• 01Jul

    Stolen Lives group mourns victims of police shootings at Pratt University

    stolen_lives

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/06/28/2009-06-28_victims_of_cops_guns_mourned.html

    They walked down the aisle one by one, the pain of losing a loved one to a cop’s bullet still etched on their faces.

    In a somber ceremony at Brooklyn’s Pratt University on Saturday, relatives of a dozen young men gunned down by city cops received certificates from a group called Stolen Lives, an organization that compiles stories of those killed by law enforcement.

    All of the victims will be included in the publication of the next edition of the Stolen Lives book.

    “I feel so much better that I have someone supporting me,” said Joann Mickens, whose son, Corey, 25, was shot by NYPD officers in Harlem in 2007. “It’s letting the people know. He wasn’t a bad son. He was bettering himself.”

    Carolyn Battle, 58, said she’s still consumed by rage following the death of her son, Ronald, 25.

    Ronald Battle was gunned by a cop in Harlem in September 2007, she said.

    “I’m angry because the people I thought were on my side are not,” Battle said. “I cried about my baby, but this is not the time to cry. The only way we will get something done is if we will keep talking about it.”

    “It all begins and ends with us. If I drop the ball just because I receive a certificate, then what? It’s about what I’m going to do with it.”

    Nicholas Heyward Sr., a member of Stolen Lives, said Officer Omar Edwards, who was killed by a fellow cop last month in a case of mistaken identity, will also be included in the book’s next edition.

     

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  • 01Jul

    Some people don’t even believe stuff like this happens, but let me tell you, this is as American as apple pie.  Its just very rare for one of them to get caught.  They are the most powerful gang in the streets (the cops), who is watching them?!  If it wasn’t for the club surveillance video these brothers would have probably gotten successfully framed by these cops.

    NYPD officer cops a plea in drug bust

    Jose (above left) and Maximo Colon were vindicated after video at a Queens bar showed Jose and his brother never having contact with the undercover cops who busted them.

    Jose (above left) and Maximo Colon were vindicated after video at a Queens bar showed Jose and his brother never having contact with the undercover cops who busted them.

     

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/06/27/2009-06-27_nypd_officer_cops_a_plea_in_drug_sting_rap.html

    A disgraced NYPD officer turned in his badge and pleaded guilty Friday to framing two brothers in a phony drug bust.

    Police Officer Henry Tavarez, 27, of Manhattan, admitted he and Detective Stephen Anderson worked together to wrongly incriminate brothers Jose and Maximo Colon during a Jan. 5, 2008, sting inside a Queens nightclub.

    They arrested the brothers on trumped up charges that the Colons sold them cocaine at the Delicias de Mi Tierra bar in Elmhurst, prosecutors said, then tried to cover their tracks by placing in evidence some of the drugs they had purchased during another bust.

    Tavarez pleaded guilty to felony charges of offering a false report. As part of his plea deal, he resigned from the NYPD and could face five days in jail at sentencing.

    All charges against the brothers were dropped and they have filed a federal lawsuit against the officers. Anderson resigned from the NYPD prior to the revelation. He could face up to nine years in prison, prosecutors said.

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  • 25Jun

    We have followed this story from the beginning; since the 1st uprising in December, to the second uprising in February, to the arrest of 3 corrections officers working there in March. 

     

    Reeves Detention Center is a 2,400 inmate PRIVATIZED prison in Texas that houses a large population of undocumented immigrants.  This for-profit prison (like all of them) is administered for the greatest profit possible, of course any corner that can be cut will be!  An inmate needs healthcare attention?  Sorry, costs too much!  Leave him to die!  They may has well have said “let him eat cake.” 

     

    We at Malcolm-Che give our full solidarity to the rightous prisoners who rose up against these horrible conditions when one of their friends died at the hands of these capitalists!!  It was the death of Manuel Galindo that sparked the uprising, but it was the poor food, poor healthcare and anger generated from the indefinate detention of these immigrants that made the uprising possible. 

     

    They took hostages (which they later released), demanded to speak to the Mexican consulate; tried anything they could do to try to get the word out about what was going on inside.  We salute you!  25 of them are up on charges right now resulting from the uprisings, we demand they be given clemency!

     

    From immigration to healthcare to privatized prisons this article touches on so many issues that are important to us.  This is MUST READ!!

     

     

    Attorney says inmate’s death led to Pecos prison riots 

    Here is a pic of the uprising at Reeves County Detention Center in Texas.

    Here is a pic of the uprising at Reeves County Detention Center in Texas.

    PECOS The death of a 32-year-old epileptic inmate in solitary confinement at Reeves County Detention Center last Dec. 12 touched off the first of two riots that saw fires set and hostages taken, said an attorney for the dead inmate’s family.

