Fairfax County Cop Convicted of Forcibly Sodomizing Ex-Girlfriend

Fairfax County Cop Convicted of Forcibly Sodomizing Ex-Girlfriend
As we've been saying for years, the Fairfax County Police are out of control

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Former Newport News cop sentenced to 12 years, all suspended



Christopher Roush exposed himself to people passing by his home in April 2013
Former Newport News master police officer Christopher Roush was sentenced Thursday to 12 years in jail -- all suspended -- for exposing himself and performing an "obscene sexual display" to people passing by his home last year. (Newport News Police / May 10, 2013)


NEWPORT NEWS — A former Newport News master police officer was sentenced Thursday to 12 years in jail — all suspended — for exposing himself and performing an "obscene sexual display" to people passing by his home last year.
Christopher Roush, 42, was found guilty in January of the 12 misdemeanor charges against him — with the judge throwing out a felony charge that was filed on the basis that one of the passing car's passengers was a 14-year-old girl.
In the April 2013 incident, several people testified they saw Roush standing "completely naked" in his doorway on Harpersville Road about 9 a.m. one Saturday morning. Several witnesses said Roush appeared to be masturbating with one hand and holding the glass storm door open with the other.
Roush — who lost his job over the incident — testified he has no memory of what happened. He said he came home from work at 1 a.m. after working the night shift and "started to drink liquor." When Roush woke up the next afternoon and was told what he had done, he said, he "couldn't believe it."
On Thursday, Roush faced up to 12 years in prison, or up to a year on each of the 12 charges.
The outside prosecutor, Suffolk Deputy Commonwealth's Attorney James E. Wiser, asked the judge to send Roush to jail.
"As public officials and certainly law enforcement officials, prosecutors and police officers should be held to a higher standard," Wiser said in an interview. "We've sworn an oath and are entrusted by the public to uphold the laws of the commonwealth," and to make sure that people are "not unfortunately exposed to this type of behavior."
Roush's lawyer, Robert W. Lawrence, pushed for a suspended sentence, saying police officers are no different than others in their limitations. "They're human beings, too," he said in an interview. "They have all the frailties that all humans have."
Circuit Court Judge Ted Markow, the retired Richmond judge substituting on the case, suspended the entire jail term, saying "he couldn't do anything more to hurt (Roush) than he's already done to himself," Lawrence said.
Wiser added: "He just felt in this particular factual scenario, the defendant had lost enough, and he didn't think active jail time would help."
Roush, who testified at Thursday's hearing, now lives with his brother in Maryland and is getting alcohol and mental health treatment.
In January, Roush said he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of several serious on-duty incidents between 2004 and 2012, and turned to alcohol to cope.
That included, for example, a 2005 fire in which he saw a little boy trying to get out of an upstairs window. Roush was unable to get up the stairs to save him. Another little girl who was heavily burned in that fire also died, he said.
In 2010, when Roush was known as Christopher Miner, two juries acquitted him on charges that he sexually assaulted two women in 2009.
The suspended sentence imposed Thursday is conditioned on good behavior. Roush must refrain from alcohol and drugs, have no contact with the people he exposed himself to, and can't work in law enforcement. He was also put on supervised probation for two years.
Roush was happy with the sentence, Lawrence said. "It worked out well," Lawrence said. "He knows what he did was totally inappropriate, and acknowledges very candidly that alcohol was the root of his problem. He understands that he cannot drink at all."

Dujardin can be reached by phone at 247-4749.