.

Case No. 2: On July 31st at approximately 3 p.m., police responded to a request for a “check the well being” on a resident at 2600 block of Hagert Street who hadn’t been seen in several days.

Medics gained entry through a front porch window. Inside, they found “an obviously dead black male in the second floor bedroom” who was in “an advanced stage of decomposition” due to the excessive heat. He was pronounced dead by the medics at 3:15 p.m.

“There was blood splattered all over the house and on several household items that could be used to beat someone to death,” one cop said. In addition, the cops were told about several fights that the victim had with other individuals in the days leading up to his death.

But the incident was marked S for suspicious, instead of M for murder. Another obvious homicide, according to the veteran police commander.

 

Case No. 3: At 9:42 am on July 15th, police dispatched to 3000 block of Wharton Street discovered the dead body of a woman found in a “large plastic container wrapped in Saran Wrap.” She was pronounced dead by medics at 10:12 a.m.

It was another death marked S for suspicious.

The veteran detective was dubious. “One thing you know for sure, she didn’t wrap herself up in that plastic bag,” he said.

But the veteran police commander said it could have been “a true S job” because the woman could have died after having sex with a married man. The married man could have decided to dispose of the body by stuffing the corpse in a trunk. Instead of a murder, the veteran commander said, it could have been a case of abuse of a corpse.

Case No. 4: At approximately 12:10 a.m. on July 16th, police officers from the 35th district responded to a radio call about a person with a gun on the 1100 block of W. Loudon Street.

 

Police located the victim, Syhee Sharpe,  a 40 year old black male, lying on the street suffering from multiple gunshot wounds to the body. The victim was transported to Albert Einstein Medical Center by medics and was pronounced dead at 12:39 a.m. Police at the crime scene recovered multiple spent casings from two different calibers of guns.

 

Video recovered from the crime scene showed a black male wearing a white T shirt and shorts carrying a gun in his right hand. The police walked over to a neighbor’s house on the same block and interviewed a black male who was “an exact match in every way” to the unidentified male caught on camera. The police transported the suspect, who was in possession of a pill bottle containing several oxycodone pills, to homicide for further investigation.

 

“This is absolutely 100 percent a homicide, even if bad guy no. 1 was shooting at bad guy no. 2,” the veteran police commander said.

Another problem with suspicious deaths: some cops will tell you that Inspector Anthony Washington, the man in charge of the Police Department’s Homicide Unit, doesn’t exactly inspire confidence with his checkered past.

Between 2011 and 2014, as the Inquirer reported, the city spent $198,000 to settle five lawsuits filed against Washington over allegations that included workplace harassment, civil rights violations, and physical abuse .

 

Washington was accused of allegedly harassing four female cops as well as a Temple student he met back in 2006 as part of a school project. The student claimed that Washington ogled her and asked what was the sexiest thing she had ever done. She filed a complaint with Internal Affairs but it wasn’t sustained.

 

Former Police Commissioner Richard Ross defended Washington last year, arguing that no complaint against him had ever been sustained. Ross also expressed confidence in Washington’s ability to do the job. But because of the bad publicity over the sexual allegations against him, Washington lost oversight of the Special Victims Unit.

 

The veteran police commander I talked to was not a fan. He described the inspector known among his fellow cops as “T Wash” as  “the most corrupt individual I have ever met” in the police department.

The way the system is supposed to work, when the Medical Examiner decides a suspicious death is really a murder, it should be changed from an S to an M. But cops can tell you plenty of stories about cases where that didn’t happen.

When I contacted an official spokesperson for the department, I got a response that my sources claim is B.S.

Here’s what was said.

“Good Morning, Mr. Cipriano,” wrote Staff Inspector Sekou Kinebrew, commanding officer of the Police Department’s Office of Public Affairs and Media Relations. “Thank you for reaching out to us and bringing this matter to our attention, as we are certainly not above reexamining and reassessing investigations.”

Kinebrew then told me that “S” numbers don’t actually refer to suspicious deaths, they refer to “Special Assignments.” And Kinebrew defined special assignments as “sudden death investigations, assistant to other law enforcement agencies, the killing of a civilian, intimidation of a witness, missing persons with suspicious circumstances, and other type incidents investigated by Homicide that are not [or not yet] classified as murders.”

