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Saturday, May 30, 2015

Cop's 'Friendly' Sentence Sums Up The Police Abuse Epidemic


"“Can you tell me why I’m being arrested?” Hamza Jeylani asks an officer in a video captured on his cell phone.

“Because I feel like arresting you,” the officer, who the American Civil Liberties Union identifies as Officer Rod Webber, replies in the short video.

This exchange happens after Webber calmly threatens Jeylani, who does not appear to be offering any resistance whatsoever. “Plain and simple,” Webber tells Jeylani, “if you fuck with me I’m going to break your legs before you even get a chance to run.”

According to the ACLU, Jeylani and four of his friends — all of whom are black teenagers — were pulled over after making a U-turn in a parking lot in South Minneapolis. The four young men had been playing basketball at a YMCA. Despite Officer Webber’s statement that Jeylani was arrested because the cop felt like arresting him, the police claim that they suspected the four youth of stealing the car they were driving."

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Police Beat Old Woman Caught On Cop Body Camera

                     

 Sheila Chester, 59, of Evansville, IN, was sitting in her car when another driver sideswiped her. In what should've been a simple case of an exchange of insurance information when the officer arrived quickly escalated into a case of police brutality on Chester's behalf.

Chester allegedly provided an outdated insurance card to the officer and recited the name that she goes by rather than the name that's on her driver's license. When she attempted to give the officer multiple other documents -- that still didn't include a current insurance card -- the officer yelled at her to return to her vehicle while he wrote her a ticket. Chester questioned the ticket -- rather loudly -- and things went downhill.

The officer opened his door, hitting Chester in the mouth. He pushed her, tasered her, and tried to cuff her. Four more officers arrived on the scene.

The officer also threw Chester onto the ground and knelt on her neck. Another officer wiped mud on her back.

Witnesses say the officer tasered Chester up to six times. Chester was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and resisting law enforcement. Police claim justifiable force based on the body cam video.

COP Chains INNOCENT Black Man To Wall, BEATS Him, GOUGES Eyes After REFU...




Milwaukee, WI — In August of 2013 former detective Rodolfo Gomez savagely beat Deron Love during an interrogation. He was chained to the wall.

Was Freddie Gray Killed Because He Offended Police?


Freddie Gray's death at the hands of Baltimore Police has caused a storm of controversy over the prosecution of six officers is discussed with retired LAPD Cheryl Dorsey. The reasons that the death was preventable and the police were culpable and responsible for the death of Gray is illuminated, as she explains how police probably let their personal feelings get in the way of their civic duty, and sparked further national outrage over police brutality, in this excerpt from Media Mayhem, hosted by Allison Hope Weiner.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Delaware officer kicking a black suspect Lateef Dickerson in the face on...


Another video of another black man’s violent arrest has made its way online. The Dover Police Department on Thursday released video of a Delaware officer kicking a black suspect in the face after a federal judge ruled it was no longer considered confidential, authorities said in a statement that accompanied the YouTube video. The officer, Thomas Webster IV, was charged Monday for second-degree assault for the arrest, which took place on Aug. 24, 2013. The shocking footage has become yet another example of police violence against black men captured on tape.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Police Dashcam Video Shows Shooting of Unarmed Man


A police dash cam video has emerged of Florida police officer Adam Lin gunning down 20-year-old unarmed black man Dontrell Stephens who was left paralyzed from the waist down by the shooting. We take a look at the video on the Lip News with John Fenoglio and Jo Ankier.

Police Electrocuted Man To Death For Sagging Pants


"Ervin Leon Edwards, 38, died face down in a jail cell after a half-dozen officers held him down and tasered him, then left him for dead.

His crime? Police were questioning him about an argument with his girlfriend and then began harassing him over his “sagging pants,” according to the lawsuit. He was arrested moments later and brought to the West Baton Rouge jail.

As Edwards was being arrested, for seemingly no reason, he began to voice his discontent. Nonetheless, officers still managed to restrain him and bring him to jail.

During the arrest, police threatened to taser Edwards at which point his girlfriend begged them not to because of Edward’s high blood pressure, according to the lawsuit.

What happens next can only be described as gross criminal negligence on behalf of Port Allen Police."

