Si there anybody left in America who thinks the cops don't do this sort of thing on a regular basis?
NYPD officer
allegedly takes a man's money during arrest
The
Brooklyn DA’s Office is probing whether an NYPD cop stole $1,300 from a
construction worker while searching him in Coney Island, officials said.
The
investigation was launched after a video emerged showing the unidentified
officer putting his hand into the pocket of Lamard Joye and pulling out what
looks like papers as the Brooklyn man is being held up against a fence shortly
after midnight on Sept. 16.
In
the video — which was taken by an onlooker with a cellphone camera — Joye can
be heard yelling after the officer took the “papers.”
“Give
me my money, man! Give me my money!” Joye exclaims.
The
officer then pepper-sprayed him, said Joye’s attorney, Robert Marinelli.
“The
cops thought they could just go in his pockets, take his money, Mace him and
leave,” said Marinelli. “If there wasn’t a video, nobody would believe this
happened.”
The
officer originally approached Joye, 35, after Joye allegedly yelled at cops
arresting a young man.
“What
are you going to do to him?” Joye said, making a reference to Eric Garner, the
Staten Island man who died in July after cops put him in a chokehold, a
law-enforcement source said.
After
allegedly taking the dough and pepper-spraying Joye, the cop also
pepper-sprayed Joye’s sister, Lateefah Joye, who protested the alleged cash
grab, Marinelli said. She had also asked for the officer’s shield number.
Lamard
had that much cash in his pocket because he planned to take his wife out of
town to celebrate her birthday, Marinelli said.
The
lawyer said he gave investigators for DA Ken Thompson bank slips and pay stubs
to prove Joye had the money legitimately.
Marinelli
said he also gave the video to the DA’s Civil Rights Bureau, sparking the
probe.
“We
are aware of the incident, and it is being actively and thoroughly
investigated,” said Thompson.
“The
incident was precipitated by a call of a man with a gun,” the NYPD said. “When
officers arrived at the scene, they encountered numerous people at the
location. As a result of the allegations, the matter is under investigation by
the Internal Affairs Bureau and the CCRB [Civilian Complaint Review Board].”
Joye
wasn’t arrested or charged, and still hasn’t gotten his money back, Marinelli
said.
Deputy police chief in Fort Worth accused of killing neighbor’s dog that mauled his cat
Matt peterson
A Fort Worth deputy police
chief has been arrested for cruelty to an animal for fatally shooting a dog
that may have mauled the chief’s cat to death.
Deputy Chief Kenneth Flynn
turned himself in Monday night at the Tarrant County Jail, then was released on
$1,000 bond.
A witness told authorities she
saw Flynn, gun in hand, near a German shepherd last week. She says he told her
the dog killed his cat in the neighborhood, then waved her away. She heard
gunshots a few minutes later and called 911. She also called police later and was
upset that a report hadn’t been made.
Flynn’s attorney tells the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram the shooting of a dangerous dog is legal and his arrest
“reeks of politics.”
Dallas officer fired for driving past pleading mother whose kids had been kidnapped
By TRISTAN HALLMAN
Dallas Police Chief David Brown
has fired an officer who drove away from a woman who tried to flag him down
after her children had been kidnapped at gunpoint.
Senior Cpl. Les Richardson, a
28-year department veteran, was one of two officers fired Wednesday. Brown
suspended another officer for 45 days.
While Richardson, 61, was on
his way to a burglary call Aug. 25, dispatchers announced that shots had been
fired and a suspect had rammed a woman’s car in the area where Richardson was
driving, police said.
He then drove past a woman who
was shouting, “That’s him, that’s him, right there.”
“Right here what, baby? I’m on
a call,” Richardson said before quickly driving off. The exchange was captured
on dash-cam video, which was released Wednesday. It also shows him smoking a
cigarette in the patrol car.
The woman was referring to her
ex, Steven Douglas, who had rammed her car with his pickup and taken two
children out of her car at gunpoint.
Hours later, Douglas led police
on a car chase. He hit a van and then fled on foot. Witnesses and an officer
who caught up to him said Douglas pointed a gun at the officer. The officer
fatally shot Douglas, 29.
The children, who were with a
family member, were unharmed.
Richardson was placed on
administrative leave after the woman told investigators what happened.