My sources thought this explanation was nonsense. “He doesn’t even know what the ‘S’ stands for,” one source said.

Kinebrew went on to explain department procedures.

“Procedurally, when a death is clearly the result of criminal murder, the case is issued an ‘M’ or Murder control number,” he wrote. “All other investigations that are assigned to the Homicide Unit receive ‘S’ or Special Assignment control numbers.”

“In many instances a case that is initially assigned an ‘S’ number is reclassified and given an ‘M’ number when the investigation determines that the death is, in fact the result of a criminal murder.”

Kinebrew then explained that three of the four deaths that I brought to his attention, which were initially reported as S deaths, have since been reclassified as murders.

For example, in Case 1, the death of Albert Chestnut Jr. was officially reclassified as Murder No. 215 this year, because of a “murder cleared by arrest,” Kinebrew said.

Case No. 2, where Kinebrew identified the victim as Johnathan Twitty, became Murder No. 253 this year as part of an “active murder investigation,” Kinebrew said.

Case No. 4, Syhee Sharpe, became Murder No. 225, as part of an active murder investigation, Kinebrew said.

Apparently, Case No. 3, the dead lady wrapped in plastic, is still classified as a suspicious death.

My sources aren’t buying it, saying the department was reclassifying S jobs to “cover their asses because you called them out.”

In his official explanation, Kinebrew appeared to absolve Inspector Washington of any responsibility for supervising whether a dead body gets an S or an M. Instead, Kinebrew placed that responsibility on the captain of homicide.

“In addition, on a quarterly basis, the Captain of Homicide conducts a review of every Special Assignment to ensure that the correct designation has been given, and that the investigation is proceeding in a satisfactory manner,” Kinebrew wrote.

If you’re looking for an explanation of why there are more shootings and more murders in Philadelphia — as most recently evidenced by the murder of a 7-year-old boy shot in the head while he was sitting out in his front porch — look no further than District Attorney Larry Krasner.

As our Progressive “reform” D.A., Krasner has presided over the emptying of the city’s jails. It began before he took office, but under Krasner’s oversight, the great emancipation has proceeded at an accelerated pace.

From July 2015 until June of this year, the city’s jail population has declined from 8,082 to 3,875, a decrease of 52.1 percent, according to the MacArthur Safety and Justice Challenge, which has been tracking these criminal justice “reforms.”

Many of these criminals let out of jail are armed and dangerous. And when they, and others, are caught illegally carrying guns on the streets of Philadelphia, Krasner’s office can be counted on for low bail and favorable treatment, or, in the worst case scenario, plea bargains way below sentencing guidelines.

The result: more mayhem on the streets. Such as last Friday, when a 32 year-old woman was caught in the crossfire of a gun battle on the 2500 block of Ingersoll Street. According to the cops, seven heavily armed men got out of two vehicles and opened fire on another group.

On Saturday, 7 year-old Zamar Jones was caught in the crossfire while playing on his porch in the 200 block of North Simpson Street. The boy subsequently died from his injuries.

Data cited in an Action News report written by Dann Cuellar shows that Philadelphia is behind only Chicago among major cities when it comes to murders. And that for the fourth year in a row, Philadelphia has more annual murders than neighboring New York City, which has five times Philadelphia’s population.

If all our suspicious deaths were marked as murders, we’d be giving Chicago a run for its money as the country’s murder capital. Chicago, with more than a million more residents, has 432 murders so far this year. Add up Philly’s 255 murders and 97 suspicious deaths and you get 352 dead bodies.

Not only are homicides in Philadelphia up 34 percent over last year, but so are shooting victims. Police crime stats show 1,091 shooting victims this year, a 36 percent increase over this point in 2019, when we had 803 shooting victims.

And so far this year, the city has had 1,815 shooting incidents, where nobody is hit but shots are fired. That’s a shocking 57 percent increase over 2019, when at this point we had 1,160 shooting incidents.

Why the big jump in shooting incidents? It’s clear that shooters aren’t afraid of the consequences of being caught with a gun, or the consequences of being caught for actually shooting someone.

And that’s all on Krasner, because of his lax enforcement of gun crimes.