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Baltimore Activists: "Freddie Gray Was Lynched"


Watch the full Democracy Now! segment with Eddie Conway on the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore: http://ow.ly/M1KXQ 

US protesters march toward police dept. in Baltimore Maryland


Protesters in the U-S state of Maryland have held yet another rally, demanding justice for a black man who died of a spinal injury he sustained during arrest.

The protesters started their rally from the street where Freddie Gray was arrested in Baltimore toward the city's police department. They were carrying placards bearing the message Black Lives Matter. The Justice Department has opened an investigation into Gray's death which once again sparked angry protests over police brutality across the country. The 25-year-old Gray was arrested on April 12 and died a week later. His autopsy showed that he died from a severe injury to his spinal cord. Police suspended the six officers involved and pledged to properly investigate the case.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

The Debate - US Racial Shootings (P.1-2)(7.3.2015)



PART 1

                       
PART 2

You are not protecting us, you are killing us . Reportedly this is what the grandmother of one of the latest victims of American police’ killing Black males. This time, the tragedy took place in Madison, Wisconsin and the victim was 19 year old Anthony Robinson, who was suppose to be starting college this coming fall. One Black male is killed by police every 28 hours in the United States, this is according to Black activist groups in the US. And rarely are any police charged and convicted, as we have just witnessed in the Ferguson fiasco, where another unarmed 19 year old young Black man was killed by police and no charges have been fired.

Monday, March 2, 2015

LA officer shoots dead homeless African American


Another case of police brutality in the United States. This time a homeless black man has been fatally shot by police officers in Los Angeles.

The shocking incident caught on video and posted online shows an intense argument between a man and several officers in LA's Skid Row area. The circumstances around the shooting were not immediately clear. However, local media reports suggest that at least one officer opened fire on the man who was declared dead at a hospital. The Los Angeles Police Department hasn't commented on the incident. Skid Row area houses many hostels and services for homeless people. Police brutality, especially racial profiling, has been a matter of concern across the US in recent years. The Justice Department is under intense pressure to review the use of deadly force by law enforcement officers.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

A Black Site in Chicago? Police Accused of Running Secret Compound for Detentions & Interrogations


An explosive new report in The Guardian claims the Chicago police are operating a secret compound for detentions and interrogations, often with abusive methods. According to The Guardian, detainees as young as 15 years old have been taken to a nondescript warehouse known as Homan Square. Some are calling it the domestic equivalent of a CIA "black site" overseas. Prisoners were denied access to their attorneys, beaten and held for up to 24 hours without any official record of their detention. Two former senior officials in the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice are calling on their colleagues to launch a probe into allegations of excessive use of force, denial of right to counsel and coercive interrogations. We speak to Spencer Ackerman, national security editor at The Guardian. We are also joined by Victoria Suter, who was held at Homan Square after being arrested at the NATO protests in Chicago in 2012.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

The History Of Lynchings In America. STUDY Released


"On Tuesday, the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Ala., released a report on the history of lynchings in the United States, the result of five years of research and 160 visits to sites around the South. The authors of the report compiled an inventory of 3,959 victims of “racial terror lynchings” in 12 Southern states from 1877 to 1950.

Next comes the process of selecting lynching sites where the organization plans to erect markers and memorials, which will involve significant fund-raising, negotiations with distrustful landowners and, almost undoubtedly, intense controversy.

The process is intended, Mr. Stevenson said, to force people to reckon with the narrative through-line of the country’s vicious racial history, rather than thinking of that history in a short-range, piecemeal way.

“Lynching and the terror era shaped the geography, politics, economics and social characteristics of being black in America during the 20th century,” Mr. Stevenson said, arguing that many participants in the great migration from the South should be thought of as refugees fleeing terrorism rather than people simply seeking work.

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Unarmed Black Carpenter Shot 8 Times By California Police Awarded $2.5 Million In Settlement



The state of California agreed Tuesday to pay $2.5 million to settle an excessive-force lawsuit filed by an African-American carpenter who was shot at least eight times by a white CHP rookie during a traffic stop.

The state offered the settlement on the first day of trial in federal court, after the officer who shot James Henry Ligon Jr. in 2012 testified that Ligon stepped out of his car and charged directly at him, shouting threats. The problem with CHP officer Joe Lafauci’s account was it did not match the physical evidence in the case, said Ligon’s lawyers, Jaime Leanos and Nelson McElmurry. Ligon was shot four times in the back, suggesting he was not coming at the officer.

