New Orleans Police Officer Charged with Killing of Unarmed Black Man

From [HERE] A New Orleans policeman was charged Thursday with manslaughter in the fatal shooting of a 20-year-old unarmed Black man at the home of his mother, where officers executing a search warrant had broken in to look for drugs. Officer Joshua Colclough, who was indicted Thursday with killing Wendell Allen on March 7, was suspended without pay while the Public Integrity Bureau considers whether he should remain on the force, Police Superintendent Ronal W. Serpas said.

After the grand jury indicted Colclough, a judge issued an arrest warrant and set bond at $300,000, said Assistant District Attorney Chris Bowman. "Twelve citizens of Orleans Parish ... said this police officer — another in a long line of many — broke the law by using excessive force and taking a young man's life," said Lionel Lon Burns, attorney for the Allen family.

He said prosecutors filed a sentence enhancement request. They said that because the crime was committed with a gun, Colclough should be sentenced to at least 20 years in prison if he is convicted. Manslaughter carries up to 40 years in prison.Serpas said the police investigation was "fair, thorough and transparent."

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Lee County (FL) Deputy Sued. Caught on Camera Attacking 14 yr old Latino Girl, Pulls Gun Out in front of Children

From [HERE] Tonight, a Fort Myers family accusing two Lee County deputies of using excessive force, one even pulling out his weapon in front of several small children and it's all caught on camera. 

Ada Matias breaks down each time she watches this video showing a Lee County Deputy, Scott Hill pointing his weapon at her family and arresting her teenage daughter. It happened last year, on July 31st when Matias was having a party at her home in East Fort Myers. Cameras were rolling when this good time took a horrible turn, ending with the arrest of Ada, her husband and teenage daughter. A Sheriff's Office report shows Deputy Scott Hill was on patrol when he noticed four Hispanic males drinking beer next to Ada's home under the "No Loitering" sign on the side of this convenience store.

Reports show Hill then arrested the four men for having open containers, one of them was Ada's husband. That's when Ada walked outside to find out why he was being arrested. According to police reports, the Deputy says there were: "30-35 people in the yard.....Ada Matias confronted me and started yelling in Spanish....it was obvious that Matias was trying to incite a riot among the gathering people and refusing my lawful commands to leave the area."

Hill then called for backup and Deputy Kenneth Sherman arrived. That's when things really heated up. Video shows Ada's 10 year old daughter going to the cruiser to see her father. Deputy Sherman then grabs her arm and pulls her away. When the girl runs back again deputy hill pulls out a weapon in front of small children.

Deputy Hill then approaches Ada's 14-year old daughter with a pair of handcuffs, as he grabs her wrists the girl takes a swing at Deputy Hill and that's when Deputy Sherman takes her to the ground and she's arrested. Two small children try to approach their sister but are pushed away. In Deputy Hill's report he writes, the 14-year old girl, "Raised her fists and struck him in the arm and chest multiple times before she was restrained by Deputy Sherman."

But that's not what the video shows. You can clearly see the girl taking one swing at Deputy Hill and she misses.

We also asked the girl about this directly. Mike Mason: "The Deputy says that you swung at him multiple times is that true?

Girl: "No it's not." The teen was charged with battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting an officer with violence. Miami attorney John De Leon is fighting to get those charges dismissed.

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New Haven Police Officer Suspended for 15 days for "using deadly force" - Standing on Handcuffed Black Man's Neck & Seizing Camera Phone

From [HERE] and [HERE] A white city police sergeant was suspended for 15 days for using excessive force during a June arrest outside a city nightclub against an unarmed, handcuffed Black man, who was under control and not resisting arrest. He was not disciplined, however, for later seizing the phone of a woman who taped the encounter. So concludes an internal affairs investigation into the actions of Sgt. Chris Rubino in the early hours of June 2. This is his 6th suspension for misconduct. 

Video and still photos taken by citizens showed Rubino putting his boot on the back of the neck of a 24-year-old Bridgeport man during an arrest. “The tactics of a foot on a neck are improper and unacceptable by any police officer let alone a police supervisor,” Esserman said Thursday.

