NYPD Officer who Bragged he 'Fried Another N-----' Admits he Falsely Arrested Black man 'to teach respect'

From [HERE] and [HERE] THE RACIST NYPD cop who boasted that he had “fried another n-----” now admits in a letter written to the judge that he falsely arrested the black man to teach him "a lesson."

Michael Daragjati, who is white,  plead guilty on Jan. 24 to a misdemeanor count of deprivation of civil rights in connection with the case. Daragjati is scheduled to be sentenced Friday for violating the civil rights of Kenrick Gray after he was stopped and frisked in Staten Island. He admitted that he arrested a Black man in Stapleton for no reason at all, knowing the man would have to spend the night in jail. On the day after the arrest, Daragjati told a female friend in an intercepted phone call that he had "fried another n-----," said court documents. 

Gray was falsely charged with resisting arrest, a misdemeanor, and disorderly conduct. As Gray was being processed at the 120th Precinct station in St. George, Daragjati allegedly told him he could have gone home that night, but Daragjati didn't like being disrespected. Gray was held in custody for about 36 hours before being arraigned on April 17 of last year in Stapleton Criminal Court. 

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Protesters call for Garfield (NJ) Chief's Firing: Claim Foul Play in Fatal Police Shooting of Malik Williams

Most of the demonstrators were members of U.R.G.E.N.T Garfield, an activist group formed in the wake of Williams' death that has since focused on a host of issues within the city, from the concern over chromium contamination near residential homes to the lawsuit against the police chief.

According to the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, Williams surrendered to Garfield police on December 10, 2011 in connection with a domestic assault warrant issued the day before involving his girlfriend. Two hours later, as they were processing the complaints, Williams ran out a rear door and police eventually traced him to a residential garage in which he had barricaded himself, Prosecutor John L. Molinelli said. When officers opened the door, they found that he had “armed himself with tools,” the statement said. One Garfield officer and one Bergen County police officer fired at Williams, striking him numerous times, it said.

Garfield attorney Victor Urbaez said “there is more to this story than a young man turning himself in and then running from the authorities,” Urbaez said. “We feel there’s foul play here. We have questions that need to be answered.”

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NYPD Officer who Killed Black Woman in Brooklyn the Subject of Six Civil Rights Suits

From [HERE] The New York City police detective who fatally shot a Brooklyn Black woman has been adefendant in six federal civil-rights lawsuits, most of them accusations of illegal searches and arrests, according to court records. The city has settled four of the lawsuits involving Detective Phillip Atkins, who shot and killed 23-year-old Shantel Davis on Thursday during what police described as a chaotic struggle in a moving car. The shooting was under investigation Friday, and Detective Atkins isn't accused of wrongdoing.

A witness said the shooting followed a high-speed car chase between plain clothes cops and the shooting victim. The witness, 30-year-old Hans Mencor, saw an unmarked police car chasing the victim's vehicle, a grey Toyota. When the victim crashed at East 38th Street and Church Avenue, plain clothes cops approached the vehicle and tried to get the woman to come out of the car. She refused, Mencor said.

"After that, it was like, boom!" said Mencor, referring to the sound of a gun firing. "They shot her inside the car." A woman who works at the laundromat Miss Bubbles, right near the scene, said she had a perfect view of the shooting from the shop. "She fell on her face, blood was just gushing out of her," said Collette, who would only give her first name. "She got out of the car, fell to her knees, and just fell down."

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Ramarley Graham's Parents Worried Officer will Walk: Unarmed Black Teen Killed by NYPD

From [HERE] INSIDE THE HOME where their 18-year-old unarmed son was killed by a cop, Ramarley Graham’s parents said Thursday they are “disappointed” by the criminal charges in the case and worried that no one will go to jail. Officer Richard Haste, who is free on $50,000 bail after his arraignment this week, deserved a tougher rap than manslaughter — and his bosses should have been arrested, too, the parents said.