    Some of the privately run federal lockup’s 2,400 inmates, many of them illegal immigrants, had complained of woeful health care after the riots on Dec. 12-13 and Jan. 31-Feb. 1.

    But the story now centers on 32-year-old Jesus Manuel Galindo of Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico, who El Paso lawyer Miguel “Mike” Torres claims was improperly treated.

    Representing Galindo’s widow, three children and parents with co-counsel Leon Schydlower, Torres said last week that a member of a Lubbock physicians’ group that contracts with the prison had examined Galindo just before his death.

    “The doctor said Jesus had an attitude problem because he was complaining about the lack of medical treatment that killed him three days later,” said Torres.

    Galindo “had no business” being in the Security Housing Unit, Torres said, “because he was only in for minor infractions, not fighting or worse.”

    The inmate’s mother had been calling almost daily to say he was not feeling well and was having seizures, said Galindo’s attorney.

    “She mailed the prison his medical records, but they sent them back with a curt note that said, ‘Don’t send these again.,’ ” Torres said.

    “When they found him at 7 a.m. Dec. 12, rigor mortis had set in, which meant he had been dead for three to five hours,” the attorney said. “I attended his funeral, and the small neighborhood funeral home in south El Paso was filled to overflowing. It was tragic because he was a young man.”

    Cellmates rioted

    Torres, who said he is taking steps toward a civil lawsuit against the company operating the prison, said Galindo’s former cellmates touched off the riot because they had feared that result. “Everything we learned is that they were worried sick about this guy,” he said.

    “They tried to contact the administration and say, ‘Bring him back and we will watch him.’ You have to take this type of medication (Dilantin) at precise times at well-monitored therapeutic levels.”

    Judy Madewell, a federal public defender in San Antonio who was handling Galindo’s appeal of a 30-month term for illegal re-entry into the United States, said she has “had concerns for a long time because RCDC has had a number of problems with inmates getting proper medical attention.

    “My secretary translated a letter in which Jesus said, ‘I’m afraid I’m going to die and no one will find me!’ ” Madewell said.

    “We feel horrible about what happened and feel like there is a lot of responsibility on the facility’s part.”

    She reported sending Octavio Vasquez, an investigator with the federal defender’s office in Alpine, to spend three hours with Galindo on Dec. 4.

    “He was in the SHU for minor disciplinary infractions,” Madewell said of Galindo.

    “Octavio went to the authorities and said, ‘He needs removing from solitary,’ and they said, ‘Yes, we will move him out by this weekend.’ He was still there when he died eight days later.

    “Jesus told Octavio the prison was not giving him his meds often enough and lowered the dosage. He was a gentle person — not a problem client, and as far as I know not a problem inmate.”

    Assistant Federal Defender Charlotte Harris of Alpine, whose office represented Galindo after his arrest, said the Geo Group of Boca Raton, Fla., operates the detention center with support from Reeves County.

    “It’s better for the government to run prisons, rather than private companies, because corners can be cut if you have a profit motive,” said Harris.

    No response from prison

    A call to the prison last week was referred to Geo Group’s Florida headquarters, where a spokesman asked that questions be submitted by e-mail. Geo did not respond to e-mailed questions.

    Two prison recreation specialists were released unharmed after the first riot. The rec center was torched during that melee, and smoke poured from a housing unit during the second, broadcast by cable news, after which three inmates were hospitalized, one missing a finger.

    Charged with assault and other crimes, 25 inmates face trial, a court official said.

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  • 24Jun

    We been saying this here at Malcolm-Che!!  Anyone who has people behind bars has heard the stories of rape.  And like it’s noted in this article, prison rape is part and parcel of the entire direction of prisons as punishment, not rehabilitation.  Guards look the other way, prisoners look the other way, no one does anything.  You know who did do something though?  Activists like those known as the Angola 3.  These Black Panther brothers knew that there could be no unity behind bars without stopping the ‘punk factory’ going on, the sexual exploitation.  Make sure you read this article, its a MUST READ!! 

    Oh yeah, and for those of you who don’t like it when Malcolm-Che says the prison guards are the most powerful gang inside the pen, here’s a statistic for you:  That study also said more prisoners reported abuse by staff than by other prisoners: 2.9 percent to about 2 percent, respectively.

    Panel on Prison Rape Hears Victims’ Chilling Accounts

    Three prison rape victims at the San Francisco hearing on the problem. From the left, Cecilia Chung, Hope Hernandez and Chance Martin.

    Three prison rape victims at the San Francisco hearing on the problem. From the left, Cecilia Chung, Hope Hernandez and Chance Martin.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/20/politics/20rape.html?pagewanted=all

    SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 19 - T. J. Parsell was a lanky pimple-faced adolescent bent on mischief. So when he found a toy gun one evening in 1978 while wandering home from a high school party, he thought nothing of pointing it at a store clerk and grumbling, “Your money or your life.”

