Indicted Baltimore PD Officers (not a complete photo - more indicted) |
RIP Detective Sean Suiter |
OK, there have been no verifications that Det. Suiter was suicidal for one. He has a wife and five children at home and has been on the job for 18 years. He was NOT the subject of the Federal Grand Jury Indictment coming down against many of his fellow officers. Why would he kill himself, or why would he have the suspicious man shoot and kill him? I find it awfully strange that we haven't heard anything from Suiter's "partner" either way. You can't have a violent struggle for a weapon and then call it a possible suicide. You just can't! This makes the Baltimore PD look outright desperate to point the finger away from the co conspirators in this huge police racketeering and corruption case. Which is more likely? A few days ago the commish was certain it was a random crime.
Commissioner Davis is finally conceding in asking the FBI to take over the case. I get the feeling this is not what he really wants, because he loses control of what information they may find and perhaps there's even more corruption than we are aware of. Davis is beginning to contradict himself as well. On November 22, 2017, Davis described a "brief but violent" struggle. Davis says the struggle was evident by the state of Suiter's clothing. Now according to his statement to WBALtv.com there was no struggle. I think the "no struggle" better supports the new suicide theory. This is really a mess and being handled unprofessionally. The FBI does need to get involved and fast.
Other conspiracy theories that sound more plausible are that Suiter may have been seen as a traitor by the dirty officers and paid the ultimate price for walking over that thin blue line. That's the most likely theory I've heard thus far. There may be people higher up in the food chain involved with this Shropshire drug trafficking organization and they don't want to be identified. Suiter sounded like one of the good guys, someone who was by the book and couldn't be bought. There are no indications he was "on the take" like these other officers were. They (allegedly) stole from citizens, robbed drug dealers, robbed the city who paid them by falsifying overtime records and generally abused the power entrusted to them. Disgraceful.
Finally, the Baltimore Sun has stated that the detective with Sean Suiter the day he was murdered was not his usual partner. Rather, he was with Detective David Bomenka. The reward fund has risen to over $200,000 for tips leading to the arrest of Det. Suiter's killer yet it sits untouched. Apparently this is very unusual in Baltimore. Citizens usually will come forward with information when that type of money is involved. Detective Suiter's homicide is the only unsolved homicide involving a police officer in Baltimore history. Does any of this sound "random" to you?
I may be getting a little tainted by the news of the world these days, but I'm telling you something isn't right about this murder. None of it makes sense. Even suspicious people in vacant lots don't disarm a police officer with 18 years training (and a partner nearby) and shoot him point blank in the head and escape unseen or just unidentifiable. That rarely happens. Where are the surveillance tapes from surrounding buildings or the patrol cars? There has to be something showing Mr. Suspicious. Also strangely enough he apparently has no fingerprints or DNA either because the murder weapon had neither. Was it cold in Baltimore and the suspect wearing gloves, or was the weapon wiped clean after the shooting but before the shooting was called in?
If you can sense the sarcasm in my writing, you are correct. I am very cynical and suspicious about this homicide and am going to keep digging around as much as any ordinary citizen can do. Baltimore has seen a surge in heroin abuse that has led to an epidemic of sorts - just think about it. These indicted officers were protecting a known heroin trafficker and selling drugs themselves and therefore they fully contributed to the current epidemic of drug addicts walking the streets of Baltimore. Many overdoses may go back to the Shropshire drug traffickers or the drugs officers stole from drug dealer they should have been busting.
These crooked cops pocketed a fortune in undue overtime at the city's expense. There are likely going to be lawsuits, cases reopened or thrown out altogether if any of these officers were involved - this is going to have repercussions that will
likely play out for years and years. What a disgrace. It's hard to imagine having that many dirty cops operating together and not being discovered sooner. And knowing they were chosen to be part of an "elite" gun task force is even more shameful. I hope there is more due diligence, compliance and internal affairs involved with the Baltimore PD in the years to come. We WILL eventually find the truth.
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