“We’re not happy with the charges,” Graham’s mother, Constance Malcolm, 38, told the Daily News in the three-story home on E. 229th St. in the Bronx. “We’re very disappointed. It should have been a murder charge.” Although Haste fired the fatal bullet after cornering the teen in the bathroom of the second-floor apartment, the family said the shooting wasn’t a solo operation. “There were many officers involved, but none of them were charged, including supervisors who should have known better,” Malcolm said.

The slain youth’s father, Franclot Graham, said he’s concerned it took four months for Bronx prosecutors to obtain an indictment — and the family is keenly aware that cops have been acquitted in other high-profile shootings, like the Sean Bell and Amadou Diallo cases.

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Prosecutor Wants to Simulate Explosion in court: Detroit Police Officer Faces Manslaughter Charge in Fatal Shooting of 7 yr. old Black Girl

Trial date set for October 22, 2012

From [HEREThe judge and attorneys involved in the manslaughter case against a Detroit tactical officer over the shooting death of a 7-year-old girl in a police raid will experience the effects of a concussive grenade firsthand. On Friday Wayne County Assistant Prosecutor Robert Moran requested that jurors experience being in a room when a flash-bang grenade is detonated.

 

Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway of the Third Circuit Court agreed to a trial run involving her and the attorneys before she decides if jurors should be subjected to the stunning effects of the blast.  "It would give the jury perspective because of the nature of the effect," Moran said. "It will show the jury exactly what happened inside that house." Officer Joseph Weekley is set to stand trial on an involuntary manslaughter charge in the shooting death of 7-year-old Black girl, Aiyana Jones. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

Police raided an eastside flat on Lillibridge on May 16 looking for a murder suspect. During the raid, a flash-bang grenade was detonated while Weekley, the first officer in, was already inside the home. Jones was shot once in the head. The special response team was being recorded by crews from the cable reality show "First 48."

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Vallejo Settles with Asian War Veteran for $4 Million: After Unlawful Entry into home, Police Beating Caused Paralysis

From [HERE] and [HERE] Lawyers for a Vallejo man announced Thursday that their client has agreed to a $4.1 million settlement with the city to end a federal civil rights lawsuit in which he claimed two officers severely injured him after entering his apartment without a warrant in 2007.

Lawyers for Macario Dagdagan, 62, say two Vallejo police officers investigating an alleged assault in June 2007 went into Dagdagan's apartment without a warrant, shocked him with a stun gun and put him into a chokehold that ruptured his spine and led to paralysis. A Vietnam War veteran who worked his whole life before the incident, Mr. Dagdagan is now permanently disabled and expects to have increasingly more expensive healthcare costs in the coming years as a result of the severe injuries he incurred.

They awoke Mr. Dagdagan, who was asleep in his bed, to ask him about a citizen complaint. Mr. Dagdagan then told the officers to leave, but they arrested him, fired a Taser at him twice and handcuffed him. The police officers then engaged in illegal and violent use of force that dislodged Mr. Dagdagan's vertebrae and ruptured his disk, causing immediate paralysis and permanent damage to his spinal cord.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Sacramento, alleged that the officers violated his 4th Amendment Constitutional rights by entering his home without a court-approved warrant. Last year, a federal appeals court ruled that under the facts alleged in the lawsuit, the officers should have obtained a warrant because there was no emergency situation. [MORE

 

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Court rules that police cannot stop audio-video recording of officers on duty

From [HERE] The ACLU announced plans to launch an audio-video taping project, targeting Cook County (greater Chicago area) Illinois police officers performing their duties. Illinois is a two-party consent state, meaning that all parties to a conversation must consent to audio recording. Thus, unless the officers consented, audio-video recording would constitute an illegal wiretap. The ACLU launched a pre-emptive lawsuit against the Cook County prosecuting attorney, asking the court to block enforcement of the wiretap law in such circumstances.