    He got $50 for what he now calls “a stupid impulsive prank.” The incident landed the 17-year-old Parsell in an adult jail, where on his first night, an older inmate spiked his drink with Thorazine and sexually abused and raped him.

    “While my friends prepared for our high school prom, I was being gang raped,” Mr. Parsell testified on Friday to a Congressional commission investigating prison sexual abuse and rape.

    Mr. Parsell, now 45, and a successful software executive who lives on Long Island, was one of six victims of prison rape to relate disturbing accounts with a bipartisan panel of The National Prison Rape Elimination Commission here.

    “What they took from me went beyond sex,” Mr. Parsell said. “They’d stolen my manhood, my identity and part of my soul.”

    The panel, which also heard from state and federal legislators, law enforcement and prison officials and mental health experts, has been investigating the prevalence, cause and possible solutions to a problem that many experts say has escalated as the prison system is collapsing. Overcrowding, staff shortages and budget cuts have contributed to an often taboo topic.

    “As a society, we have an obligation to protect the people we lock up, even though they have harmed society,” the commission chairman, Judge Reggie B. Walton of Federal District Court in Washington, said. “Some people say inmates get what they deserve. But they don’t think about the overall impact on society.”

    The body, created by the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003, was appointed by President Bush in June 2004, focusing on questions like inmates’ physical and mental problems after being released and economic burdens.

    Judge Walton, speaking before the meeting here, the second in a national series, conceded in an interview that the government did not know the magnitude of prison rape.

    “We don’t really know the prevalence right now,” he said. “But I’ve been in the criminal justice system for 20 years and I have always believed the anecdotal evidence.”

    On July 31, the Justice Department released its first statistical report on prison rape and inmate sexual abuse, a report also required under the 2003 act. It estimated that there were at least 8,210 reported incidents of sexual abuse and rape a year within a prison population that exceeds 2.1 million.

    According to the National Prison Project of the American Civil Liberties Union, prison assaults rose 26 percent from 2000 to 2004.

    Kendell Spruce told the commission that he was infected with H.I.V. after having been raped at knifepoint in 1991 in an Arkansas state prison. Mr. Spruce, who was convicted of forging a check to buy cocaine, said that in one nine-month period he was raped by at least 27 inmates. He was 28 years old and weighed 123 pounds.

    “The physical pain was devastating,” he said. “But the emotional pain was even worse.”

    A spokeswoman for the Arkansas Correction Department told The Associated Press that the accusations were untrue that that she believed that Mr. Spruce initiated the activity or was a willing participant. After his five-year term, Mr. Parsell returned to society as an addict of drugs, to “drown out the memories and pain.”

    He continues to hold back tears as he says he still struggles with the emotional residue of rape, a crime that tarnished his self-esteem and ability to trust.

    Chance Martin, 50, an advocate for the homeless here, told the panel that he was incarcerated for 72 hours in April 1973, when he was arrested as an 18-year-old at a party where another guest had hashish. The charges were dropped, but Mr. Martin’s three days in jail nearly ruined his life.

    “On a purely emotional level,” he said after testifying, “I have issues with self-confidence and trust since that day.”

    Mr. Martin echoed others’ statements when he faulted a deteriorating prison system and what he described as a society that is indifferent, and at times disdainful, of people who have been incarcerated.

    “Prison rape is a symptom of American society’s retreat from rehabilitation toward a system that relies purely on punishment,” he said.

    The secretary of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Roderick Q. Hickman, told the panel that California was trying to quantify the problem. But he said outdated prison designs, inadequate electronic surveillance systems and an antiquated computer database had stalled progress.

    The information technology “system in California is completely inadequate,” Mr. Hickman said.

    “We need a system that can report and handle the cultural classifications of the population.” he added.

    Mr. Hickman, appointed last month, said he was working to streamline and centralize procedures to investigate accusations of sexual abuse that were previously handled by individual prisons.

    To address guard intransigence, the department has established training programs intended to break what Mr. Hickman called “the code of silence” among guards, behavior that has helped conceal prison rapes.

    Representative Barbara Lee, a California Democrat who was an initial co-sponsor of the 2003 law, equated prison rape with human rights violations. She and other prison rights advocates have stressed the need for “zero tolerance” and a corrections system that accommodates different sexual and cultural orientations.

    “By doing nothing,” Ms. Lee said, “we condone this inhumane and abusive behavior. Indifference, deliberate or not, violates the Eight Amendment of the Constitution banning cruel and unusual punishment.”

    In the afternoon, the panel heard criminologists, law enforcement officials and leaders of transgender, lesbian, gay and bisexual groups about the need for better inmate classification.

    “We don’t want a first-time offender charged with drunken driving to be housed next to a guy who has committed multiple armed robberies, and who has been in and out of the system for years,” said Bart Lanni, the sheriff’s deputy for Los Angeles County.

