Tale of the 911 tape

August 30, 2011

911 Recording Refutes San Luis Obispo Police Officer’s Claims

EDITORS NOTE: See The blue code, a copy of the 911 tape, Scott Cramer’s statement to police, and a listing of officer Cramer’s statement compared with the 911 tape at the bottom of this story.

By KAREN VELIE

An Atascadero woman screams, “stop, stop, please send someone,” to the 911 operator.

In the next room, caller Sarah Summers’ developmentally disabled stepson grapples with another man who has followed him to his father’s home after the stepson passed him on the road. Her 74-year-old husband James, undergoing chemotherapy, has just seen his son smash through the front storm door with a stranger.

The man wrestling with Summers’ stepson is off-duty San Luis Obispo Police Officer Scott Cramer.

Cramer would tell Atascadero police officers that he was not fighting with Summers, 50, and that he was maintaining his calm as he dealt with an aggressor.

Summers’ stepson, Scott, tells a different story, and a recently released 911 tape supports the disabled man’s account of the March 2010 altercation.

“Upon listening to the tape, you can tell this is an outraged irate driver, who is trespassing in an innocent family’s’ home, and dispensing his own variety of curbside instant justice, said Summers’ attorney James McKiernan who has filed suit against Cramer and the city of San Luis Obispo. “How does an officer unleash it on a hapless disabled individual after all of those years of training?”

Scott Summers T-shirt was torn and bloodied during the altercation. Blood stains are still visible even though the shirt had been laundered.

Excerpts from the 911 tape support Summers’ account and call into question Cramer’s statement that he “spoke calmly” (Currently, a forensic sound studio technician is working to clarify some of the muffled statements on the 911 tape.)

Scott Summers: “Get your hands off me. Stop it. Get your hands off me.”

Scott Summers: “You know what, you are going to jail. I don’t care who you are.”

Cramer: “Oh, Screw you?

Scott Summers: “No, fuck you.”

Cramer: “Fuck you back. I can do whatever…”

Scott Summers: I want to see your badge.

Sarah Summers: “Yeah, I don’t know what happened prior to that it sound like some antagonizing is going on the road and…”

Operator: “So it sounds like – it’s like a road rage kind of thing.”

Sarah Summers: “It was – It was road rage kind of stuff and as when one thing led to another, and the next thing, you know, the guy comes down here to settle it out.”

On March 18, 2010, Scott Summers, who lives in a disabled housing facility, was driving an older model BMW he was loaned by the auto shop where his truck was being repaired.

Summers passed Cramer’s red truck on Old Morro Road East, a winding rural street. Cramer was driving with his 8-year-old. According to the lawsuit filed over the incident, Cramer began racing up to Summers’ bumper, falling back, and revving up and again getting bumper to bumper.

Summers made it to his parent’s house. A short time later, Cramer showed up.

Cramer said it was his son who pointed out Summers’ car, parked in front of a home. Cramer said he had not expected to find the driver of the car when he drove through the neighborhood looking for the vehicle.

But, several neighbors said Cramer had canvassed the neighborhood, going door to door asking about the BMW that passed him, Summers said.

Cramer came down the driveway to the house. Summers said he stepped outside, onto his parents’ porch, to find out what the man wanted.

Cramer allegedly began yelling at Summers, Summers said.

“He yelled, ‘You think you are someone special because you drive a BMW?’ ” Summers said.

Before he could answer, Summers said, Cramer punched him three times in the Adam’s apple, once in the side and than threw him through a closed storm door breaking out the glass and tearing the door from its hinges.

The 911 tape clearly shows Cramer was the aggressor, McKiernan said.

Cramer, though, told Atascadero police he was calm and that Summers was the aggressor. Cramer said Summers called him “a pussy,” pushed him and attempted to strike him.

Cramer also said in his statement, that after he noticed a woman in the house was on the phone, “I calmly explained to her that I was not fighting and I would release him as soon as he quit trying to kick me and fight with me.”

He then said he identified himself to Sarah Summers as a police officer and gave his address to her before leaving. The statements are not heard on the 911 tape.

The tape does have Cramer apologizing to Sarah Summers for his actions.

Scott Summers’ lawyer, McKiernan named both the city of San Luis Obispo and Cramer in a lawsuit he filed seeking $500,000 in damages.

“Our primary position is Scott Cramer was acting under color of law assaulting this man and explaining he is a police officer,” McKiernan said. “We have received two calls that cast suspicion that this is not the first time this has happened.”