The seizure of the phone as evidence, he said, didn’t appear to violate any law and the incident showed that the department’s internal policy about citizens’ rights to film police is too vague and needs to be rewritten. (Evidence of what, police trying to kill this Black man? Deputy Dog here seems to have just overlooked the 4th Amendment prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures. No exigent circumstances here, except he is not white - bw).

As police struggled with the suspect in this case, Jennifer Gondola was recording police on her iPhone. When the suspect was in custody, Rubino approached Gondola and asked her if she recorded the incident. She said she had and he asked to review the footage. When he saw it, he said needed the recording to support the police version of events. She balked and put her phone down her bra. Rubino then arrested her and had a female officer retrieve the phone, which he entered into evidence. Ultimately, that video was used to conclude Rubino had used excessive force. 

The internal affairs report stated, “Sgt. Rubino stated he placed his foot on the back of Rawlings’ neck to pin him to the ground. Rawlings was handcuffed and face down on the ground at that time. Rawlings was not actively resisting,” echoing a conclusion Jennifer Gondola made to investigators and in a subsequent Independent interview. “The position of Sgt. Rubino’s foot on the subject’s neck was consistent with that of the use of deadly force.”

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Brooklyn DA to Investigate NYPD Killing of Black Woman in Brooklyn

From [HERE] The Kings County District Attorney’s office has opened an investigation into the death of 23-year-old Shantel Davis, who was allegedly shot and killed by an NYPD cop after a car chase in East Flatbush, a family spokesman said. Davis' family and attorney met with District Attorney Charles J. Hynes at the D.A.'s office  in downtown Brooklyn for about an hour Thursday to discuss the investigation, said Kirsten John Foy, a Davis family spokesman.

"This is the first indication of some condolence from this city," Foy said. "We've just requested that [Hynes] look into the other issues that bubble to the surface about Det. Atkins."

Atkins' fatal encounter with Davis happened on June 14, when Davis was spotted driving a stolen grey Toyota Camry westbound on Church Avenue, police said.

Atkins and his partner Daniel Guida saw Davis running a red light. When the officers gave chase, Davis crashed into a minivan at the intersection of Church and 38th Street. The officers confronted Davis in the car, and during a scuffle to remove her, Atkins allegedly shot the woman by accident in the chest. The two removed Davis from the car, and she collapsed on the street in a pool of blood. She died while being transported to King’s County Hospital. The death sparked several days of unrest in the neighborhood, and neighbors organized a protest against the killing on June 16.

Davis' death sparked outrage among her neighbors and family, who denounced the detective who allegedly shot her, Phil Atkins, as a "renegade" cop with a history of aggressive behavior toward residents. Court records show that Atkins has been sued several times in the last decade by residents accusing him of using undue force and fabricating evidence. Foy, an aide to Public Adovcate Bill DeBlasio who was detained by police at a 2011 West Indian Day Parade, said the family presented Hynes with multiple examples of excessive force used by Atkins in the East Flatbush neighborhood.

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White Plains to File Frivolous Motion to Dismiss: Police Officer Yelled N****r before Murdering Unarmed Black Marine

From [HERE] A federal judge has scheduled a Sept. 13 conference to discuss a possible motion by the city to dismiss a $21 million wrongful-death lawsuit brought by the family of Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., who was shot and killed last year by police responding to a medical alert.

U.S. District Judge Cathy Seibel set the date after lawyers for White Plains and officers involved in the incident said the suit “is devoid of factual content sufficient to allow the court to draw the reasonable inference that the city defendants are liable for these claims” in a letter filed Monday.

City Attorney John Callahan said Thursday that no motion to dismiss has been made yet; lawyers for the Chamberlain family said they would “vigorously oppose” such a motion . “If they think they’re going to short-circuit this case, they’ve got another think coming,” said Randolph McLaughlin of the Newman Ferrara law firm. “To suggest that what happened to Mr. Chamberlain is not a federal case is absurd.”

Chamberlain, 68, was killed during a Nov. 19 standoff at his apartment after his medical alert device accidentally went off about 5:30 a.m. Chamberlain, who had a chronic heart condition and had been drinking, said he was OK and did not need help, but police insisted he open his door so they could check on him.

The encounter was recorded by audio and video devices. Transcripts from the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office of audio recordings reveal Officer Steven Hart as the officer who said to Chamberlain, “Stop, we have to talk nigger” before police broke down his door. The suit claims that cops taunted the 68-year-old Chamberlain for more than an hour before breaking down his apartment door. 