    Mr. Lanni said misplaced inmates ran an increased risk of being a target of sexual abuse.

    “Predators looking to rape someone tend to pick people without close ties or a gang affiliation,” Dr. Terry A. Kupers, a psychiatrist and an expert on prison rape, said.

    All the victims testifying on Friday said that they might have escaped their rapes if the authorities had placed them with inmates of similar age, race, sexual orientation and the same categories of crime.

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  • 11Jun

    The police superintendant referred the case to the Feds.  Rank-and-file cops are mad.  It’s known as the “blue line,” police officers are never supposed to ’snitch’ on each other no matter what happens.  Remind you of anything?!  When so-called “criminals” have a no-snitching code of honor it’s deplored in the media and by the police… but when they do it themselves no one calls them on it!  Who is the most powerful gang in the streets?!  The cops.  This is Malcolm-Che saying watch your back, it may be those you think are protecting you that are your worst enemy.

    Wheelchair beating: Chicago cop may get up to 8 years in prison for videotaped beating of patient shackled to wheelchair

    AndysLeatherSap1005.jpg image by trekon86

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-cop-beating-sentencingjun11,0,7879722.story

    A Chicago police officer whose federal prosecution has driven a wedge between many rank-and-file cops and Supt. Jody Weis faces up to 8 years in prison Thursday when he is sentenced for the videotaped beating of a man shackled to a wheelchair in 2005.

    William Cozzi pleaded guilty in January to using excessive force when he struck Randy Miles, a combative hospital patient, about a dozen times with a sap, a leather spatula-shaped object.

    Cozzi had received probation in state court and was about to return to the force after a two-year suspension when Weis angered many officers by referring the matter to federal authorities, who later indicted Cozzi. The Fraternal Order of Police union has spearheaded a campaign for officers to write U.S. District Judge Blanche Manning, who is sentencing Cozzi.

    Under federal sentencing guidelines, Cozzi, 51, faces at least 6 ½ years in prison, according to federal prosecutors.

    Cozzi “unabashedly beat [Miles] in front of hospital security guards and employees, as well as members of the public,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing. “Respect for the law, and for law-enforcement officers, is diminished when the public sees officers commit violent crimes for which they do not receive significant punishment.”

    But attorneys for Cozzi pointed out he has lived “a law-abiding life” and received numerous accolades during his police career.

    “We’re asking that he not be placed in custody at all,” said his attorney, Terence Gillespie.

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  • 11Jun

    We have previously covered the out of control gang unit in Greensboro, North Carolina but these units are notorious and its not just limited to North Carolina.  Case in point:  the unit mentioned below in Minnesota set up sweetheart deals with a used car dealership, providing them with cars for free that had been seized from gang members.  There is about $18,000 in unaccounted for seized property and money!  And when an investigation was opened up they immediately began shredding documents, which they got caught out for!  Oh, and did I mention that at least one of the gang unit members used the unit’s GPS equipment to track a female he was stalking?!  These gang units are just as criminal as the gangs they’re supposed to be shutting down!  The difference is that gangs on the streets are largely composed of oppressed poor people with little social power, whereas the gang of policemen is backed by the state with all its power and weapons at its disposal.  The mainstream media will chalk it up to a few ‘bad apples’ and move on…

    The Metro Gang Strike Task Force seized a car owned by Houa Vang of St. Paul. He said some of his property was missing from the car when it was returned to him.

    The Metro Gang Strike Task Force seized a car owned by Houa Vang of St. Paul. He said some of his property was missing from the car when it was returned to him.

     

     

     

    Document shredding puts Strike Force in doubt

    http://www.startribune.com/local/47135337.html?elr=KArks:DCiUoaW_eEO7UiacyKUUr

    A trail of shredded documents led to three desks at the Metro Gang Strike Force headquarters. At a nearby shredder, a bin of St. Paul police reports apparently was next in line for destruction. Out back, a Dumpster brimmed with more shredded documents.

    The New Brighton office where crimes were supposed to be solved was about to be treated as a crime scene: Strike Force officers had destroyed documents that authorities suspect could have explained what happened to vehicles, cash and property they’d seized during raids and arrests.

    That scene was discovered by the commander of the Strike Force on the evening of May 20. He immediately ordered a halt to investigations and locked down the offices. Hennepin County crime lab technicians were called in to collect volumes of evidence. Forensic experts left the scene after 2 a.m. the next day, and the FBI immediately opened a probe into whether public corruption exists among Strike Force officers, including theft of drugs, property, cash and cars.

    The integrity of the Strike Force — a team of 34 officers and supervisors from 13 local law enforcement agencies who focus on gang- and drug-related crime — now is so damaged by the unauthorized shredding that it’s possible the 11-year-old unit may never restart operations, said Department of Public Safety Commissioner Michael Campion.