His attorney did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
Brown also fired patrol Officer
Leroy Sharp for missing 121 days of work without permission last year. Sharp
left work early March 21, 2013, saying he was sick. He later said he needed to
be off for a while.
Sharp’s initial leave of
absence was approved through July 2013, but his commanders denied a subsequent
request. Sharp still didn’t show up to work.
In the suspension case, Officer
Doyle Wynn was disciplined for failing to fill out a domestic violence report
Nov. 5, 2013, for a woman who had “visible injuries,” police said. Wynn took
the woman to her home while the suspect was there and the officer waited as she
retrieved her personal property, police said.
While Wynn was under
investigation, a supervisor caught him sleeping in his squad car Dec. 20, 2013,
after he had been dispatched to a call. The supervisor tapped on the window and
told him to go to the call, which he arrived at 37 minutes after he had been
dispatched.
All three officers have the
right to appeal their discipline under civil service rules.
Kanawha prosecutor to review cases involving suspended cop; Charleston mayor says back off
By Kate White, Staff writer and Rusty Marks
Kanawha County Prosecuting
Attorney Mark Plants has ordered a review of all pending criminal cases that
involve suspended Charleston police Lt. Shawn Williams, but Charleston Mayor
Danny Jones thinks Plants should stay out of the way of the police department’s
investigation.Plants’ office issued a news release Thursday afternoon stating,
“Any time a law enforcement officer is under an investigation for misconduct,
the reliability of their testimony is an issue.” Jones said the Charleston
Police Department has a handle on the investigation and pointed out bad blood
between Plants and CPD officers.Williams was suspended with pay last month,
pending an investigation by the CPD’s Professional Standards Division. Police
Chief Brent Webster has said he will not discuss the investigation because of
personnel laws.However, sources familiar with the investigation said it
involves racially insensitive videos allegedly found on Williams’ home
computer. Two people who have seen the videos said they depict Williams’ young
daughter dressed in what appears to be articles of a police uniform and dancing
to a song about the Ku Klux Klan. A man purported to be Williams can be heard
asking the girl questions, in which racially derogatory language allegedly can
be heard.Plants’ office has reviewed the investigation of Williams “related to
allegations of racial discrimination,” according to the news release, which was
issued by assistant prosecutor James Bailey. During Plants’ investigation into
Williams, the officer will not be relied upon as a witness in criminal cases,
the release states. The mayor made clear his disdain for the prosecutor’s
inquiry.“Mark Plants is not smart enough, when the negative light is cast in
another direction, to stay out of that negative light,” Jones said. “He just
has to involve himself in something that has nothing to do with him.“We are
investigating this. The Charleston Police is going to handle this. We don’t
condone any kind of activity that is being alleged.” He said the city will move
to keep Plants from getting involved. Plants is facing two misdemeanor domestic
violence-related charges. Kanawha County commissioners are waiting to hear if a
three-judge panel will remove him from office. The commissioners say that,
because of the case against him, the prosecutor isn’t able to do the job he was
elected to do. After Plants was charged with domestic battery for striking his
11-year-old son with a belt and violating a domestic violence protection order
that required him to stay away from his ex-wife and their two sons, a judge
barred his office from handling charges similar to the ones Plants faces.
Kanawha Circuit Judge Duke Bloom took that action after the city of Charleston
filed a petition requesting Plants’ removal.Additionally, Plants is now married
to the ex-wife of a Charleston police detective, and city officers have
publicly criticized him. “Everyone knows there’s no good feelings between him
and the Charleston Police Department,” Jones said.Charleston officials took
their investigation of Williams to the Prosecutor’s Office at the request of
Plants’ chief of staff, Charles Miller, Jones said.“Plants wanted to be
involved, and we’re not going to involve ourselves in anything with Mark
Plants,” the mayor said. “We are handling it.”Until recently, Williams was head
of the police department’s Patrol Division, and orchestrated a series of
well-publicized raids on the city’s West Side and the downtown transit mall.
Williams told reporters at the time he was trying to help clean up the city’s
“riffraff.”Plants said, “Although this investigation is ongoing, racism or
prejudice of any kind is completely unacceptable, especially concerning law
enforcement officers who we entrust with protecting our liberties.”Webster said
he does not know how long the police department’s internal investigation will
take.In response to Jones’ comments, Plants said he’s not investigating
Williams, he’s investigating the cases in which Williams has played a part. “By
law, prosecutors are required to disclose instances of substantiated misconduct
by law enforcement officers. Mayor Jones should understand the facts and law
before saying that this has nothing to do with my office,” Plants said. “Every
criminal case that involves Lt. Williams will be impacted.”Reach Rusty Marks at
rustymarks@wvgazette.com, 304-348-1215 or follow @rusty_marks on Twitter. Reach
Kate White at kate.white@wvgazette.com, 304-348-1723 or follow @KateLWhite on
Twitter.