Police removed the door from its hinges and shot Chamberlain with a stun gun and bean bags, which they said did not stop him. He was shot and killed by Officer Anthony Carelli when police said he lunged at another officer with a knife. Police said he tried to attack officers with a knife and hatchet when they pried the door open.

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Family Of Chavis Carter Meets With Justice Department - Where is the Dashcam Video?

From [HERE] The mother of the Black man who was shot in the backseat of a police squad car met with a representative from the United States Justice Department Tuesday night.

Teresa Carter had the meeting just after seeing a video created by Jonesboro police to explain the death of her son, Chavis Carter. “Look where the handcuffs are”‘, said Carter. ” I’m still not buying that.”

The re-enactment tape shows several officers, about the same size as Carter, in a squad car with cuffs on, who are able to pull out a hidden gun and put it to their head. Carter had been picked up by police July 28. The actual dashcam video from the police cruiser has not been released by police. Police have claimed that the dashcam video exonerates the police -  but have refused to release it so far.

The New York Daily News quoted Jonesboro Police Chief Michael Yates as saying a dashboard-camera video and accounts from unnamed witnesses “tend to support” Baggett and Marsh’s account. Yates has said both witnesses and the dashboard camera put the officers outside the vehicle at the time the gun was fired.

A warrant was issued when Chavis did not show up for a court date after being caught with marijuana. Officers searched him, handcuffed him behind his back, and put him in a squad car. The two officers were placed on paid administrative leave, pending results of the probe.

The FBI is monitoring the police investigation and will perform ballistics tests on the .380-caliber, cobra semi-automatic handgun found near his body. The gun had been reported stolen in Jonesboro, a month before.

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Advocates Call for Racist Jonesboro Police Chief to Resign

From [HERE] The Arkansas Chapter of the Commission on Religion and Racism (CORR) is calling for the resignation of Jonesboro Police Chief Michael Yates in light of the death of 21-year-old Chavis Carter, who police said shot himself in the head while handcuffed in the back of a squad car. CORR is leading a protest at the Jonesboro City Hall today at 11:30 am.

Yates, who recently claimed it would have been “quite easy” for Carter to shoot himself with his hands double-locked behind his back, has a murky history in race relations. Yates came to the Jonesboro Police Department after his controversial resignation as police chief in Americus, Georgia. The local NAACP chapter launched a campaign to get Yates fired after he conducted an illegal background check on the NAACP vice president, who publicly complained about Americus police brutality at city council meetings. Yates stepped down voluntarily in 2004.

But Yates continued to stir up controversy upon moving to Arkansas. He made headlines again during the “Obama Riot” of 2008, an altercation between police and a predominantly black crowd of students celebrating Obama’s election at Arkansas State University. According to two female witnesses, about 30 officers arrested several of the 60 or 70 celebrating students, threw them to the ground, and repeatedly kicked one man in the stomach and head. Yates told a different version of events, in which there were 200-250 students who set fire to a fence, fired weapons and attacked officers.

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Arkansas Police Release Fake Video Reconstruction - Fail to Release Dashcam Video of Police Custody Death of Handcuffed Black Man

From [HERE] Police in Arkansas released a video reconstruction Tuesday meant to show how Chavis Carter could have shot himself in the head while he was handcuffed in the back of a police car.  In the video, an officer played the part of Carter, 21, a Southaven, Miss., man who died from a gunshot wound to the temple on July 28 despite being frisked twice by Jonesboro police officers.  Carter was black and both of the officers who arrested him are white, a dynamic that has generated suspicion among some members of the city's black community.

The officers stopped a truck in which Carter was riding after they received a report of a suspicious vehicle driving up and down a residential street. They arrested Carter after learning he had an outstanding arrest warrant related to a drug charge in Mississippi. Police also alleged Carter had marijuana.

In producing the video, the agency used the same type of handcuffs that were used on Carter and the same model of handgun found with Carter after he died, a .380-caliber Cobra semi-automatic. An officer of similar height and weight to Carter - 5 feet 8 inches, 160 pounds - sat in the back of a cruiser, leaned over and was able to lift the weapon to his head and reach the trigger. (Chavis was left handed and police claim while handcuffed he shot himself in the right temple. It is unknown whether the police actor was left or right handed. Police claim to have a need to hold onto the dashcam video.).