A federal district judge ruled against the ACLU on legal standing grounds prior to trial. The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed, ordering that the ACLU was entitled to a preliminary injunction and a full trial. The appellate court held that the statute unconstitutionally restricts free speech.

By suggesting that there is a First Amendment right to video record police officers in the course of their duties, the Seventh Circuit joins a small number of courts around the nation that have ruled in favor of citizens suing police after officers interrupted video (or audio-video) recording.1

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Black Man Claims he has been Stopped over 60 times under NYPD Stop & Frisk

From [HERELast year, police officers in New York City stopped and frisked people 685,724 times. Eighty-seven percent of those searches involved blacks or Latinos, many of them young men, according to the New York Civil Liberties Union.

The practice of stop-and-frisk has become increasingly controversial, but what is often absent from the debate are the voices of young people affected by such aggressive policing on a daily basis. To better understand the human impact of this practice, we made this film about Tyquan Brehon, a young man who lives in one of the most heavily policed neighborhoods in Brooklyn.

By his count, before his 18th birthday, he had been unjustifiably stopped by the police more than 60 times. On several occasions, merely because he asked why he had been stopped, he was handcuffed, placed in a cell and detained for hours before being released without charges. These experiences were scarring; Mr. Brehon did whatever he could to avoid the police, often feeling as if he were a prisoner in his home.

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Autopsy shows Newburgh (NY) Police shot Unarmed Black Man Eight Times in the Back

From [HERE] The family of a man killed in an officer involved shooting is speaking out about his autopsy report.

Michael Lembhard was shot and killed by police on March 7th after they say he lunged at officers with a knife inside a home on Liberty Street. Two of the four responding officers opened fire.

A spokesman for Lembhard's family, Omari Shakur, says they received a copy of the autopsy on Wednesday. They say it shows he was shot 15 times, eight of those in the back.

The death of Lembhard ignited massive protests in the days after the shooting, and relatives and supporters have continued to speak out against what they believe will be a biased investigation. And the anger only intensified when New York Governor Andrew Cuomo denied requests for a special prosecutor to investigate the shooting of Michael Lembhard. [MORE]  Shakur said the family planned to conduct a news conference at 6 p.m. on Monday evening to release more details of the report.

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NYPD Shooting of Black Woman in Brooklyn Under Investigation

Witnesses described a chaotic scene. "They shot her and pulled her out of the car. Then she started screaming," said Ayanna Blackman, 38, who watched from her apartment on the same corner.

Witnesses said the woman was covered in blood when she was pulled from the car.

Two elected officials from the area, Assemblyman Nick Perry and Councilmember Jumaane Williams, appeared on the scene and called for an investigation into the shooting.

A crowd gathered in the tense hour after the incident, and shouts of "murderers" were directed at police officials on the scene. 

The shooting comes at a time of heightened public scrutiny of the NYPD's tactics, particularly in some of the city's minority communities.

A narcotics-enforcement officer pleaded not guilty to manslaughter charges Wednesday in the fatal shooting in February of an unarmed African-American teenager in the Bronx. Officer Richard Haste was the first officer to be charged criminally in an on-duty shooting since three officers were indicted in the 2006 death of Sean Bell.

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8 Months Pregnant Black Woman Tasered by Chicago Police Files Lawsuit

From [HERE] and [MORE] A lawsuit is set to be filed Thursday after Chicago police used a stun gun on a 30-year-old pregnant Black woman who allegedley argued with officers. Police, on patrol in a Walgreens parking lot, used a stun gun on Tiffany Rent on June 5,  at the drugstore at 103rd Street and Michigan Avenue in the Roseland neighborhood.

Rent, along with her two young children and boyfriend, Joseph Hobbs, pulled into the parking lot and parked in a handicapped parking spot. Hobbs went into the store. Rent said she got out of the car to re-seat her 3-year-old when a police officer began writing her a $200 ticket. "He gave me the ticket and I threw the ticket on the ground," Rent said she got back into her car and closed the door. That's when, she said, the officer told her she was under arrest and used a Taser on her through the window. 