“Officer Lafauci immediately went for his gun, unlike his more experienced partner, who got out of the patrol car without even taking out his gun,” just his Taser, McElmurry said.

Lafauci had only 14 months on the job when he emptied his service pistol of 12 rounds, at least eight of which hit Ligon.

Ligon, now 37, said he had stepped out of his car after leading the CHP on a high-speed chase for three miles because he couldn’t hear what the officers were yelling and to show them he was unarmed.

Details surrounding what led to the high speed chase reveal that Mr. Ligon was suspected of drunk driving at the time of the incident.

According to Sunnyvale police, which investigated Ligon’s shooting, Lafauci and fellow CHP officer Cory Walczak tried to stop Ligon in a gold Toyota Corolla about 1:30 a.m. on southbound Highway 101 near Ellis Street, suspecting he was driving drunk. It was later determined he had an estimated blood-alcohol level of .25-.32, at least three times above the legal limit of .08. He was on probation at the time for possession of mushrooms for sale.

Ligon did not pull over and instead drove onto city streets in Sunnyvale for about three miles to the 200 block of Alturas Avenue, near where his mother lived. He was driving her car and did not want it to be impounded, Leanos said. Ligon pleaded no contest to felony evading and misdemeanor DUI charges, after prosecutors dropped a felony resisting arrest charge.

This case serves as a great example for how these types of incidents SHOULD be handled. No one is advocating that people breaking the law should get off scott-free (drunk driving and evading police is certainly a punishable offense) however, police officers shooting to kill should NEVER be the first course of action without consequence when a suspect makes it clear that he is unarmed.

Retired St. Louis Cop: White Officers View Black People As “Something To Practice On To Get Their Skills Straight”


As police officers across the country continue to show little to no regard for black lives, one retired St. Louis police officer sat down with the Atlanta Blackstar to shed some light on the ugly truth behind the badge for many of his white former-peers.


It was frustration with the racism he felt from the police officers who frequently pulled him over in his late-model vehicle that compelled Glenn Rogers to become a police officer in the St. Louis area 25 years ago. And it is still racism in the police force that is pushing Rogers to speak out now in anger and frustration, seven years after his retirement.

Rogers, 64, is a former police officer and undercover detective for several municipalities in St. Louis County and was a police chief for a short time in southwestern Illinois and a police chaplain in three different departments. He has watched the events transpiring in Ferguson with the unique perspective of someone who understands what it’s like on both sides of the badge.

From the first days after he joined the police force of a town in St. Louis County in 1990—a place that, like Ferguson, had an overwhelmingly white police department in a majority Black town—Rogers was stunned by the obvious contempt his white colleagues had for the Black citizens they were paid to serve and protect.

“As I began to see how Black people got talked to, treated, grabbed, arrested, how they got dealt with when being incarcerated, to me it looked like something off a slave boat when you actually saw the booking process and the handcuffing process,” Rogers, 64, told Atlanta Blackstar in an exclusive interview. “It was just a long lineup of Black people. I don’t think in the first year I saw more than one or two white people arrested. And those were usually for failure to appear for tickets.”

Rogers also went on to describe the mentality that he observed first-hand for of many of his white counterparts during his time as an officer.

Over the next few years, Rogers said he could not believe how much heartlessness and hostility white officers brought into encounters with Black people. Rogers calls this the “human element”—the part of the job where officers get to use their discretion in deciding how to respond to any given situation.

These are the situations where Black people often met danger.

“The human element has got to be put in check,” said Rogers, who has served as a police advisor to six different mayors in the St. Louis area. “There is an area of discretion involved in every job and the same with law enforcement. The human element has to decipher and make a decision when it’s not clearcut by law or by what is apparent before you. When they say cops have split seconds to make decisions, it is not a lie. The main goal of a police officer—as I told the new officers I trained—is to go home at night. You can’t trust anybody on the street because you don’t know what they’re going to do. But with that, you also have an obligation to be humane, to only use what is necessary to accomplish your job and go home at night. I found that many times white officers do things knowing that Black people don’t stick together, knowing you can always do something to a Black person and 95 percent of the time you will come out unscathed and it will go away and you can continue as usual.”

Former officer Rogers later made a disturbing revelation about many white officers viewing black people as good to “practice on” to perfect their skillset because blacks often don’t stick together and don’t know the law.

Rogers said the white officers knew Black people weren’t likely to know how the system worked, or to understand their rights, so it was easy to make them run afoul of the law.