Suspended officer paid about $38,000; grievance filed
By MARK MARONEY Williamsport
Sun-Gazette
City Patrolman Jonathan
Deprenda was paid $37,832 in the 10 months that he was on paid suspension
following a fiery two-vehicle accident Jan. 12 that resulted in the death of a
city man, according to the city finance department.
Bucks pays $85,000 to Bristol Twp. couple claiming false arrest
Bucks pays $85,000 to Bristol
Twp. couple claiming false arrest By James McGinnis Staff writer
Bucks County will pay $85,000
to settle the federal lawsuit brought by a Bristol Township couple claiming
false arrest and imprisonment by a county sergeant.
A payout approved Wednesday by
the county commissioners ends the case brought by Samantha Doneker and Philip
Romanek. Details of that settlement were revealed to the press in early
September. The payout amount was first disclosed this week.
Pa. trooper accidentally shot in training exercise
Sean Carlin
SCHWENKSVILLE, Pa. – The
Pennsylvania state trooper killed Tuesday during a firearms training exercise
in suburban Philadelphia was fatally wounded when another trooper’s gun
accidentally discharged, Capt. James Raykovitz announced Wednesday afternoon.
“Preliminary evidence indicates
that Trooper (David) Kedra was struck by a bullet accidentally discharged by
another member of the Pennsylvania State Police,” Raykovitz said in a news release.
“However, more specific information regarding the investigation will not be
released at this time.”
State police did not disclose
any further information on the accident, which the agency is investigating with
the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office. District Attorney Risa Ferman
did not return a message about the case.
Kedra, 26, was shot in the
chest Tuesday during a yearly training exercise at the Montgomery County Public
Safety Training Complex in Plymouth Meeting. He was airlifted to a hospital
where he was pronounced dead.
Kedra is the second trooper to
be fatally shot this month following Cpl. Bryon Dickson’s death in an ambush on
Sept. 12.
A 2010 graduate of Temple
University, Kedra was originally from northeast Philadelphia but recently moved
to Chester County, Lt. James Fisher said during a news conference outside the
Skippack barracks Wednesday morning. He enlisted in the state police in June
2012 and was assigned to the Skippack barracks in January 2013 following his
graduation from the academy.
Colleagues said Kedra was an
enthusiastic and motivated trooper who knew he wanted to get into law
enforcement.
“He was extremely proud to be a
Pennsylvania state trooper and he showed it,” said Trooper Derik Frymire, who
worked on Kedra’s squad. “He wanted to see everything, he wanted to be a part
of everything, he wanted to learn everything and those kind of qualities make
an outstanding patrol trooper.”
Joe Alkus, a criminal justice
professor at Temple, said his former student had visited to speak at one of his
introductory classes. Alkus recalled once asking Kedra what he thought was the
best day of his career.
“He says, ‘Every day is my best
day because I love being a trooper,’” Alkus said.
State Police Commissioner Frank
Noonan said it was with “an extremely heavy heart and deep sorrow” that he
announced the death of Kedra, the 96th member of the state police to be killed
in the line of duty.
“He died serving the people of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the men and women of the Pennsylvania
State Police mourn his loss and extend our sincere condolences to his family
and friends,” Noonan said.
Gov. Tom Corbett ordered
Pennsylvania flags to fly at half-staff at the state Capitol and in Montgomery
County.
Cop gets probation for shooting himself
Daniel Tepfer
BRIDGEPORT -- A 29-year veteran
of the police force, who shot himself in the leg while examining a gun in a
crowded restaurant, has been granted entry to a special probation program.
Following a short hearing
Tuesday morning, state Superior Court Judge Earl Richards granted accelerated
rehabilitation to 56-year-old Juan Santiago.
The program is for first-time,
nonviolent offenders. Santiago -- who was charged with unlawful discharge of a
firearm, a misdemeanor -- did not plead guilty to the charge, but was placed on
six months' probation. If he commits no other crimes during that probation, the
original charge against him will be dismissed.
