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"A Big No-No"
Judge sets $1 million bail for prison guard indicted for misconduct
Lynae Chapman
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By Van Smith | Posted 11/4/2009

Lynae Chapman, a 21-year-old correctional officer for the Baltimore City Detention Center (BCDC), is obviously pregnant as she stands before Baltimore City Circuit Court Judge John Prevas on Oct. 27. The father of her unborn child, concedes Chapman's defense attorney Lawrence Rosenberg, is 22-year-old murder suspect Ray Donald Lee, a Black Guerilla Family (BGF) gang member for whom Chapman is accused of procuring a cell phone while he remains jailed pending trial. According to a court reporter's video of the hearing, prosecutor Tonya LaPolla says that Chapman was indicted on Oct. 23, after a search of Lee's cell turned up the cell phone and "numerous letters from" Chapman.

Though Chapman is charged with misdemeanors--obstruction of justice, two counts of misconduct in office, and delivering contraband--LaPolla points out that the misconduct charges are common-law crimes for which there is no maximum penalty, and asks for "at least $500,000 bail." Prevas--saying "cell phones in a correctional setting are a big no-no"--sets it at $1 million, "secured by real-estate only, no corporate surety."

Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services spokesman Mark Vernarelli's statement about the case suggests that the charges against Chapman are part of larger, multi-agency probe. "At this point," Vernarelli writes in an Oct. 26 e-mail sent in response to City Paper's questions, "the case is at a critical juncture, and to comment further would jeopardize other law-enforcement agencies investigations." Though LaPolla told Judge Prevas that Chapman was fired the day she was indicted, Vernarelli says she's been placed on administrative leave.

The issue of prison guards suspected of aiding inmates' criminal conduct has attracted public attention this year. In April, federal indictments against two dozen alleged members of the BGF ("Black-Booked," Feature, Aug. 5) named three correctional officers, who have since pleaded guilty to assisting BGF inmates with their alleged drug-dealing and extortion conspiracy. In early October, a federal judge ruled that inmate Tashma McFadden's lawsuit, which alleges that prison guard Antonia Allison set him up for a beating and stabbing by inmate gang members, should go to a jury. Evidence in the case shows that, nearly three years ago, after Lt. Santiago Morales wrote confidential reports naming 16 guards suspected of gang ties, BCDC warden William Filbert ordered that such reports cease ("Ganging Up," Mobtown Beat, Oct. 21).

During Chapman's bail-review hearing, LaPolla lays out the state's facts about Chapman's conduct. The investigation "began with a homicide," LaPolla explains, that occurred on Monday, June 29--the alleged murder-for-hire of 28-year-old Tavon Walker, who was shot just before 10 a.m. on the 2100 block of Brighton Street, near Carver Vocational-Technical High School. Ray Lee and his 26-year-old co-defendant, Quinard Henson, were indicted for killing Walker in early August.

"Ray Lee drove the shooter to the location, waited, and then drove the shooter away," LaPolla says, recounting how Walker's killing is alleged to have occurred. Chapman, she says, was the registered owner of the vehicle.

When Lee and Henson were brought in on the charges, LaPolla recounts, Lee "began yelling obscenities and threats" at Henson, "regarding whether or not [Henson] had given a statement to police, and he did this in the presence of detectives."

After Lee's cell at the detention center was searched on Sept. 29, turning up the cell phone, LaPolla continues, the phone's log showed calls had been made between Chapman and Lee. A search warrant executed at Chapman's home, in the Wakefield neighborhood near Leakin Park in West Baltimore, turned up a receipt for the Sept. 24 purchase of the phone found in Lee's jail cell. Chapman, LaPolla says, then gave a taped statement to police in which "she admitted she had almost daily contact with Ray Lee while he was incarcerated" and that Lee's "brother purchased the cell phone and gave it to her, and she then took it to another party and paid them to deliver it to Ray Lee, the homicide suspect."

Lee has been charged for possessing the phone, as well as other contraband, as a result of the Sept. 29 search of his cell. Court records in that case say that Christopher Nickel, a detective sergeant with the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services Internal Investigative Unit found "a cellular phone with charger that was secreted beneath a mattress" in Lee's cell. The records indicate that he also found "hand fashioned 'baggies,'" seven containing "loose tobacco" and 16 containing "a green/brown leafy matter" that Nickel recognized to be marijuana. The packaging, the case record continues, is "indicative of an intent to distribute" the tobacco and the marijuana, both of which are deemed contraband in the prison system.

At Chapman's hearing, LaPolla tells Judge Prevas that "this is a very serious case," arguing that the facts "weigh in favor of no bail or a very substantial bail." Chapman, she continues, admitted to arranging the cell phone's delivery to Lee, who is "a known BGF member," just as discovery in the murder case against him was about to divulge whether or not his co-defendant made statements to police.