    “The answer will depend upon the findings of the FBI,” he said. “We need to determine what happened that night.”

    Based on interviews with state and local law enforcement authorities with direct knowledge of the shredding operation, as well as e-mail correspondence obtained under the state’s data practices law, the Star Tribune has pieced together the events leading up to the FBI investigation. The authorities spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    Gang Strike Force seizures criticized

    http://www.startribune.com/local/stpaul/47524092.html?elr=KArks7PYDiaK7DUdcOy_nc:DKUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUU

    The Metro Gang Strike Force seized 19 vehicles, which it then turned over to a St. Paul used-car dealer for resale, even though the vehicles had not been properly forfeited, the Minnesota Legislative Auditor reported on Wednesday.

    Those vehicles were among 29 which the Strike Force “sold” in a handshake deal — though the Strike Force apparently never received any payment — to Cars With Heart, a for-profit St. Paul car dealer, the auditor said.

    In at least one instance, the owner of one of the cars took Cars With Heart and the Strike Force to conciliation court and recovered $2,390, most of it for towing and storage charges he had to pay the dealer.

    Tags:

  • 05Jun

    “There’s no doubt in my mind,” Judge Clay said at the close of the former officer’s preliminary hearing in Oakland, “that Mr. Mehserle intended to shoot Oscar Grant with a gun and not a Taser.”

    Damn, even the capitalist judge don’t believe these lying a$$ cops!!

    Mehserle ordered to stand trial for murder

    Look at the sheriff escorting Mehserle, you could tell he's mad he has to escort one of his 'brothers'.

    Look at the sheriff escorting Mehserle, you could tell he's mad he has to escort one of his 'brothers'.

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/06/04/MNRA18125K.DTL

    (06-04) 15:12 PDT OAKLAND — Former BART police Officer Johannes Mehserle was ordered Thursday to stand trial for murder by a judge who told him he didn’t believe the explanation defense attorneys gave for his killing of an unarmed passenger.

    After listening to seven days of testimony, Judge C. Don Clay concluded that Mehserle hadn’t gotten his stun gun and his service pistol mixed up when he shot Oscar Grant in the back at the Fruitvale Station in Oakland early New Year’s Day.

    “There’s no doubt in my mind,” Clay said at the close of the former officer’s preliminary hearing in Oakland, “that Mr. Mehserle intended to shoot Oscar Grant with a gun and not a Taser.”

    The decision set up the first murder trial of a California peace officer for a line-of-duty killing in nearly 15 years. It prompted sobs of relief from Grant’s family members, who spoke of having a sense of justice restored.

    “This is going to be huge for people of color,” Cephus Johnson, Grant’s uncle, said outside court. “The community lacks faith in the judicial system when it comes to police officers.”

    Racial overtones

    Mehserle, who is white, was not accused by prosecutors or Grant’s family of a racial motive in the shooting of Grant, a 22-year-old African American who lived in Hayward and worked at an Oakland supermarket.

    But the outcry over Grant’s death had racial overtones, with some African American leaders complaining that police officers often avoided consequences after brutalizing black people.

    Mehserle, 27, showed little reaction as Clay made his ruling in Alameda County Superior Court. But earlier in the day, as Clay pushed defense attorneys to wrap up their case, Mehserle’s father reacted angrily and suggested the hearing had been unfair.

    “No justice in Oakland,” said Todd Mehserle, a Napa resident, loud enough for reporters who were in court to hear. “They want to see what they want to see. This town is a sham.”

    Seven days of testimony

    During the preliminary hearing, Clay heard prosecutor David Stein and defense attorney Michael Rains spar over whether Grant had resisted arrest, whether he had his hands behind his back when he was shot and whether the train platform had been chaotic and scary for officers.

    One crucial point of disagreement was whether Mehserle acted like a man who had accidentally fired a gun.

    Rains, who argued that Mehserle lacked the malice necessary for a murder charge, said in his closing remarks that the officer had intended to stun Grant with a Taser after thinking that he saw Grant reach for a gun.

    Mehserle announced to a second officer, “I’m going to Tase him,” Rains said, and then blurted out “Oh s-” after firing his pistol.

    “We have an intent to tase,” Rains said.

    But Stein referred to his last witness on Thursday, BART police Officer Terry Foreman, who spent more than five hours with Mehserle after the shooting and spoke to his friend and colleague in subsequent days.

    No talk of Taser

    Foreman testified that Mehserle, at times crying, had talked about the shooting - saying, “I thought he had a gun,” and, “He was going for his pocket” - but had never once said he meant to fire his Taser.

    Stein said Mehserle had also never mentioned his Taser while on the platform.

