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Woman Faces Perjury Charges After Men Jailed In Bogus Attacks (Every single guy's worst nightmare)
Local 6 (Florida) ^ | February 4, 2005 | Tony Pipitone

Posted on 02/05/2005 1:53:47 AM PST by Stoat

 

Woman Faces Perjury Charges After Men Jailed In Bogus Attacks

POSTED: 10:03 pm EST February 3, 2005
UPDATED: 3:56 pm EST February 4, 2005

 

At 5-foot-9, 140 pounds, 25-year-old Beate Faanis cut a stunning figure as a University of Central Florida golfer, and she quickly caught the eye of fellow golfer Trason Brooks.
 

 

 

  "Tall girl, blonde hair, blue eyes, pretty girl," Brooks recalled of his first impression of the Norweigian-born clinical social worker.

They would date off and on over 18 months, but after their last break-up things turned downright bizarre.

The first sign of trouble came August 8, when Brooks was arrested while working at the Stoneybrook East golf club and charged with attempted first-degree murder and aggravated stalking.

"Absolutely unbelievable," he thought, having no idea at the time from where the charges came. He soon learned Faanes told police he attacked her three times in recent weeks -- and evidence photos clearly showed the bruises she claimed he left behind on her face, thigh, and neck. But there were problems with Faanes' story: Brooks had solid alibis for two of the attacks, and he claimed he had not even seen Faanes for more than two months.

He told Orange County investigators as much, but "they didn't care. They relied on her word 100 percent," he said. The sheriff's office attitude, he said: "You beat this girl, she has the marks, she has no witnesses, but you're guilty."

 

  The sheriff's office says it had no choice but to arrest Brooks, since Faanes identified him and had the injuries to back it up.

  But there was evidence Faanes was a troubled young woman.

 

  Sheriff's office records show she attempted suicide in January 2004 over a break-up with another boyfriend. And, investigative records state, she admitted lying to Brooks about having aborted his baby in an attempt to gain his love -- in fact, she was never pregnant.

But Det. Brian Cross, the lead sheriff's detective, said those incidents did not destroy her credibility. At the time, based on the evidence at hand, he said the most likely apparent danger would be to not arrest Brooks and risk having Faanes later turn up dead. So Brooks, a 28-year-old golf instructor and aspiring real estate salesman, went to jail with no bond

"It was the most humiliating thing ever," he said. "First of all, I've never been in a jail, not even a tour of a jail." When he saw the words "MAX 1" stamped on his jail paperwork, "I think in my mind that means I'm only going to be in jail max one day."

 

 

  Actually, it means he's housed among the worst of the worst prisoners in the Orange County jail.

 

  "One guy had murdered his ex-girlfriend the night before and turned himself in and I'm thinking where in the world am I?" Brooks recalled. "A week goes by, three weeks go by, a month, two months and then I'm thinking, you got to be kidding me. Am I ever getting out of this jail?"

Then he heard of "the best attorney in town," Harrison "Butch" Slaughter, who led a team of lawyers and investigators to uncover the truth. Slaughter persuaded a judge to set bail, but by then Brooks had spent 93 days in jail and the first of what's now a $30,000 legal bill. He said if his family did not have access to a competent, highly paid law firm, he might still be in jail or prison, because the sheriff's office accepted Faanes' allegations at face value.

"Detectives did nothing. They took her word and believed it and rolled with it," said Brooks, adding, "If it was up to them, I would still be sitting in the Orange County jail." Sitting there, it turns out, with good friend Chris Brussow, who supplied one of Brooks' earlier alibis.

"My friend didn't do it and I went before a judge to make a statement," said the 28-year-old Brussow, noting he was with Brooks on a night when Faanes pinned an attack on Brooks.

  Faanes watched that alibi testimony in an August 18 court hearing.

  In October, with Brooks stuck in jail, she came forward with a new allegation: that Brussow came to her apartment and attacked her, punching her face and cutting her side.

There were new bruises and a cut, so this time it was Brussow being carted off to jail. "No matter what I said to anybody, they laughed at me," he recalled. "'Sure you're innocent.' 'Sure you didn't do it.'"

After four days, Brussow got a bond, but freedom was fleeting. On Christmas Day, Faanes told police Brussow again attacked her, this time with a knife, almost slitting her neck.

Orlando police stormed Brussow's condo within hours with a warrant for attempted murder.

