Gabriel Ramos

From LEO Ratings
 
(Redirected from Stephanie Miura)
leoratings.com is celebrating our 3rd full year of researching incidents involving law enforcement officers in the U.S. In the last year, we've added 336 incidents, 255 officers, 95 agencies, and 2 states. Please help us by following, liking, commenting, retweeting/sharing, and telling a friend to spread the word!
Facebook logoTwitter logoReddit logo

Service Record

Elk Grove California Police Department

Rank Sergeant[1]
Salary $215,892 (2019)[2]
Last Known Status Active

Incident Reports

2017 Search of Jared Hara and Stephanie Miura

On September 26, 2017, Ramos and Officer Rodjard Daguman assisted in Officer Rene Olague's investigation into a motorcycle crash. The officers placed Hara in handcuffs and detained his girlfriend, Miura. The officers then entered the couple's house without consent and performed a search. Hara and Miura were released and no charges were filed.[3]

Hara and Muira filed a complaint with the department.[3]

Response Timeline

On July 2, 2018, the complaint of misconduct was sustained, which the department defines as having "sufficient evidence to establish that the act occurred and that it constituted misconduct". [3]

On October 3, 2018, Hara and Miura sued the three officers for entering the house without a warrant and probable cause, in violation of their Fourth Amendment rights.[3][4]

On December 12, 2018, the City Council voted to defend the lawsuit rather than settle.[3]

On December 27, 2018, court records show that the case was settled.

2021 Sexual Assault

On April 21, 2021, Ramos was one of several officers who responded to a woman's call about a theft in progress. After officers took the woman's statement, Ramos asked for her phone number so he could "follow up" with her.[5]

Ramos called the woman repeatedly, asking personal questions and finally requesting sex. When she initially refused, Ramos threatened her son, after which she complied.[5]

After Ramos left, the woman called the police, who took her to the hospital and collected DNA samples.[5]

Response Timeline

On December 10, 2021, the woman filed a lawsuit for violation of her rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, and other state charges.[5][1]

References


Recent articles: Joshua Nahulu, Shevoy Brown, Thomas Mascia, Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas (2019), Gerald Goines

To check for incidents in your area, please use the search page or try a random incident.