    “Human nature tells us that not only would (Mehserle) have acted differently on the platform, I don’t think you would have been able to shut him up,” Stein said. “I think he would have said repeatedly, to anyone who would listen, ‘Oh my God, I made a mistake.’ “

    In the end, the judge said Mehserle’s state of mind remained a mystery because the officer had never spoken to investigators and hadn’t taken the stand at the hearing. Clay said he had never heard of an officer-involved shooting in which the officer never made a statement.

    Mehserle resigned rather than talk to BART police internal affairs investigators.

    Range of possibilities

    Clay said Mehserle’s apparently stunned reaction after the shooting could have indicated many things - including that the officer couldn’t believe he had shot an unarmed man in front of hundreds of witnesses.

    The judge said earlier in the day that Mehserle’s statement to other officers that he thought Grant had a gun “changes the dynamics.”

    “It’s deadly force against deadly force,” Clay said. “That might be his mind-set.”

    As for the Taser explanation, the judge noted that testimony showed Mehserle had held his weapon with both hands, whereas the right-handed officer had been taught to hold a stun gun with his left hand.

    Clay also said Grant and four friends who were detained with him at the station for allegedly fighting on a Dublin-Pleasanton train “did nothing to justify the use of deadly force.”

    Officer’s confrontation

    Stein played video footage Thursday that called into question the actions of the officer who detained Grant and made the decision to arrest him for allegedly obstructing police.

    The officer, Tony Pirone, testified earlier that Grant had belittled him for being a transit officer and called him a profane name.

    Stein’s video clip appeared to show Pirone mocking Grant before his arrest by leaning in near his face and shouting the same profanities back at him. Then, when Grant is forced to the ground, someone can be heard shouting, “Yeah!”

    Stein said it was Pirone, though the officer said he didn’t remember.

    “I don’t know why I would say that,” Pirone said of the exchange. “That’s not language I would normally use.”

    The defense also presented key evidence Thursday after calling a video expert to the stand.

    The expert said prosecutors’ assertion that Grant had his hands behind his back when he was shot was wrong. He showed an image that he said captured the exact moment of the shot; Grant’s left hand appeared to be in the air and moving toward his back.

    But Clay cut short the testimony, saying he didn’t need expert help to understand the footage.

    Mehserle remains free on $3 million bail. He was ordered to return to court June 18 to be arraigned.

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  • 04Jun

    So now we have the righteous and honorable Tony Pirone testifying in Mehserle’s defense?!  Remember who Pirone is?!  He was the cop that punched Grant in the face a minute before Grant was murdered by Mehserle.  We covered that incident here.  But even Pirone’s own testimony, and this cop is clearly trying to back his buddy, but even his testimony was filled with lies and interesting info. 

    First of all Pirone said that Grant refused to put his hands behind his back.  We all saw the video, and even the prosecutor pointed it out to him… dude is straight up lying.  But then Pirone said that after Mehserle shot Grant in the back he said “I thought he was reaching for a gun” to Pirone!!!  Now hold up, if you just shot a man by accident when you meant to tase him (which is what his defense is) then why would “I thought he was reaching for a gun” be the 1st thing you say?!?!  Nah, this fool meant to kill Grant, or was composing a BS justification for the killing seconds after it happened.  Either way, book him for murder we say!!  And then we got this other cop saying that if Oscar Grant had cooperated with authorities he’d be alive today?!?!?!  WHAT?!?!  By Mehserle’s own account he killed Grant by accident, so how does that have anything to do with Grant cooperating?!?!  These cops don’t care about our lives, it means nothing to them! 

    AND OH YEAH, TO ALL THE COPS AT THE OAKLAND BART STATION CHECKING IN ON MALCOLM-CHE WE KNOW YOU’RE WATCHING US.  YOU THINK WE DON’T KNOW HOW TO CHECK OUR INCOMING IP ADDRESSES?!?!  AND L.A. COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT, WE KNOW YALL ARE CHECKING IN TOO… GO AHEAD TAKE A LOOK, WE’RE NOT AFRAID TO EXPOSE ALL Y’ALL!!!

    BART officer, video at odds in Mehserle case

    Former BART Officer Johannes Mehserle is facing a charge ... (Cathleen Allison / AP)

    Lock him up and throw away the key, like they did to so many of us.

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/06/03/MNS9180DNS.DTL

    (06-03) 16:19 PDT OAKLAND — The BART police officer who ordered the arrest of Oscar Grant on an Oakland train platform said Wednesday that Grant refused to put his hands behind his back before he was shot and killed by a second officer.

    But one of the videotapes of the killing, which have brought so much public attention to the case and helped persuade prosecutors to file murder charges, told a different story.

    When a prosecutor showed him footage of the New Year’s Day shooting, Officer Tony Pirone, testifying as a defense witness for former BART Officer Johannes Mehserle, conceded that it appeared to show Grant’s hands behind his back as Mehserle fired.

    Mehserle’s attorney called Pirone to the stand at a preliminary hearing in Oakland as part of his effort to have the charge against the 27-year-old former officer reduced from murder to manslaughter.