“They saw Black people in my opinion as the people you could practice on and get your skills straight,” he said. “They were the people who didn’t know how to deal with the system, so therefore they would make all the mistakes that needed to be made for officers to do to them the things they do to people who make those mistakes. This is why I saw it is intentional that the public is never taught the real mechanics of the law.

If you do so, you will eliminate hundreds of thousands if not millions of incidents where they encounter the police or are candidates for arrest.

Philadelphia Cops Arrested After Video Proves They Lied About Assault On Unarmed Black Man


(VIDEO OF  INCIDENT BELOW)


The Philadelphia Police Department called a press conference this week to address new surveillance video that revealed the corrupt and brutal actions of two of their own two years ago. The incident involved Officers Kevin Robinson and Sean McKnight who have been arrested charged with Aggravated Assault, Simple Assault, Criminal Conspiracy, Recklessly Endangering Another Person, Tampering with Public Records or Information, False Reports to Law Enforcement Authorities, Obstructing Administration of Law, and Official Oppression.


In a Thursday morning press conference, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams said the two officers were seen on video beating 23-year-old Najee Rivera.

Around 10:00 p.m. on May 29, 2013, near North 7th and Somerset streets, McKnight, a seven year veteran of the force, and Robinson, a six year veteran of the force, both of the 25th Police District pulled over Rivera on his motor scooter.


Robinson and McKnight said Rivera was injured after falling off his scooter and hitting the pavement.


In the officers’ story, they said Rivera resisted arrest, tried to grab a police baton, and that’s when one of the officers hit him in the face.

Police charged Rivera with resisting arrest and aggravated assault. However, prior to the case going to court, a surveillance video emerged from a nearby store.

Rivera’s girlfriend had been searching for video that captured the incident.

SMH… The lies they tell. Good thing Rivera’s girlfriend was persistent. That video put all the lies to bed.

Williams said Rivera didn’t just fall off his scooter, but one of the officers can be seen on the video reaching out the window of the patrol car and clubbing Rivera in the head.

The patrol car, without sirens or lights flashing, bumped the scooter and Rivera fell to the ground.

Both officers got out of the vehicle, Williams said, and repeatedly struck Rivera with their fists and baton.

“He never resisted. He never struck them. He never fought back. They just started hitting him,” Williams said.

Williams said Rivera can be heard screaming for help on the video.

After the beating, the D.A. says Rivera was handcuffed and for several minutes they kept him there while he was bleeding.

Rivera received a fractured orbital bone and numerous lacerations to his head.

Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey says Robinson and McKnight have been suspended for 30 days with intent to dismiss from the force.

They were removed from street duty in 2013 when Ramsey became aware of the new facts.

Rivera filed a lawsuit in federal court and won a $200,000 settlement from the city. Thank God for his girlfriend going after that video. She’s a good one Najee, you might want to wife her! 

Friday, February 6, 2015

William Wingate, 70, Arrested July 9, 2014 in Seattle Using Golf Club as Weapon



Via Raw Story:

The Seattle Police Department (SPD) has launched an investigation into an incident in which an officer arrested an elderly veteran who was using a golf club as a walking stick.


The arrest has sparked outrage in the city and calls for the officer, Cynthia Whitlach, to be fired. She has been put on desk duty while the investigation continues.

On Thursday, Mayor Ed Murray discussed the incident with police chief Kathleen O’Toole, who took up her post last summer promising reform.

Officer Whitlatch, who is white, arrested 70-year-old William Wingate, who is black, in the city last July on charges of obstruction, after accusing him of “swinging” the golf club at her. But a video and audio recording of the encounter on the sunny street, captured on the police cruiser’s camera, showed Wingate did nothing of the sort.

(VIDEO OF INCIDENT BELOW)

News of the investigation follows an incident earlier this month , in which a member of the public shot footage of a Seattle police officer pepper-spraying a male teacher and a middle-aged woman who were walking away from a protest march.

In 2011, a US Department of Justice investigation into the SPD found a pattern of excessive force and possible bias . Whitlatch was one of more than 100 officers who filed a lawsuit last year to knock down the agreement between the city and the DoJ , although that lawsuit failed in October .

Whitlatch also made widely reported comments on Facebook about “black racism” and African Americans blaming their problems on whites.