 

  "Guns drawn, 'get face down, face down,' probably seven officers at least one dog. We're all on the ground in handcuffs. It's very disheartening to look up see my mom in handcuffs," he said. "All I could think about is this girl who's done this to me. I'm obviously terrified because now I'm going back to jail again."

By then, though, Faanes' tales would begin to wear thin. While out on bond on house arrest, Brussow was attached to an ankle bracelet that tracked his every move. And it proved he was home on Christmas when Faanes claimed he attacked her miles away.

And Brooks' lawyers produced a dozen alibi witnesses and dental records proving he was in Jackson County when Fannes claimed he last attacked her in Orange County, 300 miles away. Finally, a prosecutor asked Orlando police to seek the truth Brooks and Brussow had been claiming all along.

Orlando police presented Faanes with the men's ironclad alibis during an interrogation on December 28, and she cracked in a tearful confession, admitting she inflicted all the injuries on herself, according to court records. "Everything is fabricated," said Brooks. "Everything's a lie."

Little consolation now, said Brussow. "In my opinion they should've maybe looked into it before they came into my house with guns drawn. I guess that's not the way they do things."

  Asked why that is, Brussow replied, "I think it's very unfair. Here are two people's lives and families ruined by a girl (who) lied, all because maybe she was a pretty face."

  Talking to police, Faanes blamed her actions on alcohol and anxiety drugs, but Trason Brooks suspects another cause: "She wanted me in prison the rest of my life ... In her mind we're getting married, we're having kids, we're going to be happily ever after. I made it clear to her that's not what my intentions were."

As she was booked January 21 on charges of perjury and filing false reports, we asked Faanes, "Anything you want to say to Trason about this? Are you sorry?" but she wouldn't comment. Days earlier she told us she really was attacked, but was coerced by police to confess when they threatened her father. Police say that's another lie.

"She needs some kind of mental counseling or some kind of help," said Brussow. "She'll cause bodily harm to herself, she'll injure herself and in the process of doing that attempt to ruin other people's lives." Faanes has received some mental health care, at Lakeside Alternatives, after that suicide attempt in January 2004 and again after she confessed in December to injuring herself, according to police records.

After graduating UCF, Faanes became a licensed clinical social worker and worked at the very same Lakeside Alternatives as a therapist until she resigned January 28, one week after her arrest. As for Brooks and Brussow, they say the ordeal has cost them their good names, their jobs, and much of their life, plus tens of thousands in legal fees.

Both are consulting lawyers about possibly suing Faanes and law enforcement agencies for not diligently checking out her claims before arresting them. But for now they're just glad they're not in jail or prison.

 


Tony Pipitone can be reached at (407) 521-1291 or at tpipitone@local6.com.
 
The first sign of trouble came August 8, when Brooks was arrested while working at the Stoneybrook East golf club and charged with attempted first-degree murder and aggravated stalking. "Absolutely unbelievable," he thought, having no idea at the time from where the charges came. He soon learned Faanes told police he attacked her three times in recent weeks.
 
Evidence photos clearly showed the bruises she claimed he left behind on her face, thigh, and neck.
 
But there were problems with Faanes' story: Brooks had solid alibis for two of the attacks, and he claimed he had not even seen Faanes for more than two months. He told Orange County investigators as much, but "they didn't care ... They relied on her word 100 percent," he said. The sheriff's office attitude, he said: "You beat this girl, she has the marks, she has no witnesses, but you're guilty." The sheriff's office says it had no choice but to arrest Brooks, since Faanes identified him and had the injuries to back it up.
 
But there was evidence Faanes was a troubled young woman. Sheriff's office records show she attempted suicide in January 2004 over a break-up with another boyfriend. And, investigative records state, she admitted lying to Brooks about having aborted his baby in an attempt to gain his love -- in fact, she was never pregnant.
 
But Det. Brian Cross, the lead sheriff's detective, said those incidents did not destroy her credibility. At the time, based on the evidence at hand, he said the most likely apparent danger would be to not arrest Brooks and risk having Faanes later turn up dead.
 
So Brooks, a 28-year-old golf instructor and aspiring real estate salesman, went to jail with no bond. "It was the most humiliating thing ever," he said. "First of all, I've never been in a jail, not even a tour of a jail."
 