The Blue Arkansas Blog made the following observations: Jonesboro’s police chief Michael Yates is saying a few bizarre things to the national media about the already bizarre death of Chavis Carter:

YATES: For the average person that’s never been in handcuffs, that’s never been around inmates and people in custody would react exactly the same way that you just did, about how can that be possible. Well the fact of it is, it’s very possible and it’s quite easy.

The police have said repeatedly that the dashboard camera and witnesses place the officers outside the car at the time of the shooting. But Yates told CNN that the dashboard video does not actually show the moment the gun was fired, nor does it capture Carter sitting in the back seat.

That’s interesting, because earlier Yates said the whole thing was “bizarre” and “defies logic at first glance”.  He also said:

YATES: There’s no indication of any projectiles coming from outside the vehicle. We’ve reviewed the dashcam video and as late as today managed to have some witnesses come forward that observed the incident from start to finish. And their statements tend to support that whatever transpired in the back of that police car transpired in the back with the officers in a different location.

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Lawyer Deposes Pleasantville Police Officer Sued for Killing Unarmed Black College Student & Denying Medical Care

From [HERE] The Pleasantville police officer who fatally shot Danroy Henry Jr. was questioned for five hours Tuesday in a federal lawsuit filed by the dead Black student’s family, a session that the family’s lawyer said largely “vindicates” their position on the shooting. “It vindicates a great deal of what’s been said,” said lawyer Michael Sussman, who accuses officer Aaron Hess of unjustifiably killing the 20-year-old Pace University football player outside Finnegan’s Grill in Thornwood in October 2010.

Sussman questioned Hess from 10 a.m. to 4:15 p.m., with a 75-minute lunch break, pressing the officer on various matters related to the shooting. The deposition also was attended by Henry’s family — who is suing Hess, Pleasantville and Westchester County — and some of Henry’s friends who are involved in related civil rights lawsuits against the county, Mount Pleasant, Pleasantville and several police officers. The details of the deposition are expected to be held from public view for some time, though Zelman said she will pass transcripts on to the U.S. Department of Justice, which has said it is looking into the matter. Henry’s family has accused Hess of murder, though a Westchester County grand jury declined to criminally charge him.

Henry was shot outside the bar in the early morning hours after a homecoming game celebration. Police claim he was driving from a fire zone outside Finnegan’s when Hess fired into his Nissan. The officer, who claimed through his lawyer that the car was accelerating toward him, was cleared of criminal wrongdoing by a Westchester County grand jury.

Several witnesses, including passengers of Henry’s car, said he drove away because an officer had ordered him to leave the fire lane. Before he could slow down, Hess jumped in front of the vehicle, onto the hood, and started firing. The passenger in the car, Brandon Cox, told authorities that Henry slowed down before he was shot by police. [MORE] According to witness testimony, Henry was handcuffed and placed on the sidewalk, where he lay dying. He was left on the street for 15 minutes without any medical attention. [MORE]

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Councilman Demands Another Federal Probe of New Brunswick County Police: Witnesses say Officers Shot Black Man Without Warning as he Drove Away

From [HERE] A New Castle County councilman wants a federal investigation of the latest fatal shooting by a county cop, saying the police department’s account “too conveniently” adheres to the policy on an allowable use of force. James L. Green, 27, was shot and killed on Memorial Drive near New Castle on Thursday. Police said Green was reaching for a gun at the same time he was turning his car and accelerating toward an officer after a vehicle stop.

Councilman Jea Street, who represents the neighborhood where the shooting occured, said the department’s story is nearly identical to the May 10 police shooting of Erik Turnbull. Turnbull, 32, was shot and killed outside the Harbor Club Apartments near Ogletown after police said he aimed his SUV at two officers during a drug sting on May 10. The state Attorney General’s Office is reviewing that case. “It’s way too convenient that the exact same thing happened in both situations,” Street said.