Seattle police released video footage of the encounter between Whitlatch and Wingate. In the video, Whitlatch is seen encountering Wingate on a street corner. He is leaning on the golf club, and the officer can be heard calling from her cruiser for him to put the club down, because it is a weapon.

In a surprised and puzzled tone, Wingate asks “What?”

He then tells Whitlatch he has been using the club as a cane for 20 years. She starts shouting at him to “set down” or “shut down” the club – the audio is not entirely clear.

Wingate is holding a small shopping bag in one hand and the club in the other – he raises his arms in a slight shrug of apparent confusion and irritation. At that point, Whitlatch shouts: “You swung that golf club at me.”

The exchange continues until another officer arrives and an arrest is made.

Wingate spent the night in jail. The case against him was later dismissed; the police have apologised.

William Wingate, 70, was arrested last summer for "walking in Seattle while black

In November, Wingate’s attorney, Susan Mindenbergs, filed a claim against the city. The claim, which seeks at least $750,000 in damages, says Wingate’s civil rights were violated and his only crime was “walking in Seattle while black”.

The Seattle King County branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People said the actions by the SPD were “too little, too late”.  It has called for Whitlatch to be fired.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media 2015

Dashcam Footage Proves Seattle Cop Lied To Arrest Elderly Man


William Wingate had been standing on a busy Seattle street corner in July, leaning on a golf club he uses as a cane, when a police cruiser pulled up and the officer inside yelled at Wingate to “put that down.”

The resulting exchange — in which the officer claims that Wingate swung the club at her after she asked him to “shut it down” before she arrested him – was captured on the cruiser’s dashboard camera, the footage of which Seattle Police released this week as it apologized for the 2014 incident.

The response to that video prompted Seattle Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole to announce Wednesday that she was ordering a comprehensive review of the officer’s performance during Wingate’s arrest and another incident. A department spokesperson identified the officer as Cynthia Whitlatch

Update:Police Arrest Public Defender For Refusing To Allow Police IntimiThe San Francisco deputy public defender who was arrested at the Hall of Justice for allegedly obstructing police filed a misconduct complaint Thursday against the city officers who handcuffed her when she questioned why they were photographing one of her clients outside a courtroom. Attorney Jami Tillotson took her case to the civilian Office of Citizen Complaints after Police Chief Greg Suhr told the Police Commission late Wednesday that the department will not pursue charges against her. Suhr apologized “for any distress Ms. Tillotson suffered as a result of her detention,” but he stood by the actions of Sgt. Brian Stansbury and the other officers who arrested the lawyer. Suhr’s announcement came at the same meeting in which the American Civil Liberties Union called for a review of police policy, saying last week’s courthouse incident, which was filmed and viewed on YouTube millions of times, raised serious questions about tactics and racial profiling. Tillotson’s client is black. “While I appreciate Chief Suhr’s apology, I am concerned that he continues to support Sgt. Brian Stansbury’s actions,” Tillotson said in a statement Thursday. “My client, a young African American man, was left without the benefit of advice of counsel. The right to counsel is not a formality. It is a shield that protects ordinary people against intimidation, bullying, and overreach by law enforcement.”


The San Francisco deputy public defender who was arrested at the Hall of Justice for allegedly obstructing police filed a misconduct complaint Thursday against the city officers who handcuffed her when she questioned why they were photographing one of her clients outside a courtroom.

Attorney Jami Tillotson took her case to the civilian Office of Citizen Complaints after Police Chief Greg Suhr told the Police Commission late Wednesday that the department will not pursue charges against her. Suhr apologized “for any distress Ms. Tillotson suffered as a result of her detention,” but he stood by the actions of Sgt. Brian Stansbury and the other officers who arrested the lawyer.

Suhr’s announcement came at the same meeting in which the American Civil Liberties Union called for a review of police policy, saying last week’s courthouse incident, which was filmed and viewed on YouTube millions of times, raised serious questions about tactics and racial profiling. Tillotson’s client is black.

“While I appreciate Chief Suhr’s apology, I am concerned that he continues to support Sgt. Brian Stansbury’s actions,” Tillotson said in a statement Thursday. “My client, a young African American man, was left without the benefit of advice of counsel. The right to counsel is not a formality. It is a shield that protects ordinary people against intimidation, bullying, and overreach by law enforcement.” 

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Jerame Reid Shooting - Police SHOOT MAN WITH HANDS UP ‘I’m Going to F*cking Shoot You!