The suit contends that the city of San Luis Obispo has a duty to hire, train and supervise officers to avoid the infliction of harm and excessive force on citizens. The police department, known for bringing ultimate fighting champion Chuck Liddel into the department to teach officers street-fighting techniques, is accused of not training and supervising officers in a fashion as to avoid harm and the use of excess force upon the public.

San Luis Obispo Superior Court Judge Jac Crawford has scheduled a case management hearing on Nov. 30.

 

The blue code

Public records regarding this incident have been kept from Summers and the media for more than a year, despite repeated requests.

Atascadero Police department supervisor, Ann Jutras, said that the department did not have to release the 911 tape because there was an ongoing investigation into the incident. She also said that the department was protecting the privacy rights of the victims.

However, both the 911 caller and alleged victim, Sarah and Scott Summers, had given their permission to have the tape released and the case had been closed for more than a year.

The San Luis Obispo County District Attorney’s office decided not to prosecute Cramer. Among the documents used by the district attorney’s office was an Atascadero supplemental police report which contains statements Cramer made.

The supplemental report paints Scott Summers as the aggressor even though the 911 audio tape appears to refute Cramer’s account of the altercation.

The district attorney’s office does not usually listen to 911 tapes when deciding whether to prosecute. The statute of limitations has now expired.

The original Atascadero police report, which consists of only a few sentences, said police responded to an altercation at a house where two men had argued over a traffic incident.

That report was given to Summers who requested a copy of the police report. But police did not give Summers the supplemental report which supported Cramer’s account.

A request to the district attorney’s office for the supplemental report was denied. Although officials in the office agreed that police reports are considered public records, they said they sent the Atascadero police supplemental report back to the department.

The district attorney’s office reported that it did not make a copy of the supplemental report, which was considered in deciding against prosecution.

Atascadero police refused to provide a copy of the supplemental report, saying that police reports are not public records.

But, as part of the discovery process in his lawsuit, Summers was able to get a copy of the 911 tape, the supplemental report and Cramer’s statement to police. Summers provided a copy to CalCoastNews which had sought the records for more than a year.

 

The misstatements

San Luis Obispo Police Officer Scott Cramer said in his statement to Atascadero police that, “My 20-years experience as a police officer leads me to believe his reactions to my calm demeanor indicate either an anger management issue or a mental health issue.”

On the 911 tape, Cramer is cursing, yelling at Summers for passing him and refusing to let go of Summers.

Cramer is heard yelling on the tape that Scott Summers was driving 80 mph in a section of winding road that measures less than four-tenths of a mile.

He would later say in his statement that he estimated Summers was driving between 65 to 70 mph in a 25 mph hour zone. However, the actual speed limit on Old Morro Road East is 55 mph.

Cramer said he repeatedly told Summers he did not want to fight him.

However, that statement is not heard on the tape.

 

Listen to the 911 audio tape


Click here

  (link)

 

Read Officer Cramer’s  sworn statement to the Atascadero Police Department.

[scribd id=63469303 key=key-1mtygb98mo8ifx613j5s mode=list]


Loading...
128 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

It looks like measures A & B will pass by a super majority of the super minoroty that voted!


Thank you Scott Cramer and Ryan Mason!


“Before he could answer, Summers said, Cramer punched him three times in the Adam’s apple, once in the side and than threw him through a closed storm door breaking out the glass and tearing the door from its hinges.”

How is Summers still alive? I’m against police brutality/corruption, and it seems from what we know thus far that Cramer was the aggressor, but it also appears to me that Summers may be exaggerating just a trifle. If you punch someone in the throat three times, they’re dead or in the hospital.


Yeah, I agree. Was Crame wrong for following the guy home? Yes. But if he is as trained as the articles say, he would have hurt him bad by punching him in the throat so many times.


Here is a tip for Cramer “FIDO” “F*#! It Drive On.”


I’ve never heard of the term FIDO. It is really great!


ITA. It was attempted murder. The choke-hold was banned because of the many deaths that occurred from asphyxiation secondary to the victim’s hyoid bone being broken. That’s why Tasers were brought into use.


Also, this type of asphyxiation is not usually identified, even at autopsy, because it takes a special x-ray to identify it.


Cramer used the one attack–punching Summers in the throat–which would very possibly kill Summers (Cramer punched him THREE times, just to be sure) and that Cramer knew he would likely get away with.


