By Randy McIIwain
|
Critics of the Dallas Police
Department want answers about alleged cover-ups in police misconduct
investigations.
Members of the community,
ranging from civil rights leaders and local attorneys to military members, held
a news conference Thursday about the continued department misconduct.
The group specifically
addressed recent officer-involved shootings.
"We’re going to file a
complaint against the Dallas Police Department as well as the internal affairs
division,” said Rev. Ronald Wright of Justice Seekers Texas.
Wright’s criticism comes after
the city of Dallas paid a $900,000 settlement to the family of Tobias Mackey.
Mackey was shot to death in
2010 by then Dallas police officer Matthew Tate during a police sweep of a
crime-ridden apartment.
Mackey had committed no crime
and was unarmed when he was shot nine times.
Attorney Susan Hutchinson
represented the Mackey family. She said Tate’s supervisor witnessed the
shooting and testified that Mackey’s death was not justified and that he posed
no threat.
"Because of that
deposition and because of his statements, they are now investigating him,” said
Hutchinson, referring to the Dallas Police Department’s Internal Affairs
Division. “I think it’s absolutely retaliatory. If you violate the unwritten
code and say something against your fellow officer you are going to be the
target,” said Hutchinson.
Since 2002, Justice Seekers
Texas estimates there have been 68 officer-involved shootings in Dallas that
resulted in paid settlements of about $7 million. Two current pending cases
have resulted in officers' criminal indictments for shooting unarmed citizens.
Wright said he also wants to
see mandatory random drug tests for officers. He believes that steroid use is
occurring within the rank and file of Dallas police patrol and that the
hormones can impact decision-making in critical calls.
The Dallas Police Department
did not offer any comment on the calls for federal oversight.