Thursday
Aug122004
Thursday, August 12, 2004 at 02:40AM

A US border guard was indicted by a federal grand
jury Wednesday for allegedly beating up a Chinese businesswoman, in a
case that was taken up at the highest diplomatic level between Beijing
and Washington. Robert Rhodes, who was charged with violating the civil
rights of 37-year-old Zhao Yan near Niagara Falls in July, could face
up to 10 years in prison and a fine of 250,000 dollars if convicted. US
Attorney Marty Littlefield said Rhodes would be arraigned in court at a
date to be announced. According to the indictment, Rhodes struck and
hit Zhao with his knee and then "forcibly drove her head into contact
with the pavement." Zhao, from Tianjin city, had complained that she
told the officers who stopped her that she had legal documents,
including a passport and business visa, but they beat her anyway. Zhao
is suing the United States for $5 million [more
] and [more
] and [more
]
Wednesday
Aug112004
Wednesday, August 11, 2004 at 10:25PM
Missing Tape?
Last month reporter Betty Pleasant from the Los Angeles Wave Newspapers
revealed that the video tape of the LAPD beating of Stanley Miller had
been edited by KABC-TV. She claims that the police beating continued on
tape for an additional 8 minutes after the edited TV version is cut
off. Pleasant explained:
- 'after Mr. Miller is on the ground, subdued, kicked and hit 11
times by Officer Hatfield, most of the swarming cops get off him. But
the prone, handcuffed man is inexplicably jumped on again, like a loose
football, by seven of the eight officers present, and kicked again by
another one. At this point, Mr. Reiff can be heard on the tape yelling,
"This guy must be resisting, they're slapping the crap out of him!"
- Then, the cop that kicked him the second time hauls a visibly
dazed Mr. Miller up from the ground, kicks his legs apart and pats him
down, obviously looking for weapons. The officer completes the pat-down
and retrieves nothing. The cop came away from the pat-down
empty-handed.
- In the meantime, Sgt. Angela McGee is standing behind and to the
left of Mr. Miller and the kicking cop, busily counting and pocketing
some dollar bills. She is preoccupied with the money in her hands and
is not looking at what is happening with Mr. Miller nor at what the
other officers are doing. If she had looked up, she would have seen her
officers celebrating their capture with back pats, handshakes and
high-fives. Reporter Reiff saw it and commented incredulously, "They're
all high-fiving each other!"
- At this point, a bald-headed sheriff's deputy walks into the
picture and exchanges words with Sgt. McGee and another officer, while
the kicking cop takes a wobbly Mr. Miller by his right arm and begins
leading him back down the grassy strip to the patrol car.
- During his lengthy walk to the car, a second officer takes Mr.
Miller by his left shoulder and joins the kicking cop in propelling him
down the grassy strip.'
The article has been published at least four more times since she
originally wrote it. However, apparently no one besides KABC-TV,
Pleasant and the people she has shown it to have seen the tape. She
stated the Wave has "exclusive possession of the tape". At the end of
her article, a Rev. Jarvis Johnson says "Now that we've seen the truth,
what are we going to do about it?" Well for starters , how about
letting others see what you've seen. Tell the world! The tape does no good on a shelf.
- The original "edited" KABC-TV version can be seen [here]
- The original article can be found [here]
Wednesday
Aug112004
Wednesday, August 11, 2004 at 10:23PM

- Beaten to Death by Cincinnati Police
The FBI said Tuesday it is investigating whether any civil rights violations occurred in the death of a black man who was repeatedly struck by police with metal batons. The FBI will report the findings from its preliminary inquiry to the Department of Justice's civil rights division, which will decide whether a full investigation is justified, said Michael Brooks, a spokesman for the FBI's Cincinnati office. He refused to give further details. The Cincinnati chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People called for a federal investigation months ago, alleging that police used excessive force Nov. 30 on Nathaniel Jones, 41, of Cincinnati. Video from restaurant surveillance cameras and a police cruiser showed that Jones knocked over one officer before others jabbed or struck him more than two dozen times with nightsticks. The 350-pound Jones stopped breathing shortly after he was handcuffed. Last week, a police watchdog agency concluded that officers used excessive force, saying they could have backed off and allowed Jones time to comply with their commands. The city manager will decide whether the officers should be disciplined. [more]
- A big question in the Jones death involves a 97-second gap near the beginning of the tape. Before the gap, the police can be seen talking to Jones; afterward, he charges at them. Many black community leaders contend those missing seconds might have shown that police provoked the attack. [more]
- On Monday Court TV released what they call an "unedited version" of the video. However, this tape is simply longer than what had been previously been shown. The begining portion of the tape is still missing. See the tape here [more]
Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 09:55PM
A former New York police officer has pleaded guilty to
federal civil rights charges related to the 1998 death of a Black man
he hit in the head with a walkie-talkie, prosecutors said yesterday.
