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"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

Honolulu Pays Man $37,500 After Cop Takes A Swipe At His iPhone



By James Cave
A video recorded on New Years Eve, 2013, shows a Honolulu police officer taking a jab at a bystander who recorded an arrest on his iPhone.
Although he didn't drop the phone, the bystander, Randy Salazar, Jr., filed a federal lawsuit claiming the officer, Robert Steiner, broke a bone in his hand after hitting him with a Taser in the scuffle. Last week, Honolulu City Council approved a settlement to pay Salazar $37,500 in taxpayer money.
The case was investigated by HPD’s internal affairs division, which advised that Steiner, a decorated 22-year veteran, should be charged with second-degree assault. The Honolulu Prosecutor’s office said there was “insufficient evidence” to do so.
The incident adds nearly $40,000 to the $5.7 million that HPD has paid in settlements in the past 11 years. The Honolulu Police Department is under heavy scrutiny for its handling of officer transgressions -- whether it be accidental gun discharge (something that happened on three separate occasions this year) or domestic violence, as seen in recent footage of an off-duty sergeant repeatedly punching his girlfriend.
Since 2000, according to Honolulu Civil Beat, 23 Honolulu police officers have been suspended for domestic violence incidents; an additional three were fired, but were later reinstated or allowed to resign.

“The police have a hard job . . . but they’re not above the law,” Tracy Fukui, the attorney who represented Salazar, told Honolulu Civil Beat. “When their actions cross the line there need to be consequences.”