Published on Jan 21, 2015

JERAME REID SHOOTING. Dash cam footage released by the Bridgeton Police Department Tuesday shows Jerame Reid being shot and killed as he exited a car pulled over by Bridgetown Police Officers, an incident that has sparked some Ferguson-esque backlash against the police department.

What began as a traffic stop on the night of December 30 escalated quickly when an officer reportedly noticed a gun in the glove compartment.

“Don’t you fucking move! Show me your hands!” Officer Braheme Days began shouting at Reid, who was in the passenger seat. “I’m going to fucking shoot you. You’re going to be fucking dead.”

Days appeared to take a pistol from the glove compartment. Reid then got out the car, appearing to do so with his hands raised, even as the officers shout at him not to move. Both officers fired a rough total of nine shots, killing Reid.

Per the South Jersey Times, Reid had previously spent significant time in prison for shooting at Jersey troopers, and had even once been arrested by officer Days before.

The department is investigating the incident; both officers have been placed on paid leave. The autopsy of Reid has not been released to the public.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

The Joys Of Being White: ‘Zombie Killer’ Shoots Black Police Chief 4 Times And Is Released Without Being Arrested Or Charged


Oklahoma Man Shoots Police Chief And Is Not Charged


Via Think Progress reports:

In Oklahoma, a white “survivalist” shot a police chief three times in the chest and once in the arm. The shooting did not result in an arrest or charges and the man, identified by local media as 29-year-old Dallas Horton, has been released.

In a press release, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation said, “Facts surrounding the case lead agents to believe the man was unaware it was officers who made entry.” But Louis Ross, the Sentinel, Oklahoma police chief who was shot, said that he entered the home after “Washita County 911 received two calls from a man who identified himself as Dallas Horton, and claimed to have a bomb inside the head start school.”

Ross cast doubt on the credibility of Horton’s claim that he didn’t know officers were present, noting that there was “screaming from five officers of the law announcing our presence, requesting to see hands.” Ross only survived the shooting because he was wearing a bulletproof vest. He has “massive bruises and welts on his body” and the shot that hit his arm “went clean through.”

In a second statement released yesterday the Oklahoma State Bureau Of Investigation said Horton was “fully cooperating with the on-going investigation” and “no traces of explosives were found.”

A Facebook profile identified by Raw Story, that purports to be from a Dallas Horton of Sentinel, contains numerous racist images.

A sign on the front door of Horton’s home says he’s a “Certified zombie killer.” The mayor of Sentinel, Sam Dlugonski, described Horton as a “gun enthusiast” and survivalist. Dlugsonski was familiar with Horton, saying, “I’ve known that kid all of his life.”

Missouri Police Brutally Beat Black College Student They Mistakenly Arrested


Missouri Police Handcuff And Assault The Wrong Person

A Missouri college student with a CLEAN record says he no longer trusts police after they confused him with a criminal.

KMOV reports:

St. Ann Police apologized to a college student after they admitted to causing severe injuries to his face after accusing him of a crime he didn’t commit on Thursday.

Police were in pursuit of Anton Simmons, who had 17 warrants our for his name, when 22-year-old Joseph Swink crashed his car trying to avoid the police pursuit on Interstate 70.

“They ended up grabbing him [Swink], tossing him to the ground, and were trying to handcuff him,” said St. Ann Police Chief Aaron Jimenez. “All the sirens and lights were going off. It was very loud and they couldn’t hear anything the citizen was saying.”

Swink is an accounting student at UMSL with no criminal record and was on his way home from an internship when he was accidentally involved in the pursuit.

Police say they were able to get him into custody using the least amount of force necessary, but when they finally had him in handcuffs on the ground, they heard on their radios that the real suspect was in custody at a different location.

Swink suffered severe damage to his ear and his vehicle was totaled.

“I never really had 100 percent trust in police before,” Swink said. “But I really don’t now.”
Anton Simmons

Chief Jimenez says he has given a sincere apology for the entire situation.

Saturday, January 17, 2015

9News Investigators: Video of final moments of inmate's life prompts questions from victim's family

Ervin Edwards


9News Investigators: Video of final moments of inmate's life prompts questions from victim's family


The family of a 38-year-old black Louisiana man who was beaten and tased to death by police in 2013 following an arrest for allegedly “disturbing the peace” says they believe recently released video footage of the incident calls for prosecution of the officers who murdered him. - 

BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) -

Surveillance video obtained by 9News Investigators shows the final minutes of an inmate's life inside the West Baton Rouge Detention Center.