    Pirone was the officer closest to Mehserle on the platform of the Fruitvale Station as police tried to arrest Grant, 22, following a fight aboard a train.

    The defense says Mehserle meant to stun Grant with a Taser and accidentally fired his pistol. They say a Taser would have been appropriate because Grant was resisting, an assertion Pirone supported Wednesday.

    ‘They were not there’

    Asked by defense attorney Michael Rains whether Grant had followed orders to put his hands behind his back after he was forced to the platform on his chest, Pirone replied, “They were not there.”

    On cross-examination, however, Alameda County prosecutor David Stein had Pirone step off the witness stand and view a flat-panel television mounted in court. Stein played footage of the shooting and froze the frame just after the single shot rang out.

    “What do you see in this frame?” Stein asked Pirone, pointing at Grant.

    “What appears to be two hands,” Pirone responded.

    Asked if the video, shot by a San Francisco State University student who had been on Grant’s train, showed Grant’s hands behind his back, Pirone said, “It appears to be that way, sir.”

    Grant’s family members say Mehserle intended to fire his gun and made up the Taser story.

    Testimony has indicated that Mehserle received a Taser from another officer in the middle of his shift and was wearing it on the opposite side of his equipment belt from his pistol. Tasers, which are shaped somewhat like guns, must be turned on with a switch that is flipped by the officer’s thumb.

    ‘Big brother’ to Mehserle

    Pirone, who said he was like a “big brother” to Mehserle, gave a long account of how they and other BART officers had detained Grant and four of his friends. Grant’s family has accused Pirone - the first officer to arrive at the scene - of escalating the situation with his aggressiveness.

    The muscular former Marine answered many questions with a snappy, “Yes, sir.” When he asked Judge C. Don Clay if he could repeat profanities, he said, “Permission to speak freely, sir?”

    Pirone said he had decided to arrest Grant for obstructing police, prompting Mehserle to force him to his chest and try to handcuff him. Pirone said Grant “was flopping around, trying to get away,” and wouldn’t allow Mehserle to get his hands behind his back.

    Pirone said he and Mehserle had both ordered Grant to put his hands behind his back before Mehserle made a series of rapid-fire statements.

    ‘I’m going to Tase him’

    Mehserle twice yelled, “I’m going to Tase him,” Pirone said. He also quoted Mehserle as saying, “I can’t get his hands,” and, “His hands are in his waistband,” before shouting, “Get back, get back,” and “Tony, Tony.”

    The judge had indicated earlier that Pirone’s recollection of statements by Mehserle, who has not testified, was hearsay and thus inadmissible. But the defense and prosecution reached an agreement to allow Pirone’s testimony before Wednesday’s session.

    Pirone said he hadn’t understood why Mehserle was shouting at him to “get back,” but he said he had complied.

    “Before I even stood up, I heard a gunshot,” Pirone said. “To be perfectly honest, I thought the Taser malfunctioned. I should be seeing probes (in Grant’s back), and I’m not seeing probes.”

    Pirone continued, “I look up and I see Officer Mehserle with a gun in his hands. … I think I said, ‘Oh s-.’ It’s not something I was expecting to see or hear.”

    Mehserle, Pirone said, had a “look of shock, almost like he had the same thought: ‘Oh s-.’ “

    ‘Going for a gun’

    Soon after, Pirone recalled, Mehserle approached him and said, “Tony, I thought he was going for a gun.” Grant was unarmed.

    John Burris, an attorney representing Grant’s family, said outside court that the final statement by Mehserle shows he intended to use his pistol, not his Taser. Burris said that if Mehserle had meant to use his Taser, he would have immediately told Pirone about the mistake.

    Burris said there is no evidence that Grant resisted police.

    Pirone and five other officers who were on the train platform with Mehserle are on paid leave while an outside law firm hired by BART conducts an investigation of the shooting.

    Wednesday marked the sixth day of testimony in Mehserle’s preliminary hearing, which is expected to continue for one or two more days. Judge Clay must decide whether to send the case to trial.

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  • 04Jun

    We first covered corrupt police terrorist Jon Burge here.  “Special prosecutors appointed in 2002 documented more than 100 cases of brutality involving Burge and other police officers who worked on Chicago’s South Side.  While prosecutors claimed several officers elicited confessions from mostly black suspects through torture, they said the statute of limitations had run out and no one was charged.  The suspects were beaten by mostly white detectives with telephone books, suffocated with plastic typewriter covers, burned with cigarettes, threatened with mock executions, and suffered electric shocks to their genitals.”  THIS IS REAL TORTURE!!  And don’t think this is the only police department that ever did this, or that it doesn’t happen today!!

    We should also note that in the case below the defendant was slandered as a gang member, with the implication that he was guilty of murder just because he was a member of a street organization.

