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] The Citizen Review Board told Alonzo Grant they found two officers used excessive force and arrested him improperly. They then tried to cover up what happened.
Police arrested Grant in June after he called for help involving a dispute between his daughter and a neighbor. The charges (resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and harassment ) against him have since been dropped. Now he's suing the City of Syracuse for police brutality and then lying about their conduct in police reports.

Due to being struck repeatedly by officers, Grant, a Black man suffered a broken nose, concussion, split lip, cut on his eye, a twisted arm, numerous cuts and serious post-concussive syndrome, including nightmares flashbacks and fear of the police department, his claim stated. His attorney, Charles Bonner also said Grant also suffered brain damage.
The incident started after Grant called police to report an argument between his daughter and a neighbor in the front yard. But when officers arrived, the dispute had ended.
An officer ordered Grant out of his house to talk to another officer. As he left, Grant opened (prosecutors say "punched") the screen door. That appeared to trigger officers to bring Grant under arrest (breaking his own screen?). "Almost immediately following Mr. Grant's action, the police decided to arrest for him disorderly conduct," the DA's office stated.
According to his attorney, Charles Bonner, Grant started walking down his front steps, an officer behind him violently, without warning, charged Mr.. Grant from behind and flung him viciously across his wrought iron railing face down to the ground. He says the second officer put on his black leather gloves, dropping his knees on Mr.. Grant's back. During the scuffle, Bonner claims one of the officers held Grant in a choke hold, pulled back his arm and struck him repeatedly in the face. [MORE]
In July Black college student, Elijah Johnson, 20, said white Syracuse cops beat him and used racial slurs against him during a wrongful arrest after a party. [MORE] and [MORE]
"It’s clear that he and his family have suffered a great injustice and I think it's time for the mayor and the police chief to recognize that and at the very least implement the recommendations of the CRB,” says Jesse Ryder, Grant’s attorney.