"He has given up his job,
he injured only himself. This is the appropriate disposition of the case,"
said Assistant State's Attorney Marc Durso.
"He wasn't given
preferential treatment," said Santiago's lawyer, John Gulash. "He was
charged following an investigation ... He has had a distinguished career with
the Bridgeport Police Department and has led an exemplary life, including being
involved in the community."
Since his arrest in February,
Santiago has retired from the Police Department.
On Dec. 17, police said
Santiago was examining a handgun in the Bagel King restaurant on Main Street
when the gun went off, wounding him in the leg and shattering a window in the
crowded restaurant.
In his statement to police,
Santiago said that after taking the pouch containing the gun from another officer,
he unzipped the pouch and grasped the gun.
"I immediately pointed the
firearm downward. In an attempt to make the weapon safe, I pulled the slide to
the rear in order to check the chamber for any live rounds. As I did so, the
slide slid forward. At this time, I observed that the hammer was pulled to the
rear of the firearm. I placed my thumb on the hammer in (sic) attempt to safe
guard the firearm, the hammer slipped from my thumb, hitting the firing pin,
accidentally discharging the firearm. I was struck in my left thigh. I was
transported to St. Vincent's Hospital for treatment."
The shooting incident sparked
protests when Santiago was not immediately arrested.
Instead, Bridgeport Police
Chief Joseph Gaudett turned the investigation over to State police
Robbery suspect was shot 6 times by Oklahoma City cop after stabbing police dog: medical examiner
Oklahoma City homicide
investigators have not decided whether to charge Sgt. Ryan Stark in the death
of Mark Salazar, a robbery suspect who was shot six times while fleeing from a
robbery during an Aug. 24 incident that left Kye, a German Shepherd police dog,
dead from several stab wounds.
BY NICOLE HENSLEY
The autopsy report on an
Oklahoma City robbery suspect who stabbed a police dog does not match the law enforcement
department’s initial report on the officer-involved shooting.
The death of Kye left Sgt. Ryan
Stark distraught over the loss of his German Shepherd K-9 partner. During a
funeral service with police honors, the sergeant gave the 3-year-old dog one
last pat on the head.
The pair had spent two years
together with the Oklahoma City Police Department as partners tracking and
taking into custody an array of criminals.
The agency is currently
reviewing a medical examiner report that suggest Mark Salazar was gunned down
while running away during the Aug. 24 incident.
It’s not clear if homicide
charges will be filed against Stark, who reportedly opened fire after failing
to pull the dog and 22-year-old suspect apart as he fled the scene of a
robbery, according to the Oklahoman.
The Oklahoman reports Salazar
was gunned down while running away, citing a medical examiner report. He was
shot four times in the back and punctured his lungs, liver, stomach and
pancreas. He was also shot in the left arm and left thigh.
In addition to the six gunshot
wounds, Salazar had puncture wounds on his body, but it’s not clear if they
were dog bites from when Kye caught up to the suspect and tackled him during
the case.
“Decedent ignored the police
warnings to stop and surrender,” the report stated, according to the Oklahoman.
“Decedent got up and ran away from the officer, when shots were fired. Decedent
dropped to the ground, lying prone.”
The report was compiled by a
medical examiner investigator who went to the scene of the crime after the
shooting.
Philadelphia police officer charged with assaulting another officer
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) --
A Philadelphia police officer
has been charged with assaulting a female police officer on four different
occasions. The Philadelphia District Attorney's Office has charged 24-year-old
Kenneth Allen with Aggravated Assault, Simple Assault, Recklessly Endangering
Another Person, Criminal Mischief and Possession of an Instrument of a
Crime.According to the DA, Allen and the other officer were in a relationship
at the time of the assaults. Allen was arraigned overnight, and his bail was
set at $20,000.
How Do We Make The Issue Of Police Brutality A Campaign Stump Issue?
By Charing Ball
According to this report on the
website Firedoglake.com, at least twenty-three people have been killed in the
United States while in police custody in the past week.
This list includes:
• Charles Smith, who according to published reports, was
shot by an officer after handcuffed, placed in the back of the patrol car in
Savannah, Georgia. According to reports, cops allege Smith was able to somehow
move his arms to the front of his body, kicked out the patrol car window and
reached for a gun. That’s why the cop had to shoot him four times, including a
shot in the leg, head and back.