Green's family gave a far different account from the police version of the story, saying Green avoided a confrontation with a man outside his apartment, and was heading to work when he was shot by police. Green’s relatives and his fiance', Jennifer Thomas were with him at Parma Avenue on Thursday when he was shot. Mike Green, and Janai Clark said they arrived as two women were fighting and an unknown man was looking to get in a fight. Rather than get involved, the cousins told Green to leave. He got into his car and pulled out, and they followed him in another vehicle, about three cars behind, they said.

They said they didn’t see an officer stop James Green’s car. “They didn’t give my cousin no chance, man,” said Mike Green. “They never tried to stop that car.”

They saw police cars, apparently responding to the reported shooting, enter the development as they were leaving behind James Green’s car, they said. Police had lights flashing, but no sirens, Mike Green said. Mike Green added that his cousin had made the turn onto Memorial Drive when the shot was fired. While police only said Green was struck in the upper body, his family said he was struck twice in the head. “We were literally 30 seconds apart,” Clark said. By the time I got to the corner and turned from Parma to Memorial an officer had shot,” she said. “He didn’t even tell him to stop his vehicle, didn’t ask him to stop his vehicle.”

After the officer fired the first shot at Green’s Cadillac, the car went from the far right lane into the oncoming lanes. That’s when Clark says the officer fired a second shot. “Two shots. Both hit in the back of the head,” she said. [MORE

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Danroy Henry Case Moves Forward: Pleasantville Police Officer Shot Black College Student & Let him Die in the Street

From [HERE] and [HERE] The wrongful death civil lawsuit against the Village of Pleasantville and the police officer who shot and killed Pace University student Danroy Henry, Jr. in October, 2010, is moving along, the Henry family’s attorney said Friday.  Michael Sussman said the first deposition in the case will be taken next week and Aaron Hess, the officer who shot and killed the 20-year-old student, will be questioned.“Depositions are not themselves open to the public, but as I have indicated, given the nature of the matter, we do expect to release the transcript, or significant parts thereof, particularly as it pertains to the events, to the members of the public through the press,” he said.

“We view this as a fairly important event,” Sussman said during a telephone conference Friday with reporters. “It’s very, very important that we understand from his perspective what he did and what he didn’t do, why he did and all of that.”

Henry’s family is pursuing the lawsuit against Hess, Pleasantville and Westchester County. Eight of Henry’s friends who were at Finnegan’s Grill in Thornwood the night of the Oct. 17, 2010, shooting also have filed civil rights lawsuits against the county, Mount Pleasant, Pleasantville and several police officers — including Hess and Mount Pleasant Officer Ronald Beckley, who also fired at Henry’s car.

Henry was shot outside the bar in the early morning hours after a homecoming game celebration. Police claim he was driving from a fire zone outside Finnegan’s when Hess fired into his Nissan. The officer, who claimed through his lawyer that the car was accelerating toward him, was cleared of criminal wrongdoing by a Westchester County grand jury.

Several witnesses, including passengers of Henry’s car, said he drove away because an officer had ordered him to leave the fire lane. Before he could slow down, Hess jumped in front of the vehicle, onto the hood, and started firing. The passenger in the car, Brandon Cox, told authorities that Henry slowed down before he was shot by police. [MORE] According to witness testimony, Henry was handcuffed and placed on the sidewalk, where he lay dying. He was left on the street for 15 minutes without any medical attention. [MORE]

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Racial Profiling Rife at Airport, U.S. Officers "pull aside anyone who they don’t like the way they look"

From [HERE] More than 30 federal officers in an airport program intended to spot telltale mannerisms of potential terrorists say the operation has become a magnet for racial profiling, targeting not only Middle Easterners but also blacks, Hispanics and other minorities.

In interviews and internal complaints, officers from the Transportation Security Administration’s “behavior detection” program at Logan International Airport in Boston asserted that passengers who fit certain profiles — Hispanics traveling to Miami, for instance, or blacks wearing baseball caps backward — are much more likely to be stopped, searched and questioned for “suspicious” behavior. “They just pull aside anyone who they don’t like the way they look — if they are black and have expensive clothes or jewelry, or if they are Hispanic,” said one white officer, who along with four others spoke with The New York Times on the condition of anonymity.

The T.S.A. said on Friday that it had opened an investigation into the claims.

While the Obama administration has attacked the use of racial and ethnic profiling in Arizona and elsewhere, the claims by the Boston officers now put the agency and the administration in the awkward position of defending themselves against charges of profiling in a program billed as a model for airports nationwide.

