Posts Tagged Manoogian Mansion

Retired Police Officer Says Cox Was At Party

Explosive new details have surfaced about the alleged party involving Kwame Kilpatrick and murdered exotic dancer Tamara Greene.  Sworn testimony from Retired Detroit Police officer Sandy Cardenas says officers responding to 911 calls told her that Mike Cox was actually at the party. Cox, who would later call it an “urban legend,” denied the allegation.

Transcripts reveal a stunning exchange between lawyers and the former officer and 911 operator:

“Who did they tell you…who did they say was in the house?” an attorney asked Cardenas at the deposition.

“Mike Cox was in the house,” answered Cardenas.

“Did more than one person tell you who was in the house…at least in terms of the mayor and Mike Cox?” asked the attorney.

“Yes, several officers did,” Cardenas responded.

Cardenas was a 911 operator in 2002 and sent police to the Detroit mansion to investigate a number of disturbance calls in the fall of 2002. 

In 2003, Attorney General Mike Cox announced his own investigation only to abruptly shut down the investigation a few days later. According to a Michigan State Police investigator Cox shut down the investigation without fully interviewing key participants and potential witnesses.

Cox recently said that “Most viewers out there probably think some sort of party happened. But the reality as a prosecutor, I need to produce someone who can come in a courtroom and say, ‘I was there and this is what happened,’ who can raise their right hand and do that.” 

We don’t disagree with that idea, but that means actually interviewing potential witnesses. So why didn’t Mike Cox interview Officer Cardenas in his investigation?

 Maybe he knew what she would say. “Mike Cox was in the house.”

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Scandal Involving Cox Grows

Several affidavits filed this week directly contradict statements by Attorney General Mike Cox regarding an alleged party at the home of former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick.

In 2002, it was widely reported that a party at Manoogian Mansion featuring  27 year-old exotic dancer Tamara “Strawberry” Greene abruptly ended when the mayor’s wife returned home and began assaulting Greene. Greene was later shot to death.

Manoogian Mansion

After a brief investigation in 2003, Cox dismissed accounts of the party as “urban legend.” Yet in a sworn affidavit, former 911 dispatcher Sandy Cardenas, says she sent police to the Detroit mansion to investigate a number of disturbance calls one fall night in 2002.  Cardenas states that within hours of these calls, 911 tapes were removed by a Detroit police officer from internal affairs. “You don’t take tapes out… unless they don’t want people to know something,” Cardenas told The Detroit News. In her affidavit, Cardenas further testified that a sergeant in the police force told her that the mayor’s wife Carlita showed up at the party and an assault took place.

Former police Sgt. Odell Godbold testified that in the course of his investigation of Greene’s murder, he heard from several sources (including an active duty Detroit police officer and part-time stripper) that a party did occur on the night in question and that she, Greene and another stripper were in attendance. Godbold said his superior officers were aware of his findings and that he was ordered to turn over the Greene homicide file in July 2005.  A few weeks later Godbold’s unit was disbanded overnight.  He arrived at work to find the room cleared out and all computers confiscated.  Godbold was reassigned and forced into early retirement a short time later.

(Copies of both Cardenas’ and Godbold’s full testimony is available here.)

In 2003, Attorney General Mike Cox announced his own investigation into whether the party ever occurred.  Cox meet privately with Mayor Kilpatrick without so much as a court reporter, never interviewed Carlita Kilpatrick, and shortly after his investigation began, and was unable to interview Greene because she had recently been murdered. After only five weeks Cox ended his investigation saying the party was an “urban legend.”

Investigator Mark Krebs, a detective with the Michigan State Police, testified that Cox ended the investigation prematurely.  Krebs said Cox “stymied” them by shutting the investigation down without fully interviewing key participants.

Why did Attorney General Mike Cox shut down his investigation into the party so quickly? Did the AG just colossally botch this case or are there reasons involved here that have yet to come to light?

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