Houston Officials Trusted a Dishonest Drug Cop for Decades Before His Lies Killed 2 People
But for a disastrous raid, narcotics officer Gerald Goines would have been free to continue framing people he thought were guilty.

Gerald Goines, the former Houston narcotics officer who instigated a January 2019 drug raid that killed a middle-aged couple he falsely accused of selling heroin, was shot in the face after he and his colleagues broke into the house where Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas lived and died. When an internal investigator interviewed him at the hospital after the raid, Goines could not speak because his jaw was wired shut. Instead, prosecutors explained during Goines' murder trial this week, he wrote down his answers.
Sgt. Richard Bass asked Goines the name of the confidential informant who, according to the search warrant affidavit that Goines filed the day of the raid, had bought heroin from a middle-aged white man at 7815 Harding Street the evening before. "There was no confidential informant," Goines wrote. "I made the purchase by myself." There was an obvious problem with that backup explanation: At the time of the purported heroin purchase, Bass told the jury, Goines was eating dinner at Taste of Texas, a restaurant more than 20 miles away.
Prosecutors showed jurors a picture of Goines at the restaurant. "Investigators also found a receipt in an HPD [Houston Police Department] vehicle from the restaurant at the time Goines was seen on camera," KTRK, the ABC affiliate in Houston, reports. "They also found surveillance video from a neighbor showing Goines never went to Harding Street the day before the raid."
Since defense attorney Nicole DeBorde conceded during her opening statement that Goines lied in his affidavit and at the hospital, this evidence might seem unnecessary. But the quick unraveling of Goines' story suggests the "pattern of deceit" that local prosecutors discovered when they started reexamining his drug cases could have been detected much sooner if anyone had been paying attention.
Since the Harding Street raid, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has overturned at least 22 convictions that were based on Goines' plainly unreliable word. Those cases, like this one, featured imaginary drug purchases that Goines used to obtain search warrants, sometimes citing the same confidential informant. For years, drug defendants had complained that Goines was framing them, but no one took them seriously.
Goines' dishonesty went beyond fictional transactions. His search warrant applications frequently described guns that were never found. Over 12 years, The Houston Chronicle reported, Goines obtained nearly 100 no-knock warrants, almost always claiming that informants had seen firearms in the homes he wanted to search. But he reported recovering guns only once—a suspicious pattern that no one seems to have noticed.
When Goines applied for a no-knock warrant to search Tuttle and Nicholas' home, he likewise described a nonexistent gun. He said his informant had seen a 9mm semi-automatic pistol at 7815 Harding Street, but there was no such weapon at the house. Goines cited that imaginary gun to bolster his argument for entering the home "without first knocking and announcing the presence and purpose of officers executing the warrant." Since "a weapon was observed during the narcotic investigation," he said, "such knocking and announcing would be dangerous."
Former municipal judge Gordon G. Marcum II, who approved the warrant, testified that he would not have done so if he had known Goines was lying about the heroin purchase. But that is not exactly reassuring.
Marcum noted that it was unusual for an officer to seek such a warrant from a municipal judge rather than a district court. He said he approved the warrant after about 20 minutes. But Marcum overlooked some obvious red flags.*
Although Goines claimed he had been investigating drug activity at Tuttle and Nicholas' home for two weeks, he had not bothered to find out who lived there. He described the alleged heroin dealer as "a white male, whose name is unknown."
At the hospital after the raid, Goines said: "I was looking to buy from a female. I bought from the male. I had info regarding people at the residence. I'm not sure if the guy I bought from was male listed in info."
That "info" came from a neighbor, Patricia Garcia, who called 911 to report that her daughter was using heroin at 7815 Harding Street. She alleged that Tuttle and Nicholas were armed and dangerous drug dealers. But police eventually discovered that Garcia, who did not even have a daughter, had made the whole thing up. In March 2021, she pleaded guilty to federal charges based on her fraudulent 911 calls, and she was later sentenced to 40 months in prison.
Officers Richard Morales and Nicole Blankenship-Reeves were charged with following up on Garcia's tip. Blankenship-Reeves "visited the home and found no sign of criminal activity," The Houston Chronicle reports. Lt. Marsha Todd, who was dating Blankenship-Reeves, nevertheless urged her girlfriend to "write down her intel about the house and pass it to her." Based on an unverified tip that would prove to be nothing but the lies of a neighbor with a grudge against Nicholas, Todd left a "handwritten memo" for Goines, who was supposed to investigate the matter further.