When he saw the words "MAX 1" stamped on his jail paperwork, "I think in my mind that means I'm only going to be in jail max one day." Actually, it means he's housed among the worst of the worst prisoners in the Orange County jail. "One guy had murdered his ex-girlfriend the night before and turned himself in and I'm thinking where in the world am I?" Brooks recalled. "A week goes by, three weeks go by, a month, two months and then I'm thinking, you got to be kidding me. Am I ever getting out of this jail?"
 
Then he heard of "the best attorney in town," Harrison "Butch" Slaughter, who led a team of lawyers and investigators to uncover the truth. Slaughter persuaded a judge to set bail, but by then Brooks had spent 93 days in jail and the first of what's now a $30,000 legal bill. He said if his family did not have access to a competent, highly paid law firm, he might still be in jail or prison, because the sheriff's office accepted Faanes' allegations at face value.
 
"Detectives did nothing. They took her word and believed it and rolled with it," said Brooks, adding, "If it was up to them, I would still be sitting in the Orange County jail."
 
Sitting there, it turns out, with good friend Chris Brussow, who supplied one of Brooks' earlier alibis. "My friend didn't do it and I went before a judge to make a statement," said the 28-year-old Brussow, noting he was with Brooks on a night when Faanes pinned an attack on Brooks.
 
In October, with Brooks stuck in jail, she came forward with a new allegation: that Brussow came to her apartment and attacked her, punching her face and cutting her side.
 
There were new bruises and a cut, so this time it was Brussow being carted off to jail. "No matter what I said to anybody, they laughed at me," he recalled. "'Sure you're innocent.' 'Sure you didn't do it.'" After four days, Brussow got a bond, but freedom was fleeting.
 
On Christmas Day, Faanes told police Brussow again attacked her, this time with a knife, almost slitting her neck.
 
Orlando police stormed Brussow's condo within hours with a warrant for attempted murder. "Guns drawn, 'get face down, face down,' probably seven officers at least one dog. We're all on the ground in handcuffs. It's very disheartening to look up see my mom in handcuffs," he said. "All I could think about is this girl who's done this to me. I'm obviously terrified because now I'm going back to jail again." By then, though, Faanes' tales would begin to wear thin.
 
While out on bond on house arrest, Brussow was attached to an ankle bracelet that tracked his every move. And it proved he was home on Christmas when Faanes claimed he attacked her miles away. And Brooks' lawyers produced a dozen alibi witnesses and dental records proving he was in Jackson County when Fannes claimed he last attacked her in Orange County, 300 miles away. Finally, a prosecutor asked Orlando police to seek the truth Brooks and Brussow had been claiming all along.
 
Orlando police presented Faanes with the men's ironclad alibis during an interrogation on December 28, and she cracked in a tearful confession, admitting she inflicted all the injuries on herself, according to court records. "Everything is fabricated," said Brooks. "Everything's a lie." Little consolation now, said Brussow. "In my opinion they should've maybe looked into it before they came into my house with guns drawn. I guess that's not the way they do things."
 
Talking to police, Faanes blamed her actions on alcohol and anxiety drugs, but Trason Brooks suspects another cause: "She wanted me in prison the rest of my life ... In her mind we're getting married, we're having kids, we're going to be happily ever after. I made it clear to her that's not what my intentions were
 
As she was booked January 21 on misdemeanor charges of perjury and filing false reports, we asked Faanes, "Anything you want to say to Trason about this? Are you sorry?" but she wouldn't comment. Days earlier she told us she really was attacked, but was coerced by police to confess when they threatened her father. Police say that's another lie. "She needs some kind of mental counseling or some kind of help," said Brussow. "She'll cause bodily harm to herself, she'll injure herself and in the process of doing that attempt to ruin other people's lives."
 
Faanes has received some mental health care, at Lakeside Alternatives, after that suicide attempt in January 2004 and again after she confessed in December to injuring herself, according to police records. After graduating UCF, Faanes became a licensed clinical social worker and worked at the very same Lakeside Alternatives as a therapist until she resigned January 28, one week after her arrest.
 
As for Brooks and Brussow, they say the ordeal has cost them their good names, their jobs, and much of their life, plus tens of thousands in legal fees. Both are consulting lawyers about possibly suing Faanes and law enforcement agencies for not diligently checking out her claims before arresting them. But for now they're just glad they're not in jail or prison.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: badcops; bang; brazenhussy; chiefwiggum; cops; crime; dating; domesticviolence; donutwatch; dv; fakedomesticviolence; falsecharges; fraud; headcase; hussy; liar; lyinghussy; nutburger; perjury; police; psycho; socialworkers; women
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To: endthematrix

go check out exactly how many lawsuits your local county hospital has had to defend in the last year....they sure as heck DO get sued.


