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Wednesday
Dec222004
Wednesday, December 22, 2004 at 08:59PM
The U.S. Department of Justice has
dropped its inquiry into whether a Florida man's civil rights were
violated when he was attacked by a Mountain View police dog. The
decision concludes government investigations into the Sept. 4 incident,
when Jacksonville, Fla., resident Patrick Terry was bitten on the thigh
by a German shepherd during a confrontation with police. An internal
investigation by Mountain View police, another by an outside consultant
hired by the city of Mountain View, and now the Department of Justice
review each found no wrongdoing. But civil lawsuits may yet be filed, a
representative for Terry says. Police approached Terry on the 2700
block of El Camino Real, believing that a late-night sidewalk argument
between Terry and his white girlfriend was escalating into domestic
violence. According to police the dog, escaped from the back seat of a
police car by
jumping to the front seat, where either a door or a window was open,
then bit Terry without being ordered to do so by an officer. Terry, who
was handcuffed and on the ground at the time, required stitches and was
not arrested in the incident. Terry believes that he was stopped, and
that the dog attacked him, because he's a 6-foot-7 African-American who
was with a petite white woman. He alleges that the incident is an
example of police brutality and racial profiling. Under the advice of
an attorney, Terry refused to be interviewed by the FBI, according to
Rick Callender, president of the San Jose/Silicon Valley chapter of the
NAACP. Because of that, Callender said, it was inevitable that the
Department of Justice would say there wasn't enough evidence to
prosecute a civil rights violation. The local NAACP chapter and Terry
are considering filing a lawsuit in regards to the incident, said
Callender, who has been advising Terry since the incident.[more]
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