“I got scared, and closed the door. I didn’t hit him. I didn’t mean to harm him, or anything. He Tasered me through the window,” she said. She said thofficers were aware of her condition because she is visibly pregnant. 

The police report alleges Rent cursed the officer and threw the shredded ticket in his face, then tried to drive off, despite the officer’s warning that she not move. (Do Not Move! Stay in the Handicaped Space-- right. It sounds like she was not under arrest and was within her right to leave - to move out of the parking space -bw)

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Dallas to Pay Lavell Fairbanks $500,000 Settlement: Black Man Brutally Beaten by Police, Denied Care

From [HERE] and [MORE]  The Dallas City Council voted to settle two police brutality cases. Both cases involved police officers accused of beating Black men who were already subdued and defenseless.  One case involves Lavell Fairbanks (see the other below), who in October 2008 called 911. He told police he and his girlfriend were having an argument; he acknowledged he'd been drinking, which is why, he said, he took off running when officers arrived at his doorstep. After he surrendered to officers, witnesses state Police beat Fairbanks repeatedly with a flashlight, resulting in part of his skull being removed. The civil case filed by Fairbanks to recover damages from the city was scheduled to go to trial last week for a second time. An initial trial in January resulted in a hung jury.

A married couple who witnessed the arrest said they saw an officer hitting Mr. Fairbanks on the head repeatedly with a flashlight before and after the man was handcuffed. They say they saw an officer hit him repeatedly while he was motionless- as many as six, eight times. Their account differs from what the officers told investigators. The officers contend they struck Mr. Fairbanks once in self defense. [MORE]

Although Police called a Dallas Fire-Rescue ambulance to the scene after Mr. Fairbanks was handcuffed and beaten, paramedics' decided not to transport him to the hospital. Fairbanks was taken to jail via police car about 7 p.m., where he was again evaluated by medical personnel. He was put him in a special holding area with additional supervision and was taken to Parkland after having been found lying comatose in his jail cell about 11:50 p.m., officials said. [MORE]  At the hospital he underwent emergency brain surgery that included removal of part of his skull.

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Dallas to Pay Rodarick Lyles $500,000 Settlement: Police Caught on Video Beating Defenseless Black Man

From [HERE] The city of Dallas will pay Rodarick Lyles $500,000 for injuries he received during a 2011 traffic stop.  The arrest was caught on dash camera video in which Officer Quaitemes Williams is seen kicking and pepper-spraying Lyles, who'd been pulled over by another officer for driving with a suspended license. It shows Officer Williams punching a handcuffed Lyles with his fist and using a flashlight to beat the unarmed man. Williams kicked Lyles in the head and sprayed pepper spray into his face. Police used racial slurs during the assault. The entire video is posted on the Dallas Police Facebook page. 19 minutes and 38 seconds of the traffic stopOfficer Hiram Soler, who'd initially stopped Lyles, was suspended for 10 days for entering inaccurate, false or improper information on a police report.

His attorney says the damage that’s been done is both physical and emotional.  “Long after the bruises, and the rotator cuff, and the knee arthroscopy have healed, you’re still going to remember the guy that stood over you with a badge and made you feel less than human,” says attorney Geoff Henley.

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Lawyers for City Defend Seattle Police: Unarmed Latino Man Stomped by Officers who used Racial Slurs

From [HERE] The city of Seattle and two of its police officers asked a federal judge Wednesday to dismiss claims that they used excessive, racially motivated force against a man who was detained in a robbery investigation, but the judge made several comments suggesting he's inclined to let the case go to trial.

Lawyers for the city argued that while it was unprofessional for Officer Shandy Cobane to refer to the man's Mexican heritage while threatening to beat him up, it didn't violate the man's constitutional rights. Furthermore, they said, the level of force used - Cobane and another officer, Mary Woollum, stomped on the man as he lay prone in a parking lot - was justifiable under the circumstances.