It seems clear that Goines did not do that, and the fact that he did not even know the name of the "white male" who had supposedly sold heroin to a confidential informant was an obvious clue for Marcum that the basis for the warrant was shaky. Another clue: In his affidavit, Goines said he had "advised" his informant that "narcotics were being sold and stored" at the house, but he cited no evidence of that. It does not look like Marcum, who by his account devoted 20 minutes to reading the affidavit and approving the warrant, tried to assess the thoroughness of Goines' purported investigation.
Goines' fellow officers also had reason to doubt that he knew much of anything about the people whose home they were about to invade. Although he "briefed a tactical team that the targets' home did not have a dog," the Chronicle reports, Morales "testified that he told Goines that was not true." Morales said Tuttle and Nicholas "had a dog that another officer had seen in the front yard weeks earlier."
The couple actually had two dogs, one of which an officer killed with a shotgun immediately after Goines and his colleagues broke into the house. That detail proved to be crucial, since the cops' opening shot helped precipitate an exchange of gunfire that killed the homeowners while injuring Goines and three other officers.
According to prosecutors, Tuttle was napping in a bedroom when the cops broke down the door and killed his dog. "Mr. Tuttle reacted as anybody would, any normal person, hearing guns ring out in their house, their doors blown in, his wife on the couch, the dog is dead in the living room," Harris County Assistant District Attorney Keaton Forcht told the jury on Monday. "He grabs his pistol and comes storming out."
By contrast, Art Acevedo, then Houston's police chief, put the blame for the violence squarely on Tuttle and Nicholas, whom he described as dangerous criminals who were operating a locally notorious "drug house" where police had "actually bought black-tar heroin." Acevedo hailed the cops—Goines especially—as "heroes" and claimed that neighbors were grateful to the officers for their brave intervention.
The evidence of Goines' deceit eventually forced Acevedo to revise that account. But he continued to describe the other officers as "heroes" and even insisted they "had probable cause to be there." That claim is blatantly inconsistent with the state's evidence against Goines and the federal indictment that charges him with deadly Fourth Amendment violations.
The cops plainly did not have "probable cause to be there," and that fact should have been apparent to Marcum if he had thoroughly questioned Goines. Yet if the raid had not gone horribly wrong, most people would have continued to believe the story that Acevedo initially told. If Goines had not been shot during the police assault on Tuttle and Nicholas's home, he could have planted evidence to validate his false claims, and he would have been free to continue framing people he thought were guilty.
When he resigned in disgrace after the Harding Street raid, Goines had been a Houston police officer for more than three decades. But despite allegations of perjury and a history of making claims that could not be independently verified, no one in a position of authority questioned his honesty until it was too late.
[*This post has been revised to focus on the questions raised by Goines' affidavit rather than the amount of time that Marcum spent on it.]
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1) Go back and reevaluate every arrest / report / and affidavit, mark it as untrustworthy, and give everyone involved a new trial at no cost to them.
2) Police dept should be forced to admit guilt for legal precedent sake in addition to whatever happens to Goines.
3) Put laws on the books to punish this going forward to bypass QI claims before they even come up.
I completely agree. I also want a pony.
This will create havoc with anything that man has touched during his career.
Necessarily so. 30 years of service could mean 30 years of lies putting people behind bars falsely. The headache / nightmare of re-examining every single case needs to be hammered into police departments so nobody takes it lightly. Most of our laws aren't because something was the right thing to do; most of them are after-the-fact preventive efforts to never have to deal with a subject/incident again in the future.
George Floyd was one of them.
Sullum still ignores the fact that their is no evidence that Tuttle fired a shot or even had a gun in his hand.
At the end of the day - I'm not sure that this is relevant.
The cop's behavior was all fucked up in massive ways, that they also then shot an unarmed man . . . I'm not sure it makes a difference here.
Sure it makes a difference! If Goines gets let off of the felony murder charge because the defense can convince the jury of a false narrative that Tuttle opened fire on them - or even just had a gun in his hand - it's a miscarriage of justice.
At the trial, sure. In fact, I wonder why the prosecution hasn't brought this up when pushing the felony murder charge - dude couldn't have 'brought it upon himself' if he was unarmed.
But its not relevant to the article, IMO. Even if Tuttle did have a gun, he was completely justified in using it in that situation.
You know as well as I do how well that works. How many times have we heard, “I feared for my life! I thought he had a gun!” That won’t work this time because of all the legal scrutiny focused on this trial, but they better by god produce the .357 revolver they claim Tuttle had at the scene during the raid if they want to get Goines off.
Sullum is still looking for evidence George Zimmerman ambushed an innocent Black child in an act of racist criminal homicide.
" the cops' opening shot helped precipitate an exchange of gunfire that killed the homeowners while injuring Goines and three other officers."