The former officer, Craig Yokemick, 36, entered the plea to two felony
charges Friday in United States District Court in Manhattan. Mr.
Yokemick admitted violating the civil rights of the suspect, Kenneth
Banks, when he hurled a police radio at him as Mr. Banks tried to
escape on a bicycle. Mr. Banks later died of trauma to the head.
Sentencing was set for Nov. 12. Mr. Yokemick could get up to 10 years
in prison on each charge. A Manhattan grand jury cleared Mr. Yokemick
in 1999 of using excessive force, and the city reportedly paid Mr.
Banks' family $750,000 in a civil settlement. Mr. Yokemick also was
convicted last year of violating the civil rights of a Westchester
County teacher in 2002 when he punched him and threw him to the ground
in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. [more] and [more]
- Police say that on October 29, 1998 cops observed Banks
in a drug transaction and when officers tried to arrest him he fled.
Witnesses say that Officer Craig Yokemick came within a few feet of
Banks as he tried to get away on a bicycle and threw his two-pound
walkie-talkie at the suspect. Banks fell from the bike. He died at
Metropolitan Hospital Center on November 10. Twelve days later, the
medical examiner ruled that the thrown radio had killed Banks.
- A witness said that after Walker was knocked down and it was clear he was knocked out,
"the police began dragging brother Banks, unconscious, to the van,"
claims Stewart.
"They literally dragged the brother to the van and threw him in as
though he was a dead deer who had been hit crossing the street," adds
Stewart, who provided the investigators with names of other witnesses.
"They just dropped him in there. I don't know whether they really knew
that he was never going to regain consciousness." [more]
Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 08:22PM
A former New York police officer has pleaded guilty to
federal civil rights charges related to the 1998 death of a Black man
he hit in the head with a walkie-talkie, prosecutors said yesterday.
The former officer, Craig Yokemick, 36, entered the plea to two felony
charges Friday in United States District Court in Manhattan. Mr.
Yokemick admitted violating the civil rights of the suspect, Kenneth
Banks, when he hurled a police radio at him as Mr. Banks tried to
escape on a bicycle. Mr. Banks later died of trauma to the head.
Sentencing was set for Nov. 12. Mr. Yokemick could get up to 10 years
in prison on each charge. A Manhattan grand jury cleared Mr. Yokemick
in 1999 of using excessive force, and the city reportedly paid Mr.
Banks' family $750,000 in a civil settlement. Mr. Yokemick also was
convicted last year of violating the civil rights of a Westchester
County teacher in 2002 when he punched him and threw him to the ground
in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. [more] and [more]
- Police say that on October 29, 1998 cops observed Banks
in a drug transaction and when officers tried to arrest him he fled.
Witnesses say that Officer Craig Yokemick came within a few feet of
Banks as he tried to get away on a bicycle and threw his two-pound
walkie-talkie at the suspect. Banks fell from the bike. He died at
Metropolitan Hospital Center on November 10. Twelve days later, the
medical examiner ruled that the thrown radio had killed Banks.
- A witness said that after Walker was knocked down and it was clear he was knocked out,
"the police began dragging brother Banks, unconscious, to the van,"
claims Stewart.
"They literally dragged the brother to the van and threw him in as
though he was a dead deer who had been hit crossing the street," adds
Stewart, who provided the investigators with names of other witnesses.