Meet the new sheriff, same as the old sheriff.


Did the voters of this county really think that promoting from within the SLO Good Old Boys Network really get any kind of change?


Corruption’s gotta change….


.


New sheriff may or may not be a wanker — doesn’t really matter in this context, since the offender was SLOPD, not Sheriff’s Dept.


racket, Just so you know, the sheriff IS the SLO County Coroner, It’s called the Sheriff/Coroner Department. He is an inexperienced, poorly trained person who should NOT have the position.


And that’s relevant to an Atascaderan getting the shit knocked out of him by a SLOPD officer how?


Parkinson was in the SLO PD at the time.


And I was probably in Atascadero on that day.


What’s your point, besides getting some stink on an elected you don’t like?


(And FWIW, I didn’t like or vote for Parkinson, I just don’t see the connection between the new county sheriff and a city cop beating up a civilian in a neighboring city.)


O.K.


Fair enough.


As what recently occured in a local CSD, when a person, who the government agency knows is poorly experienced, is given a position of power over others, it is done for a reason.


It ensures that the government leadership and its consigliere-attorney can call the shots. The person placed in the position of the authority has no option but to do what his bosses say because, once they have induced the person to do some scumbaggery, like what occurred with the coverup of the Cramer and Summer attempted murders of citizens, they can hold it over the person who has become nothing but a sock-puppet administrator.


I think it is time for members of the public to ban together and publicly protest the appalling amount of police corruption, police misconduct and the lack of police accountability in this county. I think it’s time that the citizens of this county publicly call out District Attorney Shea and demand his explanation of why he has not charged a single police officer in this county with misconduct or criminal offenses.


The whole officer Crammer incident, is a prime example of why this county needs a through federal investigation of police procedures and misconduct. Sheriff Parkinson’s integrity is questionable at best and District Attorney Shea’s silence and lack of action is at least a dereliction of duty. It is my strongest opinion that the DA’s lack of action to equally and fairly enforce the laws of this state is a disgrace of the highest order!


“It is my strongest opinion that the DA’s lack of action to equally and fairly enforce the laws of this state is a disgrace of the highest order!”


—————–


It also promotes attempted murder and other criminal actions against citizens. Wouldn’t that make the local and county governments co-conspiritors?


“The statute of limitations has now expired.” Really? On a violent felony? Oh, right, this is SLO County, possibly the most corrupt county in the U.S. Cramer should pay up and be forever grateful he’s not in prison or dead. Some of us would not take the time to argue or fight with an attacker who followed us home. And we’d call 911 only to request the removal of the intruder’s body.


I guess Cramer didn’t realize that the 911 call was recording everything that was going on in the background! I think what really stands out and is undisputable is the fact that we can hear Cramer and he is not attempting to be calm or leave, he is clearly fighting, yelling, saying fuck and continuing to argue. Even after we hear him apologize to the step mother, he gets right back in Summers face saying he isn’t going to put up with him while Summers is telling him to get out of the house! Then he quickly blurts out his address and takes off before the APD arrive.


What really strikes me is that Cramer can be clearly heard yelling that Summer was driving at 80 MPH. Yet when Cramer prepares his “stunning” rendition, he states Summer was driving 65-70 MPH. It would appear that when Cramer attacked Summers and knocked him through his own front door, he was intentionally embellishing the facts to bolster the excuse behind his aggression ! Later Cramer realized that Summer would not have possibly been able to pass him at 80 and manage to stop at Morro Road with out leaving skid marks so he reported the speed at 15 MPH less!


It becomes very interesting when he doesn’t know that the speed limit is 55 (how is that possible)? This SLO LEO attacked a mentally challenged man, broke in an elderly couples door, trespassed, committed assault and left the scene of a crime and then perjured himself all because somebody was driving 10 miles over the speed limit! This guy is dangerous, he is a time bomb suffering from some sort of an emotional/psychological imbalance in my opinion and it’s only a matter of time, he shouldn’t be carrying a gun. I wonder what he does to his arrest “VICTIMS” when he has a bad day? Can anyone imagine trying to defend themselves in a court when a LEO writes up the kind of blatant LIES that we see in Cramer’s report?


I thought Cramer’s account of how his 8 year old son was calmly “reading a book” while all this happened was especially touching.


QUOTING ‘APATHYWILLKILLYOU”: I found it down-right creepy. It means the kid has seen the same or worse on a regular basis, and he will turn to reading a book because it is more interesting.


