Racial bias raised in Palo Alto police brutality trial - Black Man in Car Too Long- Beat Down
- Originally publishd in The San Francisco Chronicle MARCH 23, 2005 Copyright 2005 The Chronicle Publishing Co.
By Maria Alicia Gaura
A
man testifying in the brutality trial of two Palo Alto police officers
told a Santa Clara County jury Tuesday that he felt trouble coming when
one officer drove past the car he was sitting in and looked directly
into his eyes.
"I've been black for a long time," said Albert Hopkins, 61, adding that as an African American
man he was frequently targeted by police for trivial reasons. "He looks
at me, and I look at him, and something in my mind says it's going to
be a long night. I'm going to see him again. Something is going to
happen."
Hopkins is the key prosecution
witness in the trial that began last week in a San Jose courtroom. Palo
Alto officers Craig Lee, 42, and Michael Kan, 27, are charged with
felony police brutality and misdemeanor assault for
allegedly beating Hopkins with batons and pepper-spraying him July 13,
2003. If convicted, they face up to three years in jail. The
defendants, whose lawyers say they used force to restrain Hopkins
because he was uncooperative and threatening, plan to take the stand in
their own defense, and are expected to testify in one to two weeks.
Hopkins told the jury that at the time of the confrontation, he was
estranged from his wife and had spent two years living in his car to
avoid selling the family's Palo Alto home, where his three children
lived.
"At the time, I was living in my
car, and taking all the money I made to my family," Hopkins said,
breaking into tears several times during his testimony. "At times I had
only one dollar per day to live on. I would go to the Jack in the Box
and buy one hamburger, and cut it in half for lunch and dinner."
He said he worked days for $10 an hour at the Marriott Hotel, and had
developed a routine for parking late at night when neighbors were less
likely to be frightened by his presence.
He told the jury that on the night he was beaten, he saw the police car
pass his car twice before it finally pulled up behind him, shining a
spotlight on his car. Hopkins said he was upset.
"I was tired, I had worked an 8-hour day, and I was just trying to rest
before I went to bed," Hopkins told the jury. "I felt like (Lee) was
contacting me because I was black."
Santa Clara County Deputy District Attorney Peter Waite asked if defiance was the right approach.
"Why not just tone it down?" Waite asked. "Say 'yes sir,' 'no sir'?"
"I was well within my rights," Hopkins hotly replied.
Hopkins said Lee ordered him to stay in his car and demanded to see his
identification. But Hopkins said that when he rummaged through the
glove compartment, he saw the officer's hand move to his gun and
decided he would sit still rather than risk getting shot.
Kan arrived to back up Lee, Hopkins said, and tried to yank him from
the car, but failed. Hopkins told the jury that he emerged from the car
and was beaten with steel batons and sprayed with pepper spray.
Under cross-examination, defense attorneys Craig Brown and Harry Stern
challenged Hopkins' version of events, saying the officers gave ample
verbal warnings and that Hopkins acted aggressively, actually pulling
Kan partly into the car when the slightly built officer tried to yank
Hopkins out.
Brown asked Hopkins why he
didn't explain to Lee why he stopped searching for his wallet and
identification. "Did you think he was going to shoot you for speaking?"
Brown asked.
"People have been shot for less," Hopkins replied.
Hopkins appeared flustered under the defense's questioning and
contradicted himself repeatedly. At several points, the witness grew
visibly agitated and yelled at the defense attorneys, before Superior
Court Judge Andrea Bryan ended proceedings early.
Hopkins was never charged with a crime in the incident with police, and
the city of Palo Alto later settled a civil complaint from him for
$250,000 -- two facts that will not be revealed to the jury in this
case.
- D.A. calls police incompetent at opening of brutality trial [more]
- Accused police officer testifies [more]