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Wrongful Death Suit Filed Against Honolulu Police Seeking $10 Million - Police Beat & Suffocated Latino Man who Called 911

From [HERE] Officers went to Torres’ Kaukai Road home Feb. 20 following a series of early morning telephone calls between Torres and emergency 911 operators, according to transcripts of the calls released to Hawaii Reporter by the Police Department.

After a first brief call from Torres to police at 4:27 a.m. ended abruptly, a police dispatcher called Torres back and asked him if he needed assistance. “Yeah, help…help…help, please,” Torres said.

Tassa Torres’ suit said she lived in a nearby house with her grandmother.  When “she heard loud voices outside (she) went  to investigate and found three police officers arguing with her younger brother,” the suit said.

Aaron Torres “was saying there was no reason to arrest him and the officers were indicating they were going to arrest him for something,” the suit alleged. After handcuffing Torres, the officers threw him to ground; one sat on his back, another on his head and neck and a third “was shackling Aaron’s legs while Aaron was yelling that they were hurting him,” the suit said. “The officers seemed to her to be holding her brother down on the ground for what seemed like at least 30 minutes,” Tassa Torres alleged in the suit.

“They kept telling him to stop moving and Aaron kept yelling that they were hurting him," the lawsuit said.

“Now it seems clear that he was just moving, trying to breathe because of the way the officers pressed his face into the dirt,” the lawsuit said. After Torres stopped moving, the officers turned him over and Tassa Torres saw that there was dirt in Aaron’s nose and mouth from the way the officers held his face in the dirt,” the lawsuit said.

 

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Jonesboro Police Playing Games in Custodial Death of Chavis Carter: Still Have Not Released Police Cruiser Video

How could handcuffed suspect shoot himself?

Did he commit suicide? According to police, Carter somehow managed to get a gun and fired a single shot into his head. Just how the police officer who searched Carter was able to find what amounted to a dime bag of pot but missed a small-caliber handgun is a mystery to a lot of people.

So, too, is how Carter could have shot himself in the head, although "his hands were still cuffed behind his back," according to the police report. His mother, Teresa Carter, told a Memphis, Tenn., television station that police said her son was shot in the right temple. But, she said, Carter was left handed.

It is, of course, theoretically possible the 21-year-old was an ambidextrous guy whose fingers were nimble enough to pull off a nearly impossible bit of marksmanship with a gun that a cop overlooked while searching him. Or, failing that kind of "Ripley's Believe It or Not" scenario, the possibility of police foul play has to be seriously considered.

During an interview with national television network HLN, Jonesboro police chief Michael Yates tried to have it both ways. He said what happened to Carter was "definitely bizarre and it defies logic at first glance, so we're actively trying to determine how that happened." But then, when he was asked why cops listed Carter's death as a suicide, Yates said: "It appears that's what it is. ... We've reviewed the dash-cam video and as late as today ... had some witnesses come forward who observed the incident from start to finish, and their statements tend to support" the cops' contention that they had nothing to do with Carter's death.

So why hasn't the police department released the videotapes from the two police cars?

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D.C. Police Officer pleads guilty to radar speed-gun fraud, Falsifying Reports & Calibration Records

From [HERE] The extra shifts that D.C. police Officer David J. Cephas volunteered for proved lucrative, authorities said, allowing him to rack up more than $17,000 in overtime in a single year by running mobile radar and writing speeding tickets. But the 12-year veteran pocketed the extra money while neglecting a crucial part of his job, according to authorities: He failed to conduct hourly tests to calibrate the digital units, then falsified logbooks to cover his tracks, forcing D.C. officials to nullify 200 citations and refund $17,550 to motorists caught in the traps. On Thursday, Cephas pleaded guilty in D.C. Superior Court to three misdemeanor counts of fraud. He is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 30, when he will face up to 180 days in jail and a $1,000 fine on each count.

As part of his plea, he resigned from the department in June and agreed to pay back the money the District had to return to drivers ticketed with radar guns that police could not say were giving correct readings.