I think the SLOCo DA must have framed photographs of both John Ryan Mason and Cramer hanging on his “People I Admire” wall in his office.


I will be on the Dave Congalton show at 3:30 p.m. to discuss this issue. Turn you radio dial to 920 AM or listen live at 920kvec.com.


Thank you for continuing to shine the light on the darker places of our local community be it law enforcement or business.

The Mckiernan Law firm will do this family justice, they will not roll over and do the good ole boy network thing like our elected law enforcement officials do. I had a deputy tell me the DA settles 90% of all the cases so there is little encouragement to arrest someone and do all the paper work, go to court so the DA’s office can cut a cheap deal and release the criminal back unto our streets.

Now that we have a budget crisis, wait and see just how many more get the green light.

This off duty under the color of law officer should have been put on suspension pending a investigation by a neutral agency, period.

The victim and his family deserve all that Mckiernan can get them!


Good work as usual, Karen! I realize your “moderator” will no doubt AGAIN delete my statement, but it’s sad but TRUE, SLO PD, as well as the current “Sheriff/Coroner are NOT AS WELL TRAINED AS THEY SHOULD BE…Why don’t any of THEM attend the West Coast Coroner’s convention when it is held in LA? They actually MIGHT pick up some expertise in attending these events. Do any of them even have MEDICAL backgrounds, whether it be as a paramedic, EMT or other experience? Just to enlighten themselves, it might behoove them to contact the LA CORONER’S OFFICE & do a “ride along” with one of THEIR INVESTIGATORS, just to see how a “PROFESSIONAL DEPARTMENT” operates! SLO COUNTY needs to STOP being so arrogant & take some lessons from OTHER AGENCIES….forget the good old boy stuff…


Karen keep ‘comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable‘ great work congrats on your editorial team, yay!


RU4Real , You’re far more correct than I realized. I was just doing a quick injury on scott c cramer and I was appalled after running across the following. Not that this bungle can even be close to all cramer’s fault. But check this out, it literally reads like these guy’s were all operating under the influence of a full dose of ignorance or worse. There are actually many more stories surrounding the lack of competence and professionalism where our coroner and investigators are concerned.

Really, read this, what an embarrassment SLO County and the PD are.


http://www.taph.com/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=3758


Cindy, thanks for that info. I was just at the LA Coroner’s Office on Thursday & it’s just amazing to see true professionals at work. They are all hard working, skilled professionals who treat the families, as well as the deceased with the utmost respect & sensitivity. Sometimes, when a case is called in to the Coroner’s Office & assigned to an Investigator, the agency calling it in “sometimes” reports the WRONG CAUSE OF DEATH. That’s when the training & professionalism of the Investigator is critical. My “Investigator relative”, had such a case last night. The case was called in as a “natural cause” of death, but when this brilliant Investigator arrived on scene, it was quickly determined to be a “possible homicide”, due to the trauma to the body. If this investigator had NOT be so well trained & ASTUTE, possibly a murderer could be walking among us forever. The SLO Sheriff/Coroner Dept. is just a JOKE. Typical for SLO County.


RU–you seem very focused on this West Coast Coroners’ conference. Why? Surely, it is not the only highly-qualified organization providing training?


Mary, the reason is that I have attended a couple of the conferences & they have outstanding experts from all over the country teaching classes. I was especially impressed with a “forensic dentist” at one of the classes. Another reason is that LA is always promoting more training for their investigators. They’ve trained with the best in NYC & also with the FBI. How many of the “local yokels” with SLO Sheriff/Coroner can say THEY”VE been trained by the best? Another reason is that LA is close enough that it’s NOT a major hardship to get there. Even Ventura has a better Coroner Dept. than SLO. SLO is just sub-standard, imo.


Unfortunately, those “in power” only get rewarded, whether it’s an over-priced early retirement, or questionable election to sheriff… we have a bad habit in this county of rewarding shitty performance in government (and public safety in particular).


Blame it all on the liberals. Hollyweird, San Francisco and LA included. Teachers union and Social Services. Few are punished for their negative actions anymore. Just my feeble opinion.

My kids knew how to cut a good switch for me to use. They are old now but they still remember the good old days. They had respect for their elders and didn’t commit any crimes.


I remember when our son was a senior in high school, about seventeen I think. I was having trouble getting him to take the trash out. His mother and I had asked him a few times with no luck. Finally after he had gone to school I took the trash up to his room and dumped it on his unmade bed, My wife had a shit fit but I did solve the trash problem we were having. The added benefit was him making his bed each day before going to school.