101 posted on 02/05/2005 5:10:20 AM PST by mo
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To: Stoat

I'm sorry, but I simply don't find this woman attractive - she reminds me of that thin-faced actress on 24, Jack Bauer's love interest.


102 posted on 02/05/2005 5:10:54 AM PST by Edward Watson
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To: A. Pole; MadIvan

I have to agree with Ivan on this one, maybe you mixed up laissez-faire and l'affaire


103 posted on 02/05/2005 5:12:17 AM PST by palmer ("Oh you heartless gloaters")
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To: Lunkhead_01

I am so upset by this travesty, I think I am going to sue the Orlando PD myself! Know any cheap Lawyers?
I married late, @ 39yrs and during 20+ years of dating I learned to rely on my internal BS Meter to alert me to whacked women and rarely wasted much time or energy with these types. This guy obviously ignored obvious problems with this witch.


104 posted on 02/05/2005 5:13:54 AM PST by iopscusa (El Vaquero)
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To: Edward Watson
Beauty Is In The Eye Of The Beholder. Every man's dream pin up woman is Catherine Deneuve or Liv Tyler.

Denny Crane: "There are two places to find the truth. First God and then Fox News."

105 posted on 02/05/2005 5:15:27 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: Stoat
Trason Brooks suspects another cause: "She wanted me in prison the rest of my life ... In her mind we're getting married, we're having kids, we're going to be happily ever after. I made it clear to her that's not what my intentions were."

Hmm, makes me wonder if the Islamic rule that two women witnesses equal one man in the court is so bad. It would be hard for her to share her dream with other lady. :)

106 posted on 02/05/2005 5:16:33 AM PST by A. Pole (Alexander Solzhenitsyn: "Live Not By Lies")
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To: WindOracle
This is an example of why you should be able to sue the police officers themselves, and not just a department.

How would this work? I come into lineup and am assigned to the team to pick up so-and-so. All I know is that there is a warrant. So we go pick him up. We get sued individually? Should we sue the magistrate who issued the warrant?

So the PD, prompted by the courts, changes procedure and requires corroborating evidence on every abuse charge. The new maxim is: "No witness means no probably cause, so no charge." Then a bunch of women are killed by abusers and, guess what, it's the fault of the police!

As to "lazy detectives", sure, I suppose there are some. It might be interesting to compare the amount of money spent on various social services and transfer payments with the amount of money spent on law enforcement, on LE personnel and training. How many detectives do jurisdictions pay for per number of reported crimes and what sort of technical and other support are they getting?

In the county where I live a staff of 22 is dealing with something over a hundred outstanding warrants. That's in addition to normal daily duties.

I think that communities are trying to do policing on the cheap and are often getting what they pay for.

107 posted on 02/05/2005 5:20:48 AM PST by Mad Dawg (My P226 wants to teach you what SIGnify means ...)
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To: cyborg
She should receive the same sentence he would have gotten had he been guilty of the crime.

I guess something like that is in French system. (Also legal costs are paid by the false accuser or taxpayers if the accuser is not solvent).

Accusing someone of stealing a candy is less serious than accusing of robbing a bank.

108 posted on 02/05/2005 5:21:37 AM PST by A. Pole (Alexander Solzhenitsyn: "Live Not By Lies")
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To: Stoat
Yikes, this is from BIZZARO World.

That being said I see the makings here for an interesting episode of Law & Order SVU (where story ideas are "ripped" from the headlines) but with decidedly different atypical SVU ending and will be a "two-parter".

The following occurs in part two after the FUBAR arrest of the innocent BF and his successful lawsuit against the SVU cops which results in their wages being garnished:

  1. Lt. Cragean goes back on the bottle
  2. Detectives Stabler and Benson have an affair, get kicked off the force, then they start shooting horse -- Benson turns to prostitution with Stabler as her pimp.
  3. Tutuola (Ice-t) leaves the SVU, returns to Narcotics and gets killed in a drug buy.
  4. Do to all the above, Det Munch goes into an even deeper depression (is that humanly possible?), returns to Baltimore and 'eats his gun'.

Yep, good story line, its a winner.