Sullum, you STILL don't have it right even now! There was no pistol corresponding to the weapon the official narrative listed in the evidence collected at the scene. The independent forensics team found NO evidence of any shots fired towards the front of the house where the police entered and were shot from the position where Tuttle supposedly shot them. And the post-mortem report mentioned no significant gunpowder residue on Tuttle where there almost certainly would have been some if he had fired four rounds from a revolver! Repeating the lying self-serving narrative from corrupt and incompetent officials does not make you look very intelligent here!
"Harris County Assistant District Attorney Keaton Forcht told the jury on Monday. "He grabs his pistol and comes storming out.""
Unless the DA produces the pistol in question, which was not listed in the evidence inventory from the scene and made public by the police investigation at the time, I do not hold out much hope for justice - even justice delayed by five years - in this case. It's almost as if the prosecutors are sabotaging their own prosecution and don't really WANT Goines to be found guilty. By conceding the defense narrative right from the start, they leave the door wide open for an "intervening cause" of Tuttle's death.
Prosecutors sabotaging their case against a cop? Oh, no, that could never happen!
How could this happen in a blue county?
Never assume that malice is the explanation when incompetence could have explained the failure.
That would be too The Big Easy.
My fear is that they found the revolver in the bedside stand untouched - just where the family said he kept it - realized that they had botched the raid and that the presence of an unfired pistol would undermine any later narratives they concocted; fired the pistol twice into the wall being unaware that the sound of two shots being fired from inside the house a half hour after the suspects were dead was being recorded; and then made the pistol "disappear" when they subsequently realized that two expended rounds would not explain the four wounded raiders their narrative would have to cover.
But despite allegations of perjury and a history of making claims that could not be independently verified, no one in a position of authority questioned his honesty until it was too late.
They don’t care. That’s the thing. They really don’t care. Priority number one is backing the blue. It’s also priorities two and three. Officer safety comes in fourth, with zero tolerance for noncompliance wrapping up the top five.
Backing the blue means not interfering when another cop had a bad day and takes it out on an innocent member of the public. Backing the blue means looking the other way when an officer plants evidence. Backing the blue means working together to get their lies straight before filling out reports and testilying in court.
They don’t care. Get that through your head and then it will all make sense. That goes for prosecutors and judges as well.
They only care when something happens that they just can't defend, and that something makes headline news. Otherwise they just sweep it under the rug.
But you’re totally cool when they shoot an unarmed woman in the back.
Kill yourself you dumb fagg.
Are you speaking to sarcasmic?
Yes
He's one of the mean girls clique that goes around telling lies about certain people they don't like in hopes that people who don't know better will believe the lies and hate the person.
For me middle school was hell. For them it was a blueprint for life.
WTF are you babbling about, moron?
Speaking as a retired police officer and former deputy probation officer, you are correct.
It's the LEO version of the "noble lie". In their mind, they have to support each other in their lies because the alternative is "anarchy in the streets".
Or they just want to make money robbing people.
You wrote this exact same article two days ago.
Former municipal judge Gordon G. Marcum II, who approved the warrant, testified that he would not have done so if he had known Goines was lying about the heroin purchase. But that is not exactly reassuring.
Why not?
The cops plainly did not have "probable cause to be there," and that fact should have been apparent to Marcum if he had thoroughly questioned Goines.
Well, careful there. The cops who were along for the raid had no way of knowing that Goines falsified details in order to get the warrant. As far as they knew it was entirely valid, it was signed by a judge, and they followed proper procedures reasonably believing that they DID have probable cause to be there.
The fact that they were duped by Goines doesn't change that. Yes, it would have made any evidence collected for use in charging the suspects garbage - but that doesn't make the cops' conduct wrongful. Just Goines'. Which was Acevedo's point.
In fact, one of them is to be especially commended for his actions in shooting that dog. Thank you officer, for your service to the public! One less pitbull is always a good thing. He is 100% the hero Acevedo lauded him as.
"He grabs his pistol and comes storming out."
That's really going to be the lynchpin of all this, I think. Like I said the other day, I think you'll be hard pressed to find a Texas jury that wouldn't agree that's self-defense - but if the guys with the drugs and unrestrained killer animal in their house (the latter of which was a surprise to the breaching officers, because they'd been led to believe there was no excessively violent dogfighting breed there) started blasting after realizing that it was the cops doing a raid, that could be problematic for them. Assuming the defense can sell it to the jury.
Which is a big if, to be sure.
Just for completeness, here is a neat summary of the actual facts in the case listed in the lawsuit filed against the city of Houston by Tuttle's uncle:
https://reason.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/7726-Tuttle-lawsuit.pdf
Of the alleged facts.