• Kimberlee King, an African-American woman, was arrested in
Pagedale, Missouri for traffic warrants and was later found hanging in her
cell. Police said she did it herself however her family, who found out she was
dead upon arriving to bond her out, say” King was not suffering from any sort
of depression and had no history of mental illness.”
• Cameron Tillman, a 14 year old Black teen from Terrebonne
Parrish, Louisiana, who was shot and killed by a policeman while playing in an
abandoned home. According to reports, Tillman answered a knock at the door when
he was shot point blank by the officer, upon him opening the door. The cops say
he had a BB gun, which looked like a real weapon. However His brother, who was
with him at the time, said Tillman had no toy or real weapon in his hand at the
time the officer gunned him down.
It’s hard to tell if these
killings were justified; but in the wake of a number of highly publicized
questionable police actions, it’s also very understandable (and advisable I
might add) if these incidents give one pause. And at the very least, we have to
acknowledge that there are way too many police killings period – “justified” or
not.
There is some debate about
whether police brutality is on the rise again. It’s especially hard to figure
out considering the Department of Justice or FBI does not keep and provide
stats on departmental conduct. Some argue that it’s the availability of
cellphone cameras and other recording equipment that have made us more aware of
what have been some massive breaches and violations of both constitutional and
civil rights against the citizens, particularly Black people. And that is a
good thing.
The not so good thing is that
while modern technology has done wonders to open our eyes about just how
pervasive police brutality and misconduct is in this country, the reality is
that you can videotape, audio record, take a picture, write it down, and have
all the evidence you want against the police, and Internal Affairs, the grand
jury, and the rest of law enforcement will conclude that the offending officer
did nothing wrong. That your harassment or even death was just a result of procedure.
As noted in this article from a
couple of months ago in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, cops accused of using
questionable, deadly force are rarely convicted. And in fact, an expert tells
the paper that the reason behind the poor conviction rates is that the Supreme
Court specifically gives police “wider discretion” in self-defense claims than
would the average citizen.
Well as an average citizen, I
say that is pure malarky. I am a firm believer that cops should not have a
wider discretion but rather as enforcers of the rule of law, police should have
an even greater responsibility of caution Likewise, those who violate laws they
are bound to uphold should be prosecuted worse than the average criminal. And
since it seems that a sizable chunk of addressing police brutality and
misconduct is a matter of some paperwork (and by that I mean policies,
procedures and existing laws), then obviously it is the rules and procedures
which need changing and monitoring.
And that brings me to my
question: why hasn’t the issue of police brutality been a major stump issue,
particularly for the Black political community?
Oversight officer says Seattle police wasted $1M on overtime last year for training
SEATTLE — A Seattle police
oversight office says the department wasted more than $1 million on loosely
controlled overtime last year as officers trained to comply with a Justice
Department agreement to curb excessive force.
Office of Professional
Accountability Director Pierce Murphy reported Tuesday the spending produced
little of value.
The Seattle Times reports
(http://bit.ly/ZrOVw1) instances of officers taking overtime while on vacation
and one case of more than 31 hours of overtime in a single 24-hour period.
New Police Chief Kathleen
O'Toole promised Tuesday to take immediate steps to correct problems.
Prince George's Officer Suspended for Theft Charge A Prince George's County police officer has been suspended after being charged with theft in Anne Arundel County. The Prince George's County police department said Saturday the officer was suspended after being charged Friday. The officer was off duty at the time of the alleged theft. Anne Arundel County police said the officer, Temitope Asaya, 30, and another suspect, Tykina Anderson, 24, were arrested after allegedly stealing an iPad from a customer at the Apple Store in Annapolis. Video surveillance showed the suspects pick up the iPad from a table where the customer left it. Police were able to track down the suspects and arrested them Friday. Prince George’s County police say the officer has been employed by the police department for four years.
A Prince George's County police
officer has been suspended after being charged with theft in Anne Arundel
County.
The Prince George's County
police department said Saturday the officer was suspended after being charged
Friday. The officer was off duty at the time of the alleged theft.
Anne Arundel County police said
the officer, Temitope Asaya, 30, and another suspect, Tykina Anderson, 24, were
arrested after allegedly stealing an iPad from a customer at the Apple Store in
Annapolis.
Video surveillance showed the
suspects pick up the iPad from a table where the customer left it. Police were
able to track down the suspects and arrested them Friday.