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No Justice. Just White Supremacy. White Jury Rules in Favor of Pittsburgh Police who Beat Unarmed Black Student

From [HERE] and [HERE] An eight-member federal jury decided in favor of three white Pittsburgh police officers on Jordan Miles' accusation of malicious prosecution and a judge ordered a mistrial on two other counts, ending a three-week civil trial but setting up an as-yet-unscheduled retrial on whether the officers falsely arrested the young Homewood man and used excessive force.

The jury was composed of 7 whites and one black man. It means the jury could not award damages to Jordan Miles who maintains he was stopped without cause - likely because he was a young black man walking in his high-crime neighborhood - then wrongly arrested and beaten before and after he was handcuffed on a frigid, snowy night.

"It's a good win for us," said James Wymard, the attorney for Officer David Sisak who wasn't in the courtroom because he's vacationing with his family. "We said all along once this case was exposed to the light of daylight these allegations would not stand," said Robert Leight, attorney for another defendant, Officer Richard Ewing.

Jurors seen leaving the courthouse would not speak to reporters. Miles, now 20, his mother and sister declined comment, but his attorneys promised to continue the legal battle. "There will be a new trial on the most important issue: Was there excessive force?" said Tim O'Brien, one of Miles' attorneys. 

Jordan claimed undercover officers approached him without articulable suspicion. Officers chased him when he ran and when they caught up with him they beat him into submission by delivering violent blows that left his face swollen and distorted. Police also used a stun gun and pulled out a chunk of his hair. The officers put him in handcuffs, and repeatedly shoved his face into the snow, causing a piece of wood to impale his gums. He is 5-foot-6 and 150 pounds and was unarmed. No weapons were found. He suffers from permanent brain damage. [MORE

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Des Moines Officer Convicted of Felony Charges in Beating of Unresisting Black Man - Struck 14 Times with 'Crowbar like' Baton

Officer Faces up to 30 Years. Bonds, suffered bruises, a broken left hand, a fractured right arm and a head gash that required eight staples to close. [MORE] From [HERE] U.S. District Court jurors have found a former Des Moines police officer guilty of using excessive force on a man who was severely beaten during a traffic stop in 2008. Mersed Dautovic, 26, was convicted on two felony charges involving violating the civil rights of Octavius Bond and then obstructing justice by lying about it later on police reports. He faces up to 30 years in federal prison.

Dautovic, who joined the Des Moines police force in early 2008, is accused of striking Bonds in the back of the head with a baton during a September 2008 traffic stop, and of needlessly striking Bonds’ back as he lay on the ground. Police struck the 25-year-old Bonds with batons 14 times in the head, back, arms and legs. Witnesses stopped along Southeast 14th Street that night saw Bonds splayed out over the roof of his girlfriend’s car as Dautovic and former partner John Mailander struck him with ASP batons, a telescoping metal weapon that federal prosecutor John Courter described in court Tuesday as “essentially a mini-crowbar with a handle on it.”

“Those blows were intended merely to punish, not for any legitimate law enforcement purpose,” Courter told jurors during the trial’s closing arguments. “Because at that time, Octavius Bonds was not resisting arrest.”

Authorities said Dautovic and Mailander were working off-duty security watching a south-side Des Moines apartment building when they decided to respond to a radio call about a man with a gun in his yard. Their response was slowed by Erin Evans and Bonds, who were traveling in the northbound left lane of Southeast 14th Street in Des Moines and failed to immediately get out of the patrol car’s way. When other officers responded to the emergency call, Dautovic decided to pull Evans over, according to court papers in two criminal cases and a civil lawsuit that Des Moines eventually settled for $500,000

Jurors last week were told how a flustered Evans failed to respond to the officers’ commands, turned the car’s ignition off, then on again, then reached for her cellphone to call her mother. Evans eventually was threatened with pepper spray, pulled from the car by Mailander and “kind of tossed” across the hood of the police car before being handcuffed. Documents say Bonds, who is 6 feet 8 inches tall, was sprayed with pepper spray after he partially climbed out of the car and failed to comply with commands to get back in.

Bonds at some point grabbed Dautovic’s hands while asking him to stop the pepper spray. Both officers then hit Bonds with batons, including roughly 14 blows while he was on the ground curled in a fetal position, according to court documents.