The sheriff's department claims Ervin Edwards, 38, resisted as officers tried to book him. His family disagrees. After reviewing the video, they believe officers at the jail are responsible for his death.

The surveillance video from inside the West Baton Rouge Detention Center on November 26, 2013 shows Edwards being booked for allegedly disturbing the peace at a gas station. Several officers bring him into a jail cell. On the way there the video shows Edwards' pants around his ankles, his feet and hands are cuffed. He trips and officers drag him into the room.

Ervin Edwards in the West Baton Rouge Parish Prison

Minutes later, the officers transport him to another cell. He falls again. Officers drag him inside, face down, still cuffed. Six officers hold him down. One of them pulls out a taser and puts it on his backside. It appears an officer stepped on Edwards' back, another on his head. A minute goes by, and it appears Edwards is motionless, apparently still being tased. Officers begin to leave, but one remains and continues to hold the taser on Edwards for almost another minute. Paramedics arrived 20 minutes later. Edwards was pronounced dead.

His sister, Elizabeth Edwards, watched the video on Friday for the first time.

“I just can't believe it. The beating, the torture they did my brother,” Elizabeth Edwards said.

West Baton Rouge Sheriff Mike Cazes declined a television interview on Friday saying he could not comment on a pending legal matter. But in an interview with 9News on December 3, 2014 he said Edwards repeatedly fought with officers as they tried to book him.

“They gave him a three count demand saying 'Okay if you don't cooperate, you will be tased. All three times, ultimately, he used some profanity back toward the policeman and said 'do what you have to do,” Cazes said.

After seeing the video, Edwards' sister said she is not buying it.

“I was expecting to see at least some kind of fight, but there was none. They lied,” Elizabeth Edwards said.

According to the Jefferson Parish Coroner's report, Edwards died as a result of “acute cocaine and phencyclidine intoxication in association with restraint by law enforcement.”

His mother, Viney Edwards, who did not want to look at the jail surveillance tape said she warned deputies not to use a taser on Edwards.

“He had a plate in his jaw and a plate in his left shoulder,” Edwards explained.
Ervin Edwards

While she admits her son had been arrested before on drugs and weapons charges, Viney said this time lawmen were out of line.

“What his life was about before he went to jail has nothing do with not coming out of that jail. They killed him,” Viney Edwards said.

The family's attorney, Donna Grodner, filed a lawsuit in federal court on December 3, 2013.

A trial date has not been set.

Fear Of Black Skin: Racist Florida Police Officers Caught Using Photos Of Black Men For Target Practice At Shooting Range


The sister of a black Miami man is rightfully outraged after she arrived at a local shooting range to find Florida police officers using a photo of her brother, along with photos of other African-American men, as target practice.


A South Florida family is outraged at North Miami Beach Police after mug shots were being used at a shooting range for police training.

It was an ordinary Saturday morning last month when Sgt. Valerie Deant arrived at the shooting range in Medley, or so she thought.

Deant, who plays clarinet with the Florida Army National Guard’s 13th Army Band, and her fellow soldiers were at the shooting range for their annual weapons qualifications training.

What the soldiers discovered when they entered the range made them angry: mug shots of African American men apparently used as targets by North Miami Beach Police snipers, who had used the range before the Guardsmen.

Even more startling for Deant, one of the images was her brother. It was Woody Deant’s mug shot that taken 15 years ago, after he was arrested in connection to a drag race in 2000 that left two people dead. His mug shot was among the pictures of five minorities used as targets by North Miami Beach police, all of them riddled by bullets.

“I was like why is my brother being used for target practice?” Deant asked.

Equally as disturbing as the incident itself, was the North Miami Beach Police Chief’s response.

North Miami Beach Police Chief J. Scott Dennis admitted that his officers could have used better judgment, but denies any racial profiling.

He noted that that the sniper team includes minority officers. Dennis defended the department’s use of actual photographs and says the technique is widely used and the pictures are vital for facial recognition drills.

“Our policies were not violated,” Dennis said. “There is no discipline forthcoming from the individuals who were involved with this.”

We are truly speechless. If these officers do not face consequences for using black men as target practice at their leisure, who’s to say they couldn’t get away with doing the same in real life? Oh, wait, they already have.