Chapman's freedom, LaPolla argues, presents a risk "to the safety of any potential witnesses in the homicide case" against Lee.

"[Chapman] has chosen to affiliate herself with a known gangmember, a murder suspect who is an inmate at the detention center where she, until recently, worked--even at the risk of her job and her own freedom," LaPolla concludes. "She will do absolutely anything to assist him."

Rosenberg argues for a "reasonable bail" for Chapman, who he says "is surely not a flight risk," and "I assume not a danger to anyone." Pointing out that she has no prior criminal history, a high-school education, and a 2-year-old child, Rosenberg attempts to paint a picture of Chapman as a naïve young mother who was dating Lee--and pregnant by him--before he was arrested for the murder of Walker. She "cooperated with police" investigating her ties to Lee, Rosenberg says, adding that "her life is potentially ruined. She's shamed herself, shamed everyone in her family."

Prevas, in preparing to rule on the matter, calls Chapman's charges "extremely serious."

"If anything the state said is true, it appears that she would be enabling a dangerous [alleged] killer not only to try to avoid the consequences of the killing for which he's been indicted, but also to attempt to subvert the trial," he says, adding that if Chapman provided Lee with a cell phone or helped him get one, "that is a threat to society's ability to be able to protect itself."

In announcing Chapman's $1 million bail, he says, "If she can't even respect the rules of her job, she's not going to stick around in Baltimore" to answer the charges.

Chapman's arraignment is scheduled for Nov. 20.

Email Van Smith

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Dixon stays, says she "will continue to act in the best interests of the City."

Murder Ink (12/2/2009)

Down for the Count (11/25/2009)
Defendants sentenced in Black Guerrilla Family case

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The Black Book : Feds say prison gang's self-improvement guide is a money-laundering recruitment tool 5/27/2009

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Eric Marcell Brown : Veteran Inmate Dubbed Drug-Dealing, Shot-Calling BGF Propagandist 5/7/2009

Randolph Edison : With hard time already under his belt, "Uncle Rudy" accused as violent BGF leader 5/5/2009

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BGF Offers $10,000 for Hits, Prosecutor Says in Mobtown Beat 4/23/2009

Tags: bgf

Leave a comment

CountyCop

Guest

The screening process for CO's in MD is horrendous. They should get in line with other states like NJ and put them through the the amount of training to bring them up to MPTC standards and be sworn LEO's. They only have a 5 week academy as opposed to the BCPD's 6 month (approx 1400 hr) academy and don't even have to take a polygraph. No wonder why there are thugs like this within their ranks.

Report this comment Posted 11.4.2009 12:32 PM

A law abiding CO

Guest

I agree about the screening process. I am almost ashamed to wear my uniform any more. There are many of us who do our jobs the correct way and these bad apples that keep popping up are making it tough for us to hold our heads up in public. ALL of us are not bad officers, we want to see the law breakers disciplined too. To the County Cop, the amount of training can't fix a lifelong struggle with morals.

Report this comment Posted 11.5.2009 12:32 PM

D-nice

44 comments.

Member since 2/16/2008

The Bail is excessive but Lynae Chapman at 21 lacked the judgement and maturity to see that nationwide the cell phone crackdown was hitting prisons everywhere. This is a case and point where prisoners with nothing to lose drag down these naive women with false hopes and dreams. Ladies wake up!!!!! How many good jobs out here for convicted felons? Do you want to raise a family with the father of your child a criminal. Current and former criminals life expectancy is not good in Baltimore City. They are not going to lower her bail because they are going to make an example out of her and it is sad that her boyfriend has cost her everything and he lost nothing.

Report this comment Posted 11.5.2009 7:01 PM

so-help-me-God

Guest

As a CO, I think change will come when we start dealing with each other in a respectful and professional way. The job is inherently challenging and having useless workplace drama may send the weak willed down a miserable path as this. The job demands camaraderie to a very high level. Yes, I am placing partial responsibility of some unethical behavior in the profession on the workplace atmosphere. Personally I do a good job but I cannot stay in the industry for too long; the ignorance and arrogance is overwhelming especially from my fellow COs. My college degree will serve me better elsewhere.

Report this comment Posted 11.8.2009 6:07 AM

Concerned

Guest

The co,s are helping with crime @ BCDC the higher up,s do not want to believe it.That,s because they are one of them.They need to bring in the FEDS to run this facilities.No public safety what so ever.The co,s turn there heads like they do not see nothing.This s--- has to change.They need to be on the other side of the cells and let someone open them so someone can hurt them like they are doing INMATES.

Report this comment Posted 11.23.2009 8:25 PM

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