The request to dismiss the claims brought by Martin Monetti Jr. comes as the Justice Department and the city continue difficult negotiations over changes to the police department. The DOJ last December determined that Seattle police engaged in a "pattern or practice" of using excessive force, often against minorities, and has threatened to sue the city unless it agrees to binding reforms overseen by an independent monitor and a federal judge.

Monetti's case itself was cited in the DOJ's findings: "It is troubling that the use of this racial epithet failed to provoke any of the surrounding officers to react, suggesting a department culture that tolerates this kind of abuse," the department said.

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NYPD Officer Pleads Not Guilty in Killing of Unarmed Black teenager, Released on bond

From [HERE] and [HERE] A New York police officer who shot and killed unarmed Bronx teenager Ramarley Graham in his bathroom has pleaded not guilty to manslaughter charges.

Richard Haste, the first serving NYPD officer to face criminal charges for a fatal shooting since 2006, turned himself in and was arraigned at a Bronx criminal court on charges of first and second degree manslaughter over the killing of the 18-year-old. Haste, a four-year veteran of the force, was released on $50,000 bail. He faces a maximum of 25 years in prison if convicted. "Officer Haste's actions were neither reasonable nor justified," said assistant district attorney Donald Levin at Wednesday's hearing.

The shooting took place on 2 February after officers followed Graham to his home on suspicion that he was carrying a gun. When news of the teen's death broke, the police initially said he had disobeyed orders to stop and ran into his home. Surveillance footage later showed the young man calmly entering his building. Moments later officers are seen rushing to the door, attempting to break it down.

Haste pursued Graham into his bathroom on the second floor of the building and shot Graham once in the chest as his 6-year-old brother and elderly grandmother looked on. A small bag of marijuana was allegedly found in the toilet near Graham's body but no weapon was ever recovered.

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Milwaukee Police Chief Defends Handling of Black teen's death (Would a White Woman be Treated like this?)

From [HERE] and [MORE] After a 13-year-old boy was shot and killed in front of his Milwaukee home last month, police forced his grieving mother to sit in a squad car for more than an hour rather than let her hold her dying son or join him at the hospital. Officers also rifled through her home looking for stolen firearms, and arrested another of her sons on a year-old truancy violation.

Prosecutors say the boy, 13-year-old Darius Simmons, was outside his home May 31 when his 75-year-old neighbor confronted him about stolen firearms. When Simmons protested his innocence, John Henry Spooner shot him in the chest as Simmons' mother watched, the criminal complaint said. Spooner pleaded not guilty to first-degree intentional homicide on Monday, two days after Simmons was buried. Spooner’s hearings and trial dates will be set at a June 20 scheduling conference. The case drew attention from Jesse Jackson's Rainbow PUSH Coalition, a national organization that wants federal hate-crime charges brought against Spooner. Darius was black and Spooner is white.

The actions might have seemed harsh, Milwaukee police Chief Ed Flynn acknowledged Wednesday, but that's an unfortunate aspect of homicide investigations — the detectives' top priority is to gather facts, and compassion is only a secondary concern.

Simmons' uncle, Leon Larry, said he didn't buy Flynn's explanations. He suspected that police knew they screwed up and were spinning the facts to help cover up their errors. "None of it makes sense. My sister was treated like she was the suspect," he said. "And searching the house, it looked like they were trying to give the suspect a reason for what he did, an excuse for what he did. That's garbage."

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Widow Files Suit: Baltimore County Police Tasered Black Man having Diabetic Seizure

From [HERE] and [HERE] A Baltimore widow is suing police for allegedly beating and Tasing her husband to death when he was on his way home from Bible study. One thing is not in dispute, Carl Johnson was alive before he was Tased by police, but afterwards was not.  Johnson suffered a diabetic reaction and crashed his car in May 2010, Courthouse News Service reported. 