    17 years later, Brown’s murder conviction overturned

    Policeman and terrorist Jon Burge, who had a hand in the torture of over 100 victims while supposedly enforcing "justice."

    Policeman and terrorist Jon Burge, who had a hand in the torture of over 100 victims while supposedly enforcing "justice."

     

    http://www.suntimes.com/news/24-7/1587398,cortez-brown-death-penalty-052209.article

    Seventeen years ago, a Cook County judge described Cortez Brown as a “killing machine,” and then sentenced the admitted Gangster Disciple to death.

    On Friday, a different judge in the same courthouse — citing “staggering” and “damning” new evidence — overturned Brown’s murder conviction and ordered a new trial.

    Cheers erupted in the courtroom, and Brown clenched his fists as Judge Clayton Crane sided with Brown’s attorneys, who said their client confessed to murder in 1990 only after being beaten by detectives working under former Chicago Police Cmdr. Jon Burge.

    In making his ruling, Crane said he was at a disadvantage because all three of the detectives who originally interrogated Brown took the stand this week, only to invoke their Fifth Amendment right not to testify.

    “My advantage is I have some additional evidence as to the behavior of some, if not all, of the detectives in this case,” Crane said. “That evidence is staggering. That evidence is damning.”

    Crane did not cite specific evidence and declined to elaborate after his ruling. Brown’s attorneys referred to “massive, massive documentation that these particular detectives were corrupt.”

    “This is a wonderful victory, not only for [Brown], but for the entire human rights movement and the entire movement against police torture in this city,” said Flint Taylor, one of Brown’s attorneys.

    Victoria Safforld, Brown’s 18-year-old daughter, said, “I’m just real happy because I ain’t never had the chance to be with my father. … I stay with a positive attitude because my daddy always stays with a positive attitude.”

    It was unclear Friday if Brown will be retried. He remains in the Cook County Jail. Illinois State Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s office is handling several cases that include allegations of police brutality overseen by Burge.

    “Our goal all along has been, and continues to be, to ensure that justice is served by carefully reviewing the merits of each of these [Burge-related] cases,” said Robyn Ziegler, a Madigan spokeswoman. Ziegler said Madigan’s office has not yet made a decision about the next step in the Brown case.

    Brown says he is innocent. He contends detectives beat him with their fists and a metal flashlight, forcing him to confess to the 1990 gang-related murders of Delvin Botler and Curtis Sims. Brown was initially sentenced to 35 years for Botler’s murder.

    He was later convicted and sentenced in 1992 to death for Sims’ murder.

    Former Gov. George Ryan commuted Brown’s death sentence to life in prison.

    During this week’s hearing, prosecutors told Crane that if Brown was truly beaten, he would have had marks on his body and he would have reported the abuse much earlier. Prosecutors described Brown as an admitted gang banger who can’t keep his stories straight.

    On Friday, Crane said Brown — who testified about the alleged abuse this week — was “not a good witness,” and said he has changed his stories about how he was allegedly beaten.

    But Crane also said he paid particular attention to the fact that none of the detectives who interrogated Brown would answer questions on the witness stand.

    “I am taking [the detectives’] silence into consideration,” Crane said.

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  • 27May

    We all saw the videos.  But now the subway police (BART police) want to tell us that Oscar Grant wasn’t following orders.  Even the assistant district attorney was pointing out their inconsistencies!  We SAW the video footage, you can’t tell us that Oscar didn’t do as he was told!!  They murdered this youth for no reason, and we all know that a taser feels way different than a Glock 22!!  This is 2nd degree murder at best, 1st degree murder at worst! 

    Man shot by BART police failed to comply with orders, officer testifies

    Oscar Grant puts both his hands in the air moments before he is shot in the back.  He practically begged for his life but they’re telling us he wasn’t cooperating!

    Video 1 (filmed by Karina Vargas): http://www.ktvu.com/video/18406962/index.html

    Video 2 (better view): http://www.ktvu.com/video/18406930/index.html

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-bart-trial27-2009may27,0,1736160.story

    A transit officer said Tuesday that an unarmed man who was fatally shot by another officer at an Oakland train station failed to obey her commands before his death.

    Bay Area Rapid Transit Officer Marysol Domenici testified during the fourth day of a hearing to determine whether former BART Officer Johannes Mehserle will stand trial for murder in the death of Oscar Grant.

    The 22-year-old Hayward man was shot in the back as he lay face down on the train station platform early New Year’s Day as officers tried to control a group of unruly passengers.

    Domenici said Grant and his friends yelled profanities and did not obey her orders to sit down moments before Mehserle fired at Grant.

    She said she was fearful when she heard taunts coming from Grant, his friends and passengers on the train.

    “People were saying ‘I’m going to get your name and badge number. . . . (Expletive) BART Police, you don’t know anything, you’