Las Vegas Cops Pay Out After Unconstitutional Prostitution Stop
City pays more than $80,000 to woman detained and searched in The Cosmopolitan casino.


The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) will pay more than $80,000 to Chentile Goodman, whom officers falsely accused of "loitering for the purpose of prostitution" and detained for two hours at The Cosmopolitan casino in 2011. Goodman was eventually released without charge, but only after police searched her purse and seized her cell phone. Goodman later filed a lawsuit against the department and the two officers who stopped her, Detective John Segura and Sergeant James Signorello.
U.S. District Judge Miranda Du initially ruled in Goodman's favor. "LVMPD has developed a policy and practice of broad-scale prostitution sweeps in public casinos in a manner that threatens the constitutional rights of the women they target," wrote U.S. District Judge Miranda Du in her 2013 decision.
As evidenced by Goodman's detention and arrest in February 2011, the imprecise nature of Vice's undercover activity results in a chaotic atmosphere that portends serious constitutional violations in cases where officers fail to appropriately assess the suspicion of their targets, all without appropriate checks on individual officers' actions. The Constitution requires more.
Goodman claims she was stopped while walking through The Cosmopolitan with her friend on their way to meet Goodman's boyfriend at the hotel's restaurant. Both women worked at the nearby Spearmint Rhino strip club, and the friend had recently been arrested for prostitution. But Goodman "wore conservative clothing, never stopped walking or attempted to engage any other casino patrons, and perfunctorily rebuffed the undercover officers' advances," noted the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in its decision.
Although the officers knew that Goodman's companion was married to a pimp and was independently suspected of prostitution, "mere propinquity to others independently suspected of criminal activity" does not overcome the right to be free from suspicionless detention…. No particularized facts gave rise to suspicion as to Goodman; she was simply walking with a suspicious person.
Furthermore, Officers Segura and Signorello should have been aware "that the warrantless detention, search, and seizure were unreasonable in the absence of reasonable suspicion of criminal activity," the ppeals court continued. "Goodman's testimony suggests that she was subjected to a long and humiliating detention for no reason beyond intimidating her, and that the officers rifled through her purse without her consent."
The officers, however, say they only held Goodman for a short time and confiscated her cell phone and purse to insure officer safety and the integrity of the investigation. They claim their suspicion of prostitution was reasonable based on the fact that it was 2 a.m., Goodman was known to be a stripper, and she was seen by "a known area for loitering for prostitution," i.e., passing the hotel elevator.
In June 2015, the appeals court partially upheld and partially struck down the district court's ruling, suggesting that the officers' suspicions and actions could be seen as reasonable. "Because the facts here are so thoroughly disputed, and the resolution of the federal claims depends entirely on who is believed," the appeals court stated, remanding the case back to a lower court to go to trial. Facing a trial, the Las Vegas police settled with Goodman for $82,500.
At the time Goodman had been arrested, LVMPD officers "were engaged in a large anti-prostitution sting operation at the Cosmopolitan," according to district court documents. "Several other women were detained in the security room as a result of the sting operation. According to Goodman, other detained women were filing into the room over the course of the evening to the point where she had to relocate her position due to overcrowding. At the end of the evening, a number of these women were ultimately arrested for prostitution-related offenses. At oral argument, Defendants noted that a total of 17 women were detained, and 14 of them were arrested."
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Officers Segura and Signorello should have been aware "that the warrantless detention, search, and seizure were unreasonable in the absence of reasonable suspicion of criminal activity,"
We'll see if this stands up on appeal, as other courts have ruled that, if you are a cop, ignorance of the law is a complete defense.
And realistically, unless they have to pay the fine themselves, why would they even care?
What appeal ?
Vegas offered to settle out of court.
Oh, sure, get your "facts" in my snark.
Well - you got your chocolate in his peanut butter, so.....now you're even.
.... is this a buttsex joke? It seems like a buttsex joke, but I'm not sure I understand.
"The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) will pay "
And by that you mean the taxpayers of Las Vegas will pay, right?
But Goodman "wore conservative clothing, never stopped walking or attempted to engage any other casino patrons, and perfunctorily rebuffed the undercover officers' advances."
Well there you go.
In Vegas?! Sounds mighty suspicious to me.
This! Fuckin' A. THIS.
My brother recently moved to a small town in east Texas. I asked him what the local cops are like.
" Last week the local paper had a front page photo of a stripper swinging on a pole wearing nothing but a cops utility belt and waving his gun around. Before that a cop from the next town got in a fight with a cop from our town and one took the taser away from the other and tased him with his own taser. It is fuckin' Reno 911 all the way man."
lulz
What town Suthenoy?
Inquiring minds need to know. Also where was the other cop from ?
"The other cop was from outta town...."
Palestine and Grapeland. I think the Grapeland cop was tased, but it might be the other way around. I was laughing too hard to pay that much attention. I might also have been drinking.
My brother said he was having lunch with a local guy and the tased cop came in the restaurant. Everyone in the place was whispering and snickering.