To document what Krasner is up to, Big Trial has previously tracked 236 gun arrests from July of 2019. Of those 236 gun cases, as of March 16th, the last day the courts in Philadelphia were open, 66 cases, or nearly 28 percent, had either been dropped, dismissed or lost in court by the D.A.’s office.

Of the 236 cases stemming from July of 2019, only 37 defendants, or 15.6 percent, were found guilty, all as the result of plea bargains. In those plea bargains, the result was either probation, where the defendant immediately walked, or a prison term way below sentencing guidelines for gun crimes. Often, the criminals taking the guilty pleas walked immediately for time served.

Of the 236 cases from July of 2019, not a single defendant to date has been convicted by a judge or a jury of being guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Out of the 236 cases, only two went to trial, and the D.A. lost both cases.

If you’re looking for a poster boy for Krasner’s revolving door for armed and dangerous drug dealers, consider Vernon Harris. As previously documented by Big Trial, Harris, only 19, was arrested three times over a 14 month-period for possessing a firearm. The first two times Harris got arrested, it cost him a total of $2,500 in bail to get out of jail both times.

Of course, the most egregious example to date of armed and dangerous drug dealers being freed by Krasner involve the two main suspects charged with the murder of Corporal James O’Connor. Before they murdered O’Connor, drug dealing gang members Hassan Elliott and Bilal Mitchell were repeatedly granted favors and were repeatedly let out of jail by Krasner’s office.

Krasner’s culpability for the surging gun violence and record murder rate is so obvious that only the Progressive reporters at The Philadelphia Inquirer, such as longtime Krasner apologist Chris Palmer, can continue to cover for the D.A. by writing stories that absolve Krasner of any guilt.

In Palmer’s latest opus, about the murder of the seven-year-old, Palmer quotes Krasner as blaming “the availability of guns, as well as poverty, a lack of opportunity, and substance abuse for the ongoing spike in shootings.”

In other words, it’s everybody’s fault but Krasner’s. But many people in town know the real story.

As one prominent criminal defense lawyer told me, “All of my clients are out on the street.” And they’re all packing.

Also deserving of blame for the surging gun violence — Mayor Kenney and his hand-picked rookie Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw. Months ago, the mayor and Outlaw were justly ripping Krasner for his lack of prosecution of gun crimes.

Now, both the mayor and Outlaw are silent, and Outlaw has joined forces with Krasner in an ill-advised collaboration that has Krasner’s incompetent assistant district attorneys working banker’s hours while hanging out at every police district.

Meanwhile, whether they’re marked S or M, the body count continues to grow.

On Aug. 1st in the 200 block of N. Simpson Street, video recovered from several locations on the block show that a driver of a Chevy Silverado stuck his left hand out the driver’s side window and opened fire on a group of people standing on the block.

Two males returned the fire. And in the gun battle, seven-year-old Zamar Jones got shot in the head.

The crime was initially classified, not as the city’s 256th murder, but as the city’s 98th suspicious death.

When I asked Kinebrew if that S had been changed, he wrote back, “Yes, it was an ‘S’ until the child was pronounced” dead. “It was converted to an ‘M’ yesterday.”

“He’s lying to you,” a source responded. “It doesn’t change that quickly.”

That accusation from an anonymous source upset Kinebrew, who called back to clear the record.

“I answered that question correctly,”he insisted. “Homicide was already investigating. It became an M the minute poor Zamar was pronounced yesterday.”

After informing me that most cops know where his office is, Kinebrew issued an invitation to his anonymous critic.

“I invite that person to discuss that with me,” he said. “If he or she believes that something else needed to be done [to change an S to an M] I invite that person to explain that to me.”

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20 Comments
Auntie Kriest
Auntie Kriest
August 9, 2020 11:24 am

Auntie doesn’t give a rat’s ass about the intra-community Black murder rate in Philthydelphia. Or Detroit, Baltimorgue, or Chicongo either.

Let them continue to kill each other as they are wont to.

With such astonishing statistics the American Negro community displays to the entire world that the bloody reality is that Black lives do not matter to Blacks.

