http://www.omaha.com/article/20091023/NEWS01/710239946Real Joe is good to go.
No more glancing over his shoulder. No more mistaken warrants or arrests. And, he hopes, no more nights, or holidays, in jail.
After The World-Herald reported about an identity theft case that led police to jail Omaha resident Joe Salazar twice — including once for more than two weeks over Christmas and New Year's — authorities this week dropped the criminal charge and warrant that mistakenly named Salazar.
“It shouldn't have happened in the first place,” Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine said of Salazar's jail stints. “We're not going to let it happen again.”
Real Joe hopes so.
In the past 10 months, Salazar, 38, has spent more than 16 days in jail in “one of the worst” identity theft cases that Kleine said he has seen.
Each time, authorities believed they had the Joe Salazar that a judge listed on a bench warrant. Each time, they eventually realized the warrant was for an impostor who had disappeared after using Salazar's identification during a drug arrest in 2002.
“It was pretty bad,” Salazar said. “Pretty ugly. I was worried about getting pulled over and having to go through the whole thing again.”
It turns out, authorities could have prevented the whole ordeal with a few timely fingerprint checks.
A synopsis:
Someone stole Salazar's wallet in late 2001 or early 2002.
In October 2002, Omaha police arrested a man on suspicion of cocaine possession. The man — Faux Joe — gave officers Salazar's driver's license, was fingerprinted and was booked into the Douglas County Jail.
Faux Joe bailed himself out of jail and eventually disappeared. Douglas County District Judge Patricia Lamberty issued a warrant for his arrest.
Six years later, on Christmas Eve 2008, Real Joe was pulled over for speeding near West Point, Neb.
An officer ran his name through police records, discovered a warrant for a Joe Salazar and took him to jail.
Salazar told authorities that he had no warrants. Thurston County sheriff's officials ran his fingerprints in a computer system and determined that, indeed, he wasn't the Joe Salazar listed on the warrant.
However, they said, they had to deliver him to the Douglas County Jail because officials there had a “hold” on him.
Salazar immediately told Douglas County corrections officials they had the wrong guy.
Even so, he sat in the Douglas County Jail for two weeks — over the Christmas and New Year's holidays — after jail officials told him he would have to wait to plead his case to Judge Lamberty, who was on vacation.
No one told Salazar that he could ask to appear before a duty judge who fills in for vacationing judges.
Salazar eventually called an attorney and was released on Jan. 7.
Lamberty then reissued the warrant for Joe Salazar with this caveat: “Please re-verify identification of Joe Salazar due to mistaken arrests.”
That note didn't solve Salazar's problem.
On Oct. 6, Salazar called Omaha police to report a burglary at his home. An officer took the report, then ran Salazar's name in police computers.
Up popped the warrant.
Salazar and his girlfriend explained the mix-up and the holiday jail stay. But staring at a man with the same identification and information that was listed on the warrant, the officer told Salazar he had to take him to jail.
The officer booked Salazar into the Douglas County Jail. However, he didn't run Salazar's fingerprints through a computer system that could have shown he wasn't the wanted man.
“Hopefully, it's a learning experience for everyone so that it doesn't happen again,” said Lt. Darci Tierney, an Omaha Police Department spokeswoman.
Kleine said it became abundantly clear that the warrant was worthless — that authorities had no idea who Faux Joe was. Now investigators can run Faux Joe's fingerprints through a national database to see if they match any known criminal — something that Kleine called a long shot.
Unfortunately, Kleine said, no one brought Salazar's first mistaken jail stay to his attention.
“We're not going to just let this continue to happen to this kid,” Kleine said. “No one should have to go through that.”
Salazar, a forklift operator at an Omaha warehouse, kept the mix-up quiet from most of his friends and co-workers — fearing that they may not believe he was in jail because of an innocent mistake.
Several people told him they were shocked to read about his travails, he said, and he received a lot of sympathy but no solutions — until this week.
Now, he hopes, he can rest easy. No warrants. No worries.
“At first, I couldn't believe it was happening to me,” he said. “Then, I don't know, man, I sort of got used to it.
“I'll just be glad to not have to deal with it anymore.”
Cheers for the attorney's office for dealing with this in an efficient manner. We are lucky the individual hasn't sued; he would have grounds for a great case. Anyway, I don't think he'll be bothered by LEO's for mistaken identities anymore.
I do like the idea of printlady for any future problems. It is now my mission to ensure that this doesn't happen again, hence the need for speedy QC'ing, rapid identification of criminals and victims.
"If we accept human testimony, the testimony of God is surely greater." I John 5:9