I ran into the Sherrif in Crockett. He was a pretty good guy. I liked him. We talked at length about our respective collections of 45 long colts and he had just purchased a new one.
Hopefully, they have their own version of Terry.
It used to be that, "Barney Miller," was the TV show that the cops I knew would point to as 'most realistic.' A few years ago, I asked the question again, and was surprised to here that it was "Reno 911"
$800K for being detained for a couple hours and having the cops go through my phone and purse wallet?
Where do I sign up?
If it saves even ONE life....or even if it DOESN'T....
You have an extra 0. Just so you know.
BONUS!
Hey you are forgetting the embarrassment.
That and the fact that she charges $1000 per hour
confiscated her cell phone and purse to insure officer safety
They're monkeys, trained to blurt out pre-programmed phrases regardless of meaning.
"Oh look! A woman with a cell phone! Obviously a threat to officer safety!"
Why didn't they just shoot her?
Assault cellphone.
No one needs more than 12 texts for their assault cellphone.
http://www.foxnews.com/tech/20.....-case.html
They only took those pictures so they could get up-close shots of the girl's ass in tight shorts. How redonkulous.
"Why didn't they just shoot her?"
It happens.
Wave your hand over a resting alligators head and it will leap up and bite. Wiggle a worm-like shape in front of a Bass and it bites. Present the right stimulus and a simple creature will respond in a reflex fashion. They didn't shoot her because she didn't present the right stimulus.
The problem is that you can't always know ahead of time what that stimulus is.
If you're a 12 year old, it's playing in the park with a toy gun that sets 'em off....so....forewarned if fore-disarmed.
Could be flashing your brights.
Could be selling loose cigarettes.
Could be asking a cop what he's doing in your parking lot.
Could be driving slowly away from a cop.
Could be damn near anything, I guess.
It always comes down to the same thing: failure to obey.
I read that as "resisting alligators head" and immediately started wondering what FL nut punch story did I miss about a cop shooting at gators who were resisting and accidentally hitting bystanders.
I take it as a given that such incidents occur at least a couple times a week.
Cops are terrified of gators and won't go anywhere near them. They just call in animal control people.
Whatever you do don't bark at them, that always sets them off
The cops? The alligators?
Both?
LVMPD needs to end this stop and fist policy.
Stop a fist policy? Why isn't this a porn movie already?
Go on...
"In June 2015, the appeals court partially upheld and partially struck down the district court's ruling, suggesting that the officers' suspicions and actions could be seen as reasonable."
A stripper is in the company of a convicted prostitute, whose husband is a known pimp, and she's in an area that's known for prostitution--and that might constitute reasonable suspicion?
I'm surprised they settled.
I suspect the NVPD decided to rethink their position that elevator lobbies in high-end casinos are "an area that is known for prostitution."
The rest of it boils down to "walking next to someone with a criminal history." And walking next to someone with a criminal history, without more, is a long way from "reasonable suspicion."
Reasonable suspicion must be individualized. The fact that her companion was a prostitute and her companion's husband was a pimp means nothing with respect to Ms. Goodman.
Keep in mind that 'pimp' is defined in most states as anyone living on the proceeds of prostitution, so husbands (and any other family members living with or receiving money from a prostitute) are pretty much always considered pimps.
Kidnapping doesn't have a time length.
*notes for future reference*
Almanian, the sex-offender thread is the other direction.
Honestly, though, I can't really reach a conclusion on this until I see some pix of the alleged victim.
Which Reason does not provide, causing me to have a disappoint.
^^ what RC said
At 40k an hour, I hope she's hot.
I typed her name into google images and a picture of Megan Kelly came up.
From the article:
I assume she is a fairly pretty lady. She is also now apparently a nurse, so I hope she stripped her way through nursing school; it would make me feel better about the money I may have given strippers in my younger days.
This might be her. Can't be too many women named Chentile Goodman studying nursing in Nevada.
Crusty, I'm assuming this is playing nonstop in your van?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMGVMtnxXEw
I am old school and prefer to play this NSFW tune out of my NSFW van.
Click through the first link above, and check the comments.
The bitter cynicism and unremitting hostility to cops remind me of, well, H & R.
Human Race?
City pays more than $80,000 to woman detained and searched in The Cosmopolitan casino.
Was she on her way up to Nick's room?
And Hidden Pizza secretly serves deep dish!
This is why I never wear short skirts.
None of us can, lest it attract Warty.
Sometimes short skirts are culturally appropriate
Speaking of Warty.
It figures you would like that tattoo, you know, being from Jersey.
I do like the tattoo, although I'm not from Jersey. I just live here.
Now HERE'S a man who knows how properly to wear a kilt....
http://www.morrissey-solo.com/.....n-In-Kilts
I stand corrected and apologize for the insult.
Did the individual cops face any consequences for their actions?
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
/sage
Being Vice anti prostitution squad must be the easiest job in the world.
When I'm at the Rio for the WSOP I can't walk 10 feet without being hit on by a hooker.
Were prostitution legal, think how many fewer cops, judges, and lawyers we would need. The more laws on the books, the more cops with their nice pay and benefits, and early retirements.