In Historic Police Brutality Case, Family of Homeless Denver Pastor Killed in Custody
Awarded $4.6M
As Denver faces a string of
police brutality cases, a federal jury has awarded a historic $4.6 million in damages
to the family of a homeless preacher killed while he was in the booking area of
the Denver jail. Marvin Booker died after he was grabbed and then piled on by a
team of officers who handcuffed him, put him in a chokehold and tasered him.
The coroner ruled his death a homicide, but prosecutors declined to charge the
deputies involved, and Denver Sheriff Department officials never disciplined
them, saying Booker could have harmed someone and that force was needed to
restrain him. The case highlights a history of alleged misconduct by the police
department, and has added momentum to calls for reform both locally and
nationwide in the aftermath of calls for justice in the killing of unarmed
teenager Michael Brown by an officer in Ferguson. We are joined by two guests:
Rev. Reginald Holmes, pastor of the New Covenant Christian Church/Alpha and
Omega Ministries, who has been a leading voice calling for law enforcement
accountability, and Susan Greene, editor of The Colorado Independent and
longtime reporter formerly with The Denver Post.