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Prosecutors have dropped charges against a
former rookie Homestead police officer who was fired after pointing her department-issued gun at her
boyfriend during an argument at a Super Bowl party.
Officer Jenna Maldonado was terminated on March 1, less than a month after the Feb. 7 incident, according to city officials.
“The case is over, unless and until the
victim or other witnesses come forward, there is nothing we can do,” Miami-Dade
State Attorney’s Office spokesperson Terry Chavez said on Thursday, March 18.
The
case involves Maldonado, 28, and her boyfriend, Steven
Encarnacion.
Encarnacion
originally filed a complaint with Homestead police over the incident, but subsequently,
he did not respond to several subpoenas served on him in the case.
The
complaint taken by Homestead police was not a sworn affidavit, and therefore it
is insufficient to prosecute the case, authorities said.
“Right now, as far as we’re concerned, we
had no choice but to no-action the case,” Chavez said.
Homestead
police have not responded to questions about the statement they took from
Encarnacion, or explained why he was not placed under oath when he gave it.
“The
complaint was unsworn, and you would need to ask the police why they didn’t
take a sworn statement from him [Encarnacion],” Chavez explained.
Maldonado was charged with one count of
aggravated assault with a firearm, a felony, on Feb. 23. The charge could have carried
a three-year minimum mandatory sentence, according to the Miami-Dade State
Attorney's Office. There were several dozen witnesses to the encounter.
Nevertheless, at the request of
prosecutors, Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Reemberto Diaz issued an order
closing the case on Monday, March 15, which effectively dropped all charges
against Maldonado. No other information or details were included in the court
files explaining the decision to close the case.
“The victim supplied an unsworn complaint
to the internal affairs unit at the Homestead Police Department about an
incident that occurred in Metro Dade Police Dept.’s jurisdiction,” Assistant State Attorney Johnette Hardiman wrote in a March 17 deposition form. “Metro Dade
Police Dept. Followed up on the complaint. The victim and witnesses were
subpoenaed for pre trial files and failed to appear, twice.”
Maldonado’s attorney, Sean P. O’Connor,
could not be reached for comment. But according to records on file at the
Miami-Dade Clerk of the Courts Office, a $5,000 bond that Maldonado posted to get
released from jail has also been returned.
Hardiman handled the case for the State
Attorney’s Office’s Public Corruption Division. The decision to close the case
was also approved by Joseph M. Centorino, who heads the Public Corruption
Division.
Homestead City Manager Sergio Purrinos has
not responded to repeated questions about the closing of the case.
Maldonado was a reserve officer with the
Homestead Police Department. Homestead police suspended Maldonado on Feb. 10.
According to the police report, Maldonado
and Encarnacion lived together for roughly the last six years. On Feb. 7 at
about 10:30 p.m., Encarnacion was at a Super Bowl party hosted by a friend in
the unincorporated Redlands area of Miami-Dade County.
Maldonado called Encarnacion, upset that he
had not returned home yet to take care of the children so that she could go out
with her friends. A short time later, she called Encarnacion again, and said she
was on her way to the party, and that she had her gun in her lap.
Encarnacion asked another man to drive him
home to avoid any further problems at the party. But as Encarnacion and the
other man were leaving, Maldonado pulled up next to the vehicle in which the
men were traveling and pointed a gun at Encarnacion. The other man backed up
his vehicle and pulled over to the side of the house.
That’s when Maldonado walked toward them,
pointing her gun at Encarnacion. She then pushed his face as she yelled at him
that she wanted him out of the house. Encarnacion reached for the gun twice and
let it go. He then walked to the back of the house as she followed him,
according to the police report.
As Encarnacion walked away, Maldonado was
still pointing her gun at him, yelling, “We’ll see who’s the duck now,” the
arrest report states.
The report also states that Encarnacion
tried several times to leave the party to avoid the confrontation, by walking
away. But Maldonado, with gun drawn, followed.
Maldonado is the daughter of former
Homestead Mayor Lynda Bell, who was defeated in the 2009 elections. Bell bonded
Maldonado out of jail.
Maldonado was hired into the city’s Reserve
Police Officer Program on Nov. 18, 2009. The program pays a $1 annual salary,
and officers work part-time hours to obtain experience. Reserve officers are
also allowed to work off-duty details for private companies, which pay them
through the police union.
Maldonado was serving a one-year probationary
period in the Homestead Police Department, and she could have been fired at any
time with or without cause.
Purrinos said that the city would take
final action after the criminal investigation was completed.
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Pictured above is
Jenna Maldonado.
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Disgusting!