"They just dropped him in there. I don't know whether they really knew
that he was never going to regain consciousness." [more]
Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 06:25PM
- Unarmed Latino Man reaching for Wallet Shot Dead by Police
The mother and the estate of a Guatemalan immigrant shot
and killed by a Bellevue police officer in August 2001 have filed a
federal lawsuit against Bellevue Police Chief Jim Montgomery and
Michael Hetle, the officer involved. Hetle is no longer is with the
Bellevue police. The suit, filed yesterday in U.S. District Court in
Seattle, alleges Montgomery failed to adequately train or discipline
Hetle despite what the suit said was Hetle's history of excessive
force. It seeks unspecified damages for the shooting of 24-year-old
Nelson Martinez Mendez. The killing triggered anger and frustration in
the Latino community over police treatment. Martinez was unarmed when
he was shot in the parking lot of an East Bellevue condominium. Hetle,
responding to a domestic-violence complaint, had been warned Martinez
might have a knife. He shot Martinez twice after the man reached for
what turned out to be a wallet. An inquest jury determined Hetle had
reason to fear for his life when he shot Martinez, and county
prosecutors ruled the killing a justified homicide. [more]
Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 06:24PM
For the past two Saturdays protesters have lined the
sidewalks at the Blytheville Police Department in protest of police
brutality. Part of their concern, as stated on one of their protest
signs, is what happened to Cory Crawford. Crawford, 26, of Blytheville,
died in the early morning hours of July 23, shortly after being taken
into police custody at the Pear Tree Inn in Blytheville, according to
Blytheville Police Chief Royce Carpenter. Autopsy reports from the
medical examiner's office in Little Rock indicate Crawford's death was
due to excited delirium and acute cocaine intoxication with an
extremely high level of cocaine being present in his system. "The
report from the medical examiner specifically noted that Crawford had
numerous superficial wounds consistent with glass and that no cervical
(neck) fracture, no blunt force trauma, no evidence of strangulation
and no head injuries were detected," Carpenter said. Carpenter also
said that prior to the arrival of police at Pear Tree Inn, Crawford
repeatedly rammed his head into a glass door before eventually breaking
the glass. [more]
Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 06:23PM
A former New Folsom prison lieutenant was acquitted
Monday of assaulting an inmate despite testimony from five fellow
guards, but he was convicted of filing a false report. The case
involving Stephen Luke Scarsella renews the debate over what
whistle-blowers and a federal court-appointed monitor say is a
pervasive "code of silence" within the state's prison system, and over
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration's attempts to clean up what
critics say is an often abusive system. Five guards, including a
sergeant, testified that Scarsella, a 49-year-old former lieutenant,
dragged inmate Mel Edward by his leg chains partly down a stairway,
then punched the defenseless inmate twice in the face. Edward was being
forcibly removed from his cell at California State Prison, Sacramento,
commonly known as New Folsom, on June 8, 2002. The guards said they
were subsequently derided as "rats" by fellow officers, and ostracized
for speaking out. Scarsella was fired after the incident. [
more]
Tuesday
Aug102004
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 at 06:22PM
Orange County jail officials have shown an indifference
to violence against inmates by deputies, who call themselves "psycho
crew" and "the untouchables," according to an inmate who is suing a
second time alleging that he was beaten. Daniel Louis Parra, 36, who is
awaiting trial for murder, states that in both incidents he was pulled
out of a food line, taken down a stairwell out of the view of video
cameras and beaten. Both incidents were investigated by jail officials,
who found no evidence of wrongdoing by jail personnel, said Jon
Fleishman, a sheriff's spokesman. Parra was treated for injuries to his
neck, head, face, eyes and arms after the alleged attacks, his attorney
said. [
more]
Monday
Aug092004
Monday, August 9, 2004 at 06:16PM
The plainclothes state narcotics and parole
agents staking out a San Jose house were looking for a parole
violator who was at least 7 inches taller and 50 pounds heavier
than Rodolfo "Rudy" Cardenas, 43, a San Jose construction worker,
who drove up in a van to visit the wanted man. But when Cardenas sped
off for unknown reasons, he was chased by agents in unmarked
vehicles and later on foot. As Cardenas ran around a building
into a parking lot, narcotics agent Michael Walker allegedly
fired through a fence, hitting the man in the back. Most
troubling, the dead man's family and ambulance records say, after
the shooting, paramedics were held back by police for five
critical minutes as Cardenas was bleeding to death. Walker said he shot
Cardenas, who was running away from him, only after the man turned
slightly toward him, and Walker thought he saw a gun in his hands. No
firearm was ever found on Cardenas or at the scene. San Jose police
officers who patted down the father of five right after he was shot
also did not find a weapon. But later, a crime scene investigator going
through Cardenas' bloody clothes found a folding four-inch knife with a
black handle in his left, front pants pocket. Walker said that could
have been the object he mistook for a gun. [more]and [more] Pictured above: Rudy Cardenas.
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