The email sent will contain a link to this article, the article title, and an article excerpt (if available). For security reasons, your IP address will also be included in the sent email.
From [HERE] A Metro-North conductor was lying face down on the ground when an off-duty rookie cop in the Bronx shot him in the back. Edward Mitchell, a Black man, 41, says in a $30 million lawsuit that the officer violated his civil rights in 2005 by using excessive force after the two men had a fender-bender on an exit ramp off the Bruckner Expressway.
Jury selection in the trial is set to begin Monday. Mitchell’s lawyer, James Lenihan, said he has forensic evidence and witnesses to prove his African-American client was on the ground when white officer Anthony Adorno fired two shots.
“I remember being shot in the back by a police officer,” Mitchell told the Daily News. “It hit my leg. I fell on the ground. I remember the officer telling me, ‘Don’t move. Don’t move.’ It was very painful.” Mitchell said his most painful memories from that night involve “the ordeal of my family seeing me in a hospital with handcuffs on my wrist and my leg.