Witness Marie Grove, who saw part of the attack from her Jeep on Southeast 14th, told jurors last week that Evans’ screams were “horrific” and that the officers’ baton blows looked “like they were chopping wood.” (In photo, Erin Evans throws her hands up in thanks as she reacts to the not-guilty verdict in criminal case in March 2009 . She and Octavius Bonds, left, were charged with interference after an altercation with police officers.)

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The Nature of Police

From [HERE] This report — along with Will Grigg's massive collection of other brutalities — illustrates the sociopathic nature of those who work for the police system. Such people want to work within an agency that permits them to exercise the violent powers of the state to enforce whatever whim they might have. To most police officers, the greatest offense amounts to behavior expressing a "contempt of cop," and will be dealt with firmly. Their "right" to remain unaccountable (i.e., to not be answerable for their wrongs) is implicit in the definition of the state as a "system that enjoys a monopoly on the use of violence." To suggest that the enforcers of state power should be limited in the exercise of their momentary whims, is to suggest that the state, itself, is subject to some higher standard (i.e., that it does not enjoy a monopoly on violence).

Those who respond that not all police officers are  ill-motivated are doubtless correct. But virtually all members of the force will cover for those who do exceed the bounds of decent behavior. If you doubt this, re-watch the video-taping of the infamous Rodney King beating, and see how many police officers just stood by  and observed the brutalities of their "fellow officers." Remind yourself, as well, of how the then LA police chief went into a tirade against the man who videotaped the attack;  and of how local governments now conspire to criminalize the photographing of police actions.

When I was in grade school, kids used to threaten one another on the playground with the claim that they would "call the police" on them. Teachers — ever mindful of their task to condition young minds into obedience to authority — would respond "Oh, no, the policeman is your friend."  Small children know better: They have always been more in tune with reality than are the adults who have been trained to roll over on command, to sit up and beg, and to carry their leashes in their own mouths!

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NY Times Photographer Beaten Up And Arrested By NYPD

From [HERENew York Times photographer Robert Stolarik was allegedly beaten up and arrested by NYPD officers for taking pictures of an arrest Sunday night. While on an assignment in the Bronx, Stolarik took pictures of an NYPD officer arresting a 16-year-old girl. He says an officer slammed his camera into his face when they learned he was a journalist, and dragged him to the ground and kicked him after he asked for their badge numbers. He was then charged with obstructing government administration and with resisting arrest. The NYPD defended the officers, saying Stolarik “inadvertently” struck an officer in the face with a camera and “violently resisted being handcuffed.” The New York Times has a video showing Stolarik face down on the sidewalk, surrounded by a huddle of about six officers. Lawyers for the National Press Photographers Association asked the NYPD to return $18,000 worth of cameras and press credentials seized by the officers. Stolarik was previously arrested while covering an Occupy Wall Street protest.

PG County Cop Suspended for Lying in Report: Video Reveals Officer Assaulted Unarmed Black Man from Behind

From [HERE] A Prince George's County Police officer has been suspended after surveillance video contradicted his version of events, stemming from a police-involved shooting in Brentwood on Feb 3, sources tell ABC7 News. Paula Dorm's 19-year-old son Ryan has been locked up since last Friday when he was very nearly shot by Prince Georges County Police.

Police claimed that Ryan assaulted an officer, ran and then reached for an officer's gun, causing the officer to fire. Ryan was charged with resisting arrest and assault. But now police admit a surveillance video shows that the officers involved lied about large portions of that story.

It all began when two Prince George's County detectives were in the area of Rhode Island Avenue and 38th Street on the lookout for robbers. They spotted Ryan and a friend--one allegedly wearing a mask--go into the Lowest Price Gas convenience store in the 3800 block of Rhode Island Avenue. Fearing that a crime was about to occur, the officers approached and were buzzed into the locked store by the attendant.

A police report said that Ryan Dorm swung at an officer and began to flee. The officer caught the man after a brief foot pursuit. The man then tried to reach for the officer's gun. Fearing that the man was trying to take his gun, the officer fired his gun at the man. Through his lawyer, Ryan tells ABC7 that he walked out and across the street because he didn't want any trouble.

According to sources, the newly found security video supports Ryan's claim that Cpl. Donald Taylor tackled him from behind, punched him in the back and then hit him in the head with his gun, which accidentally fired.

On Monday, the Police Inspector General announced the two officers involved have been suspended and Ryan's charges will be changed.

 

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