Police who responded to the scene hit Johnson at least five times with their clubs, threw him over the guardrail, applied pressure points to his ears and armpits, and Tased him twice, Johnson's wife Linda Johnson alleges in her lawsuit. Linda Johnson is suing the Maryland State Police and Baltimore County Police, as well as the departments' top commanders and the officers she holds responsible.

The suit describes several officers continuing to struggle with Johnson, including punching him in the face and using "excessive force" but failing to look at the medical alert card in his wallet. Several officers placed Johnson in leg shackles and continued to "forcibly hold Mr. Johnson down to the ground even though the body of Mr. Johnson was no longer moving," the suit says.

According to the suit, a witness said at one point Johnson "was laying on his back with his hands up in the air, shouting, 'help,' numerous times."

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Latino Teen Files $2M suit against Monticello, 4 officers

From [HERE] A Monticello teen has filed a multimillion-dollar federal lawsuit against the village and four unnamed police officers, claiming he was arrested without cause, then roughed up by police. Santiago Acevedo Jr. filed on May 22 in the U.S. District Court Southern District.

The lawsuit claims police officers had no probable cause to arrest Acevedo, then 17, in February 2011, entered his home without first obtaining an arrest warrant, and violated his rights under the 4th Amendment from unlawful search and seizure and also excessive force. Acevedo has asked for a jury trial and is seeking $1 million in compensatory and $1 million in punitive damages. Acevedo filed a claim a year ago.

The complaint says the 5-foot-4-inch, 110-pound Acevedo was held for about 12 hours, while "one or more of the defendants "¦ struck him, battered him and pushed his face into a wall in such a manner as to cause serious injury to his mouth, teeth and face."

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NYPD Officer Indicted in Shooting Death of Unarmed Black Teen

From [HERE] and [HERE] The police officer who shot dead an unarmed Black Bronx teen hiding in his bathroom in February is expected to turn himself in Wednesday on manslaughter charges, sources told The Post.

A Bronx grand jury handed up first- and second-degree manslaughter indictments against Officer Richard Haste, a four-year NYPD veteran, for the Feb. 2 shooting of 18-year-old Ramarley Graham. The shooting of Graham inside his Wakefield home sparked accusations of over overly aggressive policing. Haste, 30, has been on modified duty since the incident. He faces up to 25 years in prison. The Bronx District Attorney’s Office determined that Haste not only didn't follow procedure, but broke the law by opening fire.

Cops assigned to an undercover street narcotics unit had noticed Graham on the street and thought he was acting suspiciously that day. They followed him into his family's East 229th Street apartment. Guns out, the officers ran to the second floor and broke down the door. They spotted Graham down a long hallway near the back of the apartment and saw the teenager duck into the bathroom. and burst into the bathroom where he was hiding.  That’s when Haste allegedly opened fire. Acording to police, Graham had a small amount of marijuana on him and was trying to flush it down the toilet.

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Family of Unarmed Latino Teen Killed by US Border Patrol sues - Shot in the Back 3 Times

From [HERE] The mother of a 19-year-old man fatally shot in the back by a U.S. Border Patrol agent has sued the federal government and the agent himself, claiming it was "an appalling use of excessive force" because her son was unarmed, had his back to the agent and posed no threat.

Guadalupe Guerrero said Monday that the Border Patrol had no right to take her son's life, even if he had marijuana in his truck as they say — though she disputed the allegation. A Border Patrol agent identified by police as Lucas Tidwell shot Carlos La Madrid three times — twice in the back and once in the thigh — as he climbed a ladder on the U.S.-Mexico border fence in southeastern Arizona on March 21, 2011.

The Arizona man, who did not have a weapon, fell to the ground and died about five hours later at a hospital.

"I say he didn't have drugs, but let's suppose he did," Guerrero said. "Let's suppose he had 40 pounds of marijuana. You think that's dangerous enough to kill a young boy, an American citizen? Why not send him to jail?"

 

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