Prince George’s County police
say the officer has been employed by the police department for four years.
Chicago cop fired after Facebook posts on Ferguson shooting
by the Grio |
A member of the Elgin Police
department in suburban Chicago was fired Monday because of Facebook posts he
allegedly made regarding the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson,
Missouri.
Jason Lentz, a 17-year veteran,
allegedly posted that Darren Wilson, the Ferguson police officer who shot and
killed the unarmed 18-year-old, “did society a favor,” according to NBC
Chicago.
Local police Chief Jeffrey
Swoboda spoke about the dismissal, explaining that the officer was fired after
his recent conduct, which would “undermine the credibility of the city or
employees.”
Brown’s death sparked weeks of
unrest in Ferguson and protests nationwide.
Lentz was the first police
officer to be placed on administrative leave after investigation into his
actions last month. This is not the first time he has been stripped of police
powers; he has had them stripped three times already prior to this incident.
Animal Rights: Protestors Rally Against Police Shooting Dogs
By Olivia Demarinis
(staff@latinpost.com)
Animal advocates are raising
awareness about the high rates of law enforcement officers who shoot pet dogs
while answering calls on duty.
Several pet owners are suing
police departments and state legislatures for their mistreatment of their
animals.
While there is no official data
on how often these killings occur in the U.S., media reports suggest that at
least a few dozen pets are killed each year, but many activists suspect more go
unreported. Outcry against these senseless killings say that it is an abuse of
power by the police and officials should be better trained to deal with pets in
the line of duty.
An argument citing a violation
of the Fourth Amendment was upheld when a San Jose chapter of the Hells Angels sued
the police department and city in 2005 for killing members' dogs during a gang
raid in 1998. In federal appeals, a judge found that "the Fourth Amendment
forbids the killing of a person's dog ... when that destruction is
unnecessary." The Hells Angels won $1.8 million in damages.
Similar lawsuits have been
filed in Idaho, California and Nevada, among other states.
Animal-rights activists are
concurrently lobbying for increased pet training for police officers. Illinois
and Colorado have already implemented some measures to reduce dog shootings,
other states are currently considering such legislation.
In 2011, the Department of
Justice published a report on police incidents involving dogs along with advice
on how to avoid killing the animals.
"It's much more likely
that a cop is going to encounter a dog than a terrorist, yet there's no
training," Ledy Van Kavage, an attorney for the advocacy group Best
Friends Animal Society, said. "If you have a fear or hatred of dogs, then
you shouldn't be a police officer, just like if you have a hatred of different
social groups."
Fort Worth policeman under investigation for shooting dog
BY DEANNA BOYD
FORT WORTH — A Fort Worth
police deputy chief is under investigation for shooting a dog while off-duty
Monday night.
Kenneth Flynn has been stripped
of his gun and badge and placed on restricted duty pending the outcome of a
criminal and administrative investigation, police officials confirmed Thursday.
Flynn’s attorney, Robert Rogers
of Dallas, said the shooting occurred after the dog, which he described as a
German shepherd, “attacked and killed the deputy chief’s cat.”
“There was an eyewitness to the
attack of the cat,” Rogers said.
Rogers said Flynn was aware of
the fatal mauling of his cat when he shot the dog.
“He had that knowledge when he
encountered this dangerous, vicious animal running loose,” Rogers said.
Police Chief Jeff Halstead said
the shooting was reported to a police supervisor.
“The allegations are serious
and our department will fully investigate these matters, holding any and all
employees accountable, to sustain the public’s trust for our department and our
profession,” Halstead said in an email to the Star-Telegram.
The shooting occurred Monday
night in the 1300 block of East Oak Grove Road, according a Fort Worth police
report.
Detectives with the
department’s special investigation unit were called out to the scene. The call,
the report states, involved “shots fired inside the city limits.”
“A white male in a black SUV
was reported to have shot at a dog with a handgun,” the report states.
At the time of the report, the
dog could not be located and it was unknown if it had been hit. On Thursday,
Sgt. Steven Enright, a police spokesman, confirmed that the dog had been shot
and is now dead.
Police officials declined to
answer other specific questions regarding the incident.
“There is a criminal and
administrative investigation being conducted involving the shooting of a dog by
a Fort Worth police officer that occurred on Monday night,” Enright said in an
email.