Machinist
Machinist
  Auntie Kriest
August 9, 2020 11:45 am

Detoilet

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Machinist
August 9, 2020 1:00 pm

Shitcago.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Auntie Kriest
August 9, 2020 12:06 pm

Problem is these feral scum are being sent out into the countryside to work for their gang or because the “shitty” they are from has torn down a housing project and dumped them on the countryside. One may recall Dubuque Iowa being declared part of Chicagoland by HUD under Obama. Busloads of real ghetto filth were sent there by Rahm Emmanuel with vouchers and claims of first in line status because Obongo declared a city in another state over 200 miles away “Chicago.” County officials were threatened with prison if any resident of Dubuque County was given public housing before one of the hundreds of Chicagoans dumped there.
I’m a hundred miles from Shitcago and we are starting to see Dindus all over the place and the police report is full of names nobody ever heard of and they all have one thing in common. To say that our local Black families, who are mostly fine people are freaked out, is an understatement.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Auntie Kriest
August 9, 2020 4:28 pm

Could not have said it better,Auntie.

realestatepup
realestatepup
August 9, 2020 11:38 am

Holy shit balls you have to be bat shit crazy to try and be a moral officer of the law there. It seems to me that perhaps Mr. Krasner is either one of two things or both:
1. A blithering idiot
2. On the take
If he’s on the take then he’s still a blithering idiot, but he’s also arrogant with an ego the size of a Mac Truck.
And now on to Mr. Spin-the-blame Kinebrew. It’s all Bullshit. You know it, the other cops know it, the citizens know it too. The problem here is the law abiding citizens are being held hostage by the criminals. If you know, deep in your heart, that your own police department is either so inept or so heartless that nothing will be done about anything, you pretty much have to just hunker down and hope the bullets don’t come into your house one night.
When are the communities of color going to take a stand and do something about this? I am truly surprised on a daily basis that the citizens have not risen up and just eliminate these asshole criminals themselves. I am sure everyone knows who they are and where they live.
How many of their children need to be murdered on their own front porch before they do something? It’s completely obvious that no one else is going to.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  realestatepup
August 9, 2020 11:58 am

He is another one of these Soros financed DA’s. I believe he described himself as a “Public Defender with power.” When the law is under the control of communist mercenaries the only alternative is violence. That is probably the goal anyway. I volunteer to personally run the Vermeer chipper while they are all loaded in feet first after the tribunal.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Harrington Richardson
August 9, 2020 1:49 pm

I hope it is one of the really big, industrial sized chippers. There’s a lot of vermin out there.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  TN Patriot
August 9, 2020 2:08 pm

I really dig the ones that can eat 100 year old Oaks like they are twigs. Just have to keep the tank full. Wouldn’t want it to stop with Soros only half way through. On second thought……

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Harrington Richardson
August 9, 2020 5:28 pm

For the special cases, I think you should take it slow and only take up to one major joint with a 10 minute rest before going to the next one. Ankles, stop; knees, stop; hip, stop At that point, you could finish the job. 1 oz of silver pay per view would bring in a lot of Lincolns for the most egregious of the bunch. I would certainly chip (spun intended) in one for Soreass, one for Zuck, one for Gates and especially one for Roberts, the Constitutional traitor.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Administrator
August 9, 2020 12:38 pm

Sounds like St. Louis. The DA there is a Soros financed toady. Honest people don’t have a chance against the money machine.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  realestatepup
August 9, 2020 12:01 pm

2. He’s a soros toady.

Henry Ford
Henry Ford
August 9, 2020 12:09 pm

“Philadelphia seeing a surge in gun violence”.
I just wish a social worker would have a talk with all those violent guns.
It is not possible to start to fix a problem unless one admits there is a problem first.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Henry Ford
August 9, 2020 1:52 pm

Before I lost them, I had a talking to all of my guns and insisted that they not shoot anyone who doesn’t deserve it. They all agreed and signed a pledge to not be violent.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  TN Patriot
August 9, 2020 2:11 pm

I’m still pissed at you for saying “Let’s put all our guns and valuables on this boat. It’s perfectly safe.” Of course you just had to go to the deepest part of Lake Superior …….

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Harrington Richardson
August 9, 2020 5:28 pm

Sorry. Even though I knew the risk, I did not think it would happen that day.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
August 9, 2020 7:43 pm

comment image

Nothing, huh?

We’re all going to look at that face and pretend that individual should be in charge of one of the largest police departments in the country?

Any doctors in the house? Quick diagnosis, please.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  hardscrabble farmer
August 9, 2020 9:27 pm

Fizeogeeonomy fo $100.