Maybe we should do this to the mamby pamby people that have forgotten how to get people to at least stay close to the straight and narrow. Who took the physical punishment out of the schools?

Where are the good examples?


God Bless


Much of the problems we’re seeing today is that the “parents” lack GOOD PARENTING SKILLS. Instead, they would rather be “the kid’s FRIEND” instead of being a “parent”…


Again, why stoop to blaming the parents, when there are so many forces which shape children as they grow?


Some people turn out to be nearly sociopathic in their disregard for others, and that ends up in cases like Summers and Mason, and the government agencies that promote their behavior by coddling them when they do it.


It is impossible to define one, two, or even three things that produce these sociopathic people because there are so many influences that shape who we become.


Just my opinion, here, but if we focus on the ones who are corrupt and, when possible, bring them to justice, it will be the best learning experience for the rest of the corrupt people who hold power over us.


The best example I can think of is the City of Bell’s corruption debacle. It forced the State to draw up new requirements for openness, including cities, counties and local agencies like CSDs posting publicly what their staff make in pay.


We can thank the State Controller, John Chiang, for this. He didn’t focus on blaming who created the corrupt scumbags who have nearly destroyed the City of Bell by their avarice, greed and corruption.


Instead, he went after them for WHAT THEY DID and, in doing so, frightened the State legislature into making new regulations and laws, and the local governments to change their ways on their own.


BTW, the City of Bell’s homeowners now have to pay, on average, $2000 more a year on property taxes for a city park that was never built, and never will be built. Bell’s former administrators and City Council received a huge grant for constructing this mighty fancy city park with a sports arena, etc, which was never built.


Doesn’t matter if it wasn’t built. The homeowners STILL have to pay for it.


Sort of reminds me of the infamous Los Osos sewer “project”…Why should SLO County care that they will be displacing so many homeowners that cannot afford the outrageous costs of this thing…?


They don’t care, it’s all about the money!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

This was once a great place now the slim is slowly covering it.


Why is it the weak and frightened must always try to find a scapegoat (in this case “liberals” et al.) for what are clearly greater societal problems?


Unless you can provide solid references proving that “liberals” are at fault for what is clearly a societal problem, I would appreciate it if you would apologize for your scapegoating of one portion of society.


I can name as many kids of Republicans who have royally screwed up as you can of Democrats.


But then, the Democratic Party under Obama’s leadership is basically the butt-boys for the GOP, anyway.


I am wondering at what what point the Atascadero city attorney started advising the APD.

Was it after the 2 reports were issued and after listening to the 911 tape? If that is the case then he had a mess to cover-up. If he was involved in the decision making from the beginning the city attorney is as guilty as the Atascadero PD for covering up.

Was Jim M, still the police chief?

I can understand why the SLO PD wouldn’t want to release any info knowing there wold probably be a law suit against the officer .

I also wonder if the APD and SLOPD were colluding from the get-go to cover up.

Without CalCoastNews the public would never have known about this incident. It would have all been settled behind closed doors.


Settled behind closed doors and a entirely different spin spoon fed to the public guaranteed. Without the work of CCN and Karen this would have been buried like seeming many other stories of this nature. KSBY claim they ask “questions that make others uncomfortable”, that’s a damn joke. I have yet to see any coverage of this story on any other local media source.

At what point will an out of control off duty cop like this guy stop his actions? Typically officers carry their firearm when off duty, Cramer bursts into a home, the home owner has no idea what this guys intentions are or who he is, they pull a gun in an attempt to deter an attack well within their rights Cramer pull his piece and kills one or more of the residence. This could have easily been the outcome of this couldn’t it have? Unfortunately the story would have read, Off duty police officer attacked in road rage incident, acting alone he followed the perpetrator to his residence where a gun battle broke out with several of the residents who were heavily armed, Gunfire was returned by the office fatally wounding several of the gunmen and the incident was over. Cramer is being called a hero for his bravery during the incident.

Im no cop hater but these types of individuals are supposed to be trained at all levels of conflict and be able to maintain self control. Their also sworn to protect the public, not be vigilantes sworn to their own rules. Fire this idiot, take his retirement, pension,whatever, and lock him up, we all know if this was any normal citizen they would be serving time as we speak.


Agreed! That’s how it would have gone down had that been on my property. Cramer would not have won the showdown, though.


The dude’s a renegade.