Flynn was named deputy chief in
March 2008 by then acting Chief Pat Kneblick.
Halstead later demoted him to a
newly created rank of major in 2011 under a management reshuffling that
whittled the number of deputy chief positions to three. The rank of major was
later eliminated and Flynn’s title returned to deputy chief.
He is currently over the
investigative and support command, according to the department’s website.
Two Enfield officers suspended following police brutality case
By Kaitlyn Naples
By Susan Raff
This all stems back to an
incident in April where a video showed a man being repeatedly punched by a
police officer.
In a 35-page report the
investigation concluded that the man was beaten up and did nothing to provoke
it.
After the investigation
determined there was an act of police brutality, one Enfield officer was fired
and two others were suspended.
Mark Maher has a scar above his
eye after being beaten up by a police officer. Maher and three others were in a
car parked at the town's boat launch when they were approached by police.
A dash cam inside of the police
cruiser captured pictures of Maher being punched several times by officer
Matthew Worden, even though Maher was being restrained by two other officers.
Maher was arrested for
assaulting an officer, but the charges were dropped.
“All of them that were there -
they did nothing to stop it - they stood there and let it happen. They are
there to protect and serve and they didn't,” Maher said.
Enfield's police chief said the
officers were justified in questioning Maher and the others in the vehicle, but
not in their use of force.
Officer Jaime Yott has been
suspended for 60 days for neglect and inattention to duty. The investigation
found that her police report lacked details and that she failed to write her
use of force in the report based on her own observations.
Officer Michael Emons has been
suspended for 90 days for violating ethics codes, conduct unbecoming of an
officer, using unnecessary force on another person in the car and for turning
in a report containing inaccuracies.
"I know there are good
cops out there - it's just that when something like this happens it really
makes people concentrate on all of the bad,” Maher added.
Enfield's police chief said
that out of 150 calls for service over the past three years, the department has
only investigated 16 internal affairs complaints.
Maher is suing the department.
APPEALS COURT UPHOLDS DISMISSAL OF KILLER COP CHARGE IN AIYANA JONES CASE, DESPITE ‘WILFUL DISREGARD OF ORDINARY CARE’
UPDATE: COA panel, headed by
Michael Talbot, one of the most racist, backward judges on the bench, has
denied the prosecution’s appeal of Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway’s dismissal of
involuntary manslaughter charges against Aiyana Jones’ killer, Joseph Weekley.
The appeals court order was
posted in George Hunter’s article in the Detroit News before it was even up on
the court website, indicating that he got it from his usual source, defense
attorney Steve Fishman. The decision is at Weekley final COA order.
Supporters of Aiyana Jones and
her family are calling for all to come out to Ferguson, MO this weekend, Oct.
10-13 for a national protest against police killings and the disregard for
Black lives in this country, called by the Organization for Black Struggle. See
post below at
http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/10/06/ferguson-weekend-of-resistance-justice-for-mike-brown-oct-10-13-2014/
for all details.
VOD published stories months
ago that a scenario where Weekley would plead guilty to the high misdemeanor
charge of reckless use of a firearm
resulting in death, and get probation,
was being planned. See
http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/04/18/dad-of-aiyana-jones-7-killed-by-detroit-police-sentenced-to-40-60-years-in-blake-killing.
AND
By Diane Bukowski
A state Court of Appeals panel
is currently reviewing the Wayne County Prosecutor’s office appeal of Judge
Cynthia Gray Hathaway’s order dismissing an involuntary manslaughter charge
against Detroit Police Officer Joseph Weekley in the death of Aiyana Jones, 7,
on May 16, 2010.
The panel is headed by Appeals Judge Michael
Talbot and includes Kurtis T. Wilder and Kirsten Frank Kelley.
In their appeal, Wayne County
Prosecutor Kym Worthy, Chief of Research on Appeals and Training Timothy
Baughman, and Asst. Prosecuting Attorney Thomas Chambers argue that the case
should go to the jury as presented. They say that Judge Hathaway’s ruling was a
“legal error” contrary to her actual finding in the case, and cite a 1995
Michigan Supreme Court opinion defining involuntary manslaughter.
Hathaway said as part of her
ruling that “the trier of fact can decide if the Defendantfailed to use the
ordinary care to avoid injuring another when to a reasonable person it must
have been apparent that the result was likely to be serious injury.”