Wait... that'd kill the show?!? Oh well I'm sick of the reruns anyway :-)

109 posted on 02/05/2005 5:22:11 AM PST by Condor51 (May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't. - Gen G Patton)
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To: Stoat

Maybe this is how they date in Norway.


110 posted on 02/05/2005 5:24:15 AM PST by LoudRepublicangirl (loudrepublicangirl)
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To: Stoat
The police screwed up big time, but I think there are some things to remember before the tar and feathers are applied:
(1) Most states now have laws that require the police to arrest a man accused of domestic battery.
(2) The NOW crowd and the rest of the loonies have screamed for years that "all men are abusers and all women are victims"
(3) The people that buy their ink by the barrel and their paper by the boxcar, push the loony agenda, therefore a man is always guilty to the press if a woman accuses him..
(4) What would have happened if her charges had been true, the police had not done anything and then she was killed, would the same people screaming so loudly now yell just as loud?
111 posted on 02/05/2005 5:24:43 AM PST by sticker
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To: goldstategop
"Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned." I guess this is one case where it was true. No guy should be around a woman's fury. What the fair sex lacks in physical toughness, it can make up for in feminine wiles.

See my comment about Islamic justice.

112 posted on 02/05/2005 5:25:39 AM PST by A. Pole (Alexander Solzhenitsyn: "Live Not By Lies")
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To: Celtic Conservative
but this woman was in the mental health field.

I with you there. Most (but not all) of the people I knew who majored in Psychology in college were looking for answers to their own problems. Once they graduate, they get work in the mental health/social work field and are still messed up. They're the ones accusing parents of abuse for giving their 5 year old a spank...

113 posted on 02/05/2005 5:35:01 AM PST by Kay Ludlow (Free market, but cautious about what I support with my dollars)
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To: ijcr
if only all police detectives could be like Lt. Columbo..

Tragically the majority are like Homer Simpson.

You mean like Chief Wiggum?


114 posted on 02/05/2005 5:37:14 AM PST by A. Pole (Alexander Solzhenitsyn: "Live Not By Lies")
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To: Stoat
I remember a case a few years ago, which took place near that same area in which a young man was convicted of rape.

The strange thing is he had absolute proof he was somewhere else and should not have even been arrested. The truth eventually came out and he was exonerated, but the whole affair was scary as all get out.

I also personally know of a guy who was head of a Federal Law Enforcement Agency, in a medium sized city, and a deacon in the church. He was arrested and charged with rape based solely on a womans seeing him and telling the cops he was the man. He also had an ironclad alibi and the cops did do their job in this case and caught the right one who didn' even look like him. He had the arrest completely removed from the records but the average guy would have gone through life with that arrest report still on their record.

115 posted on 02/05/2005 5:38:39 AM PST by yarddog
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To: Kay Ludlow

Women trump men in every way when it comes to the law. Divorce one and see who gets the alimony and the kids. Believe me the last thing women want is equality in the courts. This woman is up on charges of perjury. Thats a joke. she might get 6 months. She deserves 10 years in prison.


116 posted on 02/05/2005 5:39:04 AM PST by sgtbono2002
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To: goldstategop

What about the clinic where she was treated and then worked? Talk about the patients running the asylum... but it seems like they should have some responsibility, too. Don't counselors have an obligation to report information if their patient is going to commit a crime? In this case, every day those men sat in jail based on her story was a crime.... I would think there was some responsibility on her counselors. I believe patient confidentiality yields if there is threat to someone else. In this case, seems worthwhile to see what obligation, if any, her counselor(s) had.....


117 posted on 02/05/2005 5:45:46 AM PST by GraceCoolidge
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To: goldstategop
From 'She Stoops to Conquer'.

Hastings. Well, but you must allow her a little beauty.--Yes, you must allow her some beauty.

Tony. Bandbox! She's all a made-up thing, mun.

118 posted on 02/05/2005 5:46:20 AM PST by kanawa
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To: Stoat

bump


119 posted on 02/05/2005 5:49:50 AM PST by lowbridge
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To: sgtbono2002
She deserves 10 years in prison.

I agree with you. I think the courts are filled with judges and prosecutors whose parents divorced in the 50's and 60's, where women often were abandoned and got little in return. Now, the pendulum has swung too far the other way. No fault divorce laws haven't helped either..

120 posted on 02/05/2005 5:50:50 AM PST by Kay Ludlow (Free market, but cautious about what I support with my dollars)
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