Wednesday
Jul212004
Wednesday, July 21, 2004 at 03:07PM
- Last Week Police Shot and Killed a Black Man and a Latino Man
Long Beach Police Chief Anthony Batts met Tuesday with
about 70 community members and religious leaders to discuss
investigations into three shootings by officers last week, two of them
occurring within 10 hours. Of the three men wounded in the shootings,
two died, said Long Beach Police Sgt. David Cannan. He said two of
those shot were Latino and the other was African American. The black
man was unarmed when he was fatally shot. The department and the Los
Angeles County district attorney's office are investigating the
shootings. The seven officers who discharged their guns were put on
paid three-day leave, which is routine, and must be cleared for return
to duty by the department psychologist. [
more]
Wednesday
Jul212004
Wednesday, July 21, 2004 at 02:09PM
Nevada:
The Bureau of Indian Affairs is assisting in the investigation into
last week's shooting death of a teenager by tribal police on a Las
Vegas Indian Reservation. Norman Boney Junior, 17, also known as
"Manny," was shot twice by a Walker River Paiute Indian Reservation
tribal police officer in the town of Schurz on Thursday night.
According to the FBI, the incident began when Gayle Boney, Norman's
mother, called tribal police seeking help in finding her husband,
Norman Boney Senior. The FBI reports that she said he was driving
around in his truck drunk and "acting crazy." [
more]
Wednesday
Jul212004
Wednesday, July 21, 2004 at 01:10PM
People asked
for their DNA have little choice: Either submit to the test or move up
the suspect list. And, they say, sweeps - in which police collect DNA
from dozens of people based upon a broad description - violate people's
constitutional rights against unreasonable search and seizure. "These
sweeps - whether they're roadblocks or these massive DNA collections -
are not only intrusive but they're ineffective," said Sam Walker, a
longtime criminal justice professor at the University of Nebraska at
Omaha. "Research has shown that time and time again, crimes are solved
by some specific identifying information from people. The victim. A
witness. A friend. "A lot of these sweeps are just done as theater.
It's police playing to an audience, trying to show that they're doing
something." [more]
Tuesday
Jul202004
Tuesday, July 20, 2004 at 03:12PM
Unedited tape Shows More Police Blows
The complete and unedited nine-minute tape of the
June 23 pursuit and arrest of Stanley Miller by LAPD officers shows
that he took a beating from the cops -- after receiving the 11
flashlight blows. The world was shown only a one-minute portion of the
tape. No one except LAPD higher-ups has seen what happens after that.
KABC-TV news reporter Scott Reiff, in the Air 7 helicopter, continued
to tape the incident until Miller was placed into police car number
569. the complete tape, which vividly depicts the following: After
Miller is on the ground, subdued, kicked and hit 11 times by 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. [more]
- Black Man Beaten by L.A. Police files $25 Million claim with city [more] and [more]
Different Version of Beating Emerges [more
Tuesday
Jul202004
Tuesday, July 20, 2004 at 02:13PM
Police are investigating a claim that Southeast Division Officer John
Hatfield -- the cop who struck Stanley Miller 11 times with a flashlight
following a police chase last month -- threatened to kill a 14-year-old
boy, it was learned Tuesday. Mabelle Pittman, a staunch police
supporter and an active volunteer with the Southeast Division for the
past 25 years, filed a complaint against Hatfield after she learned of
her son's March 26 encounter with him, during which the officer
allegedly told the child: "Why don't you run so I can shoot you in the
back?" [more]
Tuesday
Jul202004
Tuesday, July 20, 2004 at 01:15PM
A Philadelphia Highway Patrol officer is accused
of a racist act after hanging a black doll from his car. The veteran
officer is now the target of an internal investigation. Several police
officers said they were surprised, shocked and outraged that a fellow
police officer would do anything to create racial tension among the
ranks. Police officials said the white officer drove to work with a
black baby doll hanging by a noose from the outside of his personal
car. Police sources said a black officer confronted the white officer,
demanding he take down the doll, but the white officer refused and the
black officer filed two complaints -- one with the department and one
with the federal EEOC. [more]
Friday
Jul162004
Friday, July 16, 2004 at 04:41PM
The
Black man beaten by police last month filed a claim Thursday with the
city of Los Angeles for $25 million in damages. Stanley Miller, 36,
alleged he suffered "brain damage, spinal injuries,
trunk-torso injuries, internal injuries, emotional distress, and
bruises and contusions" during his televised arrest near a concrete
creek bed in Compton on June 23. The sum he is seeking, the claim said,
is justified by the "malicious and egregious conduct of the LAPD." "The
LAPD planted evidence, lied about evidence, destroyed evidence and has
attempted to cover up its misdeeds," according to the document. [more] and [more]
Friday
Jul162004
Friday, July 16, 2004 at 03:42PM
A man said Omaha police handcuffed him and forced him to give a DNA
sample, even though he had already been exonerated by a rape victim.
The man told his story to KETV NewsWatch 7's Carol Kloss and asked to
remain anonymous. He said two years ago police questioned him in the
first of four serial rapes. At the time, he said the victim told police
he didn't do it. [more]
Friday
Jul162004
Friday, July 16, 2004 at 02:45PM
Monday's criminal grand jury hearing into the shooting death of an
unarmed man by a state agent will be held in public, Santa Clara County
Superior Court Presiding Judge Thomas P. Hansen has decided, marking
the second time in less than a year -- and only the third time ever in
the county -- that the normally secret proceedings will be open.
Supporters of Rodolfo ``Rudy'' Cardenas, mistaken for a fugitive by a
state drug agent, said they were pleased by the decision, which was
expected. But they added they are concerned authorities will seek to
discredit Cardenas in an effort to clear the officer who shot him. [more]
Thursday
Jul152004
Thursday, July 15, 2004 at 04:50PM
I guess it has never dawned on them that they need to
look at their own human rights violations first before they can even
open their mouth. The last two years alone have seen numerous counts of
pure brutality that cannot be wished even on one's worst enemy. There
was the case in Cincinatti were the police shot a young black man for
eluding them, claiming he had 14 warrants of arrest but not bothering
to mention that the warrants were merely for unpaid tickets by the same
cops. Then there was the Ingelwood California case where a handcuffed
black teenager was slammed on the hood of a car and punched in the face
by four police officers, who were surprisingly acquitted. [more]
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