That's a complaint. It's heavily slanted towards the ACABs. Which is why Reason loves them so much.
Not quite. Although it includes everything including possible alternatives to the allegations that might eventually be disproved by new facts the HPD has refused to release to the plaintiffs, it also includes a number of indisputable facts such as DNA testing on a bullet the official forensics team left behind and the findings of the autopsies and the trajectories of bullets fired from outside the house.
Odd that they'd report on the Complaint but not the Discovery then, isn't it.
I still have not tracked down the final report from independent forensic expert Michael Maloney, but this interview summarizes his findings and the stonewalling from HPD.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iJ72R0Hhgs
It seems that the 'grabs his pistol and comes storming out' appeals to Jacob because it backs up the self defense narrative. But it looks like the cops stormed in, shot the dog, two unarmed people and each other. And very possibly executed the still breathing witness, Tuttle, a half hour later. If the 112 pound Tuttle with a leg in a brace and a bandaged arm did manage to get off four shots good on him. But I find the story unconvincing.
And very possibly executed the still breathing witness
Nonsense like this is why nobody takes Losertarians seriously.
Too much television, not enough reality.
I don't know Texas law, and there is no accounting for juries, but you generally don't get to claim self-defense when you unlawfully created the situation that required your self-defense actions. If you are robbing someone and they draw on you and then you shoot them, it's murder, not self-defense.
That's the way it is in my state. You can't be the initial aggressor and then claim self defense.
Cop with dick smaller than AT's shoots dog belonging io innocent man. Film at 11.
Acevedo's a lying cunt.
There's no evidence they were drug dealers. The police opened fire on the people in the house. There's no valid evidence the people in the house ever fired a weapon, though the state of Texas would sure like to pretend there is.
Every thug on that SWAT team should be facing murder charges.
Language.
According to the ACAB narrative, sure. But we DO know that drugs WERE found in that house. We DO know that they had a killer dog on site that needed/deserved immediate termination. We DO know that 5-0 breached on a signed warrant.
The only real crime here on the part of the cops seems to be Goines falsifying the PC that he used to obtain the warrant. Whether or not the drug criminals came out blasting will serve as an effective self-defense on a no-knock argument is up to a Texas jury. And I've said repeatedly that it likely will.
Reason keeps trying to make more of this than there is. Because they hate cops. But really, the only objectionable thing in this entire debacle is the falsifying of the PC to obtain the warrant.
Better for all if there are no warrants allowing unannounced entry, all warrants are served by uniformed officers in daylight, and all judges should have to accompany the officers serving the warrant to assure all the facts presented were correct.
A few bad guys might get away with something, but that happens anyway.
I just watched Civil War. Holy crap was that movie bad. It was like a Jr. High film project that got 75 million in funding.
I agree that generally it was mediocre but realistically speaking we would be fools to assume our country couldn’t devolve into a cluster fuck of domestic warfare.
I wonder if someone could make a compelling move about that.
Funny how mystical rednecks hated that but felt glorified by Der Sieg des Glauben.
Just lookit the photo of the Jesus Caucus snitch. He's OBVIOUSLY getting Revelations straight from God, Jesus and the DEA.
Lt. Marsha Todd, who was dating Blankenship-Reeves, nevertheless urged her girlfriend to "write down her intel about the house and pass it to her." Based on an unverified tip that would prove to be nothing but the lies of a neighbor with a grudge against Nicholas, Todd left a "handwritten memo" for Goines, who was supposed to investigate the matter further.
It sounds to me like it could be worth investigating Todd to see how many times she routed cases with shaky foundations to Goines in particular, likely knowing his methods.
Probably impossible to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, but worth doing anyway as a deterrent from pulling that kind of nonsense again.
Bad cops, bad police chiefs, and lazy judges killed these two people and ruined countless other lives. But yeah, don't mess with Texas!
I think the implication that the Judge somehow failed/was lazy is incorrect (or isn't verifiable with the facts given). Judges routinely sign warrants that don't take 20 minutes to review. Judges don't (and aren't allowed) to cross examine the affiant - they have to find probable cause based on the four corners of the warrant application. Judges CAN'T cross-examine the officer or ask clarifying questions. The PC is in the document, or it isn't. The vast majority of warrants don't take 20 minutes to review, so long as you know what you are reading/looking for in a given type of warrant request. This is a well-written article overall, and it's important for this sort of story to be put in front of the public - but I think the "lazy Judge" angle isn't supported. To be fair, I get why it would seem that way if someone didn't fully understand the process.