Houston Chronicle via YellowBrix

October 15, 2008

HOUSTON, TX – A Houston man who identified himself as a CIA agent before leading police on a high-speed chase that ended with his fatal shooting in late April had been questioned by authorities five years ago for allegedly pulling over a woman in Pearland, according to records obtained by the Houston Chronicle on Tuesday.

A woman called the Pearland Police Department on the afternoon of Nov. 21, 2003, to report that a man in a tan sport utility vehicle had tried to stop her.

The man told her he was a federal agent and needed to talk to her, but drove off when she threatened to call police, the woman said. She gave the man’s license plate number and an officer pulled him over at North Nolan and Vanity in Pearland.

Previously unreleased police reports from Pearland and Brazoria County identify that man as Roland Carnaby.

His widow, Susan Carnaby, has filed a civil rights lawsuit against the city and the Houston Police Department on behalf of her husband’s estate, seeking damages and a change in police customs and practices in high speed chases like the one that preceded his shooting by police on April 29.

Her attorney released the homicide report and videos of the traffic stop, chase and shooting to the Chronicle after a federal judge on Friday refused to seal documents in the lawsuit.

The city of Houston had asked that the homicide report and other materials be kept secret, but U.S. District Judge Keith Ellison ruled the report and other materials could be released, with some personal information redacted.

Among those documents are the reports detailing the Pearland incident in 2003 when Carnaby reportedly tried to pull a woman over on County Road 90 at Northfork. Carnaby told officers he had seen the woman driving recklessly, so he pulled up next to her “and told her to slow down before she kills someone.”

He said that he was working with the FBI and CIA overseas “doing intelligence work” and that his story could be verified by speaking to an FBI agent he knew. An officer called the agent, who vouched for Carnaby and said “he would be very thankful if we helped Carnaby out.” No charges were filed.

But when Carnaby flashed his CIA identification badge to get out of a speeding ticket on Texas 288 in April, Houston Police Officer C.H. Starks quickly became suspicious that the silver-haired man in the dark suit might be impersonating a federal agent.

Carnaby’s hands were shaking, and he had a red and blue strobe light on his dash, Starks later told investigators.

Video and audio recordings of the traffic stop show Starks asking for a closer look at Carnaby’s ID badge. Carnaby declined, citing “national security.”



Wardy R Landrau
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