US Dept. of Justice Civil Rights Probe Opened in Brutal Milwaukee Police Beating Case - Review May Take Months
Saturday, April 22, 2006 at 11:59PM
TheSpook

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The U.S. Justice Department will join a federal investigation into the beating of a black man after a jury acquitted three white former police officers of most state charges, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said Friday. U.S. Attorney Steven Biskupic in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, already has said his office is looking into possible federal charges in the case. Gonzales said the Justice Department's civil rights division and Biskupic's office will jointly decide whether to file charges. In week since the former officers' acquittals stunned Milwaukee, black and white residents, including the mayor, have expressed their outrage by attending community meetings and downtown marches. Activists called for federal authorities to intervene. Alderman Joe Davis Sr. said earlier this week that he sent a letter to Gonzales asking for federal indictments in the October 2004 beating of Frank Jude Jr. Davis said Jude was denied his civil rights. An all-white county jury returned not guilty verdicts last Friday on most charges against fired officers Jon Bartlett, 34, Daniel Masarik, 26, and Andrew Spengler, 26. On one charge against Bartlett, the jury reached no verdict and prosecutors say they will retry him. Defense lawyers had argued key witnesses were unreliable because they did not remember correctly, lied or were influenced by pretrial gossip and publicity. Biskupic has said the federal review of the case could take months and possible charges could include obstruction or civil rights violations. [MORE]

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