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		<title>Police received 3 pizzas as payoff admits he shot himself</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/6/police-received-3-pizzas-as-payoff-admits-he.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Police received 3 pizzas as payoff admits he shot himself</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/6/police-received-3-pizzas-as-payoff-admits-he.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jun 2010 01:01:18 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>2 years later, ex-cop admits story of shooting was a lie<br /><br />Fired shot into his vest to stir Gowanda search<br /><br />Stephen T. WATSON<br /><br />BUFFALO NEWS<br /><br />NEWS STAFF REPORTER<br /><br />June 09, 2010, 12:30 am<br /><br />A disgraced former Gowanda police officer has admitted that he lied two years ago when he claimed that a gunman shot him, a disclosure that apparently settles one of the area s more perplexing police shooting cases, prosecutors said Tuesday.<br /><br />Jason D. Miller confessed that he staged the 2008 incident by firing a shot into his bulletproof vest as it hung from a tree and hiding the weapon before making his false call, Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III told The Buffalo News.<br /><br />Miller made the admission to investigators from Sedita s office as part of a plea deal in a case that accused Miller of covering up a traffic violation in exchange for free pizza.<br /><br />From what I know about this case, it makes a certain amount of sense, Sedita said of Miller s statement. It makes a heck of a lot more sense than the story he s been sticking to since September 2008.<br /><br />Members of the Gowanda police force, the State Police and other law enforcement agencies have long had suspicions about the incident, which occurred Sept. 26, 2008.<br /><br />Miller, now 36 and a North Collins resident, was a part-time Gowanda officer at the time.<br /><br />He initially told police that he had been driving on East Hill Street in the village when a man walking on the side of the road threw something at his patrol car, Gowanda police said.<br /><br />Miller said he got out of his car and chased the man, who Miller said climbed a steep incline and fired two shots at the officer from a plateau. One of the bullets hit Miller in his vest, according to his account.<br /><br />The call by Miller drew a heavy law enforcement response, with state troopers and Gowanda police leading an intensive investigation into the shooting.<br /><br />Miller stayed on the Gowanda police force until last July, when he was placed on administrative leave because of his handling of a June 4, 2009, traffic stop.<br /><br />Officials say Miller arrested the driver for having a suspended license, filled out the required paperwork but never filed those documents with the court. He did this in exchange for three free pizzas provided by the driver, authorities said.<br /><br />Miller resigned from the force in September and, on the same day, resigned as an investigator with the Cattaraugus County district attorney s office.<br /><br />In May, Miller pleaded guilty to official misconduct, a deal that required him to pay back $600 to the Gowanda Police Benevolent Association and reveal what happened in the shooting.<br /><br />Sedita s office handled Miller s prosecution because of his former employment with the Cattaraugus County office.<br /><br />In his first session with Sedita s investigators, Miller acknowledged that the shooting didn t happen the way he reported it, but he did not elaborate.<br /><br />This didn t satisfy Sedita, who said he directed Chief Investigator John M. Cleary Jr. and Investigator Mark R. Stambach to interview Miller again.<br /><br />The investigators talked with Miller on Monday at the office of his lawyer, Daniel J. Henry Jr. There, Miller admitted that he fired a bullet into his vest as it hung on a tree, put the vest back on, buried the weapon and reported that he had been been shot and needed backup, Sedita said.<br /><br />Miller said he got nervous and returned about a week later to dig up the gun, which he dismantled before scattering the pieces throughout Gowanda.<br /><br />Monday, Miller contended that he always intended to eventually tell the truth.<br /><br />He did say he was going to come clean to the authorities, but it was too embarrassing, Sedita said.<br /><br />The two investigators repeatedly asked Miller why he had staged the shooting.<br /><br />He said, I don t know, said Sedita, who speculated that Miller might have wanted to present himself as a hero or victim to his fellow officers.<br /><br />Sedita said that Miller was not promised immunity for his admissions in the shooting and that he has the discretion to charge him with reporting a false incident, a Class Bmisdemeanor. But Sedita noted that Miller already has pleaded guilty to official misconduct, a Class A misdemeanor, and now has cooperated with investigators.<br /><br />Henry declined to comment on the details of his client s admission.<br /><br />Miller s confession is gratifying to Gowanda Police Chief Joseph J. Alessi, who said law enforcement officials had worried for two years that a cop shooter may be on the loose. I don t understand his thinking, Alessi said. It s very disheartening that he threw away a promising career in law enforcement, . . . and for what?<br /><br />Alessi thanked the State Police, Sedita s office and the Erie and Cattaraugus County sheriff s offices for their work on the case.<br /><br />He said he and a number of police officers plan to attend Miller s sentencing, originally set for Thursday in Collins Town Court but now postponed.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/6/police-received-3-pizzas-as-payoff-admits-he.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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