The prosecutor then cites
People v. Datema, where the high court ruled that the crime of involuntary
manslaughter can be committed EITHER with the intent to injure OR in a grossly
negligent manner.
“In the latter instance,” it
says, criminal liability is imposed because, although the defendants’ acts are
not inherently wrong, the defendant has acted or failed to act with awareness
of the risk to safety and in willful disregard of the safety of others.”
According to the transcript of
the Oct. 3 arguments, Asst. Prosecutor Robert Moran said, “He [Weekley] knew
what the standard was, he knew what ordinary care was required because they go
in there with all this powerful equipment, an MP5 submachine gun, a ballistic
shield, vest, whatever the case may be, they’re trained how to use it, they’re
trained the proper way to use it. He could have avoided injury if he had
followed his training, he didn’t. As a result of not following his training and
not following the mandates of ordinary care, someone was killed.”
Numerous Special Response Team
members testifed earlier that they are repeatedly trained to keep their index
finger on the slide of the gun, off the trigger, even if involved in a
confrontation. One officer said the training results in automatic “muscle response.”
A weapons expert said Weekley’s
gun could not be fired accidentally, only by exerting eight to nine pounds of
pressure on the trigger.
Defense Attorney Steve Fishman
cited only the U.S. Supreme Court case, People V. Evans, which Detroit News
reporter George Hunter included in his Oct. 3 story, without acknowledging that
Fishman was his source for finding the case.
In that case, Fishman said,
“The United States Supreme Court has clearly stated that the trial judge’s
ruling cannot be appealed and that retrial on that count is prohibited by the
Double Jeopary clause of the United States Constitution. Therefore, the
prosecution’s emergency application for leave to appeal should be denied.”
However the Appeals Court
rules, courts have proven throughout this country that justice for people of
color in particular is rarely rendered, as in the acquittal of George Zimmerman
for killing Travyon Martin, and Oakland County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper’s
refusal to prosecute Northland Mall security officers who killed McKenzie
Cochran, 25, as he cried out, “I can’t breathe” and “I’m dying” while they held
him down.
Many hope that actions like the
protests in Ferguson, including the one planned for this weekend, cited below
in VOD’s post at http://voiceofdetroit.net/2014/10/06/ferguson-weekend-of-resistance-justice-for-mike-brown-oct-10-13-2014/,
will eventually provide justice.
A former town of Greece police officer has been charged in a federal child pornography case.
A former town of Greece police
officer has been charged in federal court with possession of child pornography.
According to a criminal complaint
and other court papers filed Sept. 5 but unsealed on Tuesday, John Casey III is
accused of having images of child pornography on his laptop computer and
sharing them via a peer-to-peer (P2P) downloading service.
The charges stem from a
two-year investigation that included federal agents downloading videos from
Casey's computer and a search of Casey's home on Long Pond Road.
Casey was hired by the Greece
Police Department on Feb. 7, 2011 and resigned on May 23, 2014, according to
department spokesman Sgt. Jared René.
Chief Patrick Phelan said he
could not provide any details of a criminal investigation being conducted by
another agency. He said he was aware of the investigation when Casey resigned.
The charges are apparently not
linked to Casey's employment.
According to court documents,
Department of Homeland Security investigators looking into peer-to-peer file
sharing programs in 2012 identified a user making available numerous files with
digital fingerprints linked to child porn with an IP address that traced back
to Casey. While agents downloaded a file apparently containing child
pornography from that IP address at the time, no judicial action followed.
However, in March 2014, when an
agent was again investigating P2P file sharing services, the agent came across
a user — with an IP address that also later traced back to Casey — who had 64
porn-associated files available for download. The agent downloaded five of the
video files, and determined that four of them "contained depictions of
minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct."
A search warrant was executed
at Casey's home on Long Pond Road on April 22 and two laptop computers were
seized, according to court documents. Investigators found the same P2P
downloading program that agents had used on one of the computers, and they also
found digital links and other traces showing that child pornography had at one
time been present on the computer.
A second computer taken from
Casey's home, which investigators say had registered user information that not
only linked back to Casey but also to his profession, contained "multiple
images depicting minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct," including
at least one image of a female infant being violated by an adult male.
Casey was arrested on Sept. 17
in Iowa and is scheduled to appear Monday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jonathan
W. Feldman in Rochester.
MCDERMOT@DemocratandChronicle.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)