Negro ex-cop jimmies bracelet, charged with rapes

Brewski

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Ex-officer accused in rapes may have tampered with ankle monitor

Alleged kidnap rapist, Ronnie w. Jackson
ktrk_042205_anklestory.jpg


A former deputy constable and police officer who runs his own security business is accused of the kidnap and sexual assault of a teenage girl and the rape of another woman.

Ronnie Wayne Jackson was a Fort Bend Precinct 2 deputy constable and a Kendleton police captain. But right now he's a Harris county inmate.

This story begins with the March 17th arrest of Ronnie Wayne Jackson. Police charged the former police captain with sexual assault and aggravated kidnapping. They say he picked a woman up in February

in the 2800 block of Little York and later raped her. An Eyewitness News search found Jackson faces one other sexual assault c
harge for an April 2004 alleged rape of a 15-year-old girl in the 3300 block of Yellowstone, and also an active investigation of into a supposed attack of a 14-year-old girl.

Court documents say showed that girl a badge, identified himself as a police officer and told her she was truant. He reportedly told her she had to get into the back of his vehicle. The girl told authorities she did not consent to the alleged sexual assault.

The catch to all this is at the time of this March 2005 alleged attack, Jackson was wearing an ankle bracelet while out of federal custody on bond. He's been indicted for lying to the FBI when it investigated another allegation in 1997 that he raped a woman while he was a captain of the Kendleton Police Department.

Now authorities are trying to sort things out. Jackson told them he was home when he supposedly attacke
d th
e 14-year-old. Court documents say Jackson's bracelet recorded him at home the day of the alleged attack on the teen. But we found out
he was really in the Harris County jail cell on other charges.

Now authorities believe Jackson either modified the ankle monitor or set up a false radio signal to show he was home when he really wasn't. David Adler is Jackson's attorney on the federal case.

"I'd like to see what leads the officers or investigators to make those claims," said Adler.

Jackson's brother-in-law, Ronald Hamilton, said, "I don't believe (Jackson) did anything of that sort (that he's accused of.) We live in the United States of America and everyone here is presumed innocent until proven guilty."</span>

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<span style=\'color:blue\'>Sorry, that rule doesn't apply to niggers, Ronald!!!</b
>

:angry:
 
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