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Brutal beating photo of inmate is released as judge says the six Rikers Island prison guards responsible should be fired

Inmate Robert Hinton in a medical clinic in New York, bloodied with a swollen face, shortly after an April 3, 2012 beating. On Monday, a judge recommended that six New York City jail guards be fired for the brutal beating of the handcuffed Rikers Island inmate in a now-shuttered solitary confinement dorm


A shocking picture has emerged of an inmate who was viciously beaten by guards while handcuffed at a New York prison.

A judge on Monday recommended that six New York City jail guards be fired for the brutal 2012 beating of a handcuffed Rikers Island inmate in a now-shuttered solitary confinement dorm for mentally ill prisoners.

The beating left 27-year-old Robert Hinton with a broken nose, fractured back and a bloodied, badly swollen face.

The Department of Correction said Hinton was beaten after being carried hogtied into a cell for refusing to be escorted and that to justify the use of force, the guards fabricated a story that Hinton put one of them in a chokehold

The recommendation in the Department of Correction's disciplinary case against the five correction officers and a captain was meant to serve as an example and deter other jail workers 'who would participate in or stand idly by when such brazen misconduct occurs,' Judge Tynia Richard said.

'Individuals who themselves are out of control cannot be made the overlords of any group of inmates,' the judge wrote.
The Department of Correction said Hinton was beaten after being carried hogtied into a cell for refusing to be escorted and that to justify the use of force, the guards fabricated a story that Hinton put one of them in a chokehold.

The recommendation comes in the wake of months of headline-grabbing tales of guard misconduct and the maltreatment of inmates in the nation's second-largest jail system.

In March, based on an internal city health study, it was found that nearly a third of Rikers inmates who said their visible injuries came at the hands of a correction officer last year had suffered a blow to the head.

And last month, a federal review of Rikers Island by government lawyers found a 'deep-seated' culture of violence in the 10-facility jail complex on the 400-acre island off Manhattan's shores.

But the recommendation also provides a small window into the world of internal discipline in the Department of Correction.

A federal review of Rikers Island by government lawyers found a 'deep-seated' culture of violence in the 10-facility jail complex on the 400-acre island off Manhattan's shores

In the past four and a half years, the department brought 2,007 administrative cases before the Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings, according to records.

Of those, only 97 resulted in a written report and recommendation. Most cases were settled in exchange for the forfeiture of vacation days and unpaid suspensions, while the details of the incident and names of those involved remain secret.

In Hinton's case, surveillance video showed the 6-foot-3 man carried into his cell by Captain Budnarine Behari and other guards, shackled by his hands and feet and lifted off the ground, the judge wrote.

The guards involved said Hinton - described by the judge as a Bloods gang member with an attempted murder conviction - kicked Behari twice and put another correction officer in a headlock, resulting in a struggle that led to his injuries.

Hinton's version of events, combined with inmate witnesses and surveillance video outside the cell was more believable, Richard wrote, ultimately determining he had remained handcuffed as the guards, some wearing gloves, beat him while an officer calmly stood outside the cell.

'This case appears to combine some of the worst aspects of the use of force cases: a coordinated effort to enter an inmate's cell, serious physical injury, an attempted cover-up, and a lack of provocation by the inmate,' Richard wrote.

Hinton is suing the city in federal court.

Behari's attorney, James Frankie, said the judge's recommendation was 'very disappointing'.

Norman Seabrook, head of the Correction Officers' Benevolent Association, said he would ask Commissioner Joseph Ponte to spare the five officers termination. He said the case, while unfortunate, was reflective of a department that lacked sufficient supervisory staff where unqualified captains are promoted.

Surveillance video didn't capture what occurred inside the cell, only in the corridor outside. 

Department of Correction lawyers have denied the public records request for the footage, as well as the appeal of the denial, arguing in part that the footage was a personnel record and exempt from public disclosure.

But the video was played publicly during Behari's hearing this spring before the Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings, and inmate advocate Hadley Fitzgerald, who watched the video, said it was disturbing how eerily calm the guards appeared in the footage.

'I remember it hit me like a brick,' she said, noting that about 10 minutes passed before Hinton was brought out of the cell, limp, and placed face-down on a gurney and rushed to a hospital. 

'You can only imagine what's happening in there. A man who is cuffed, and without weapons, is now in there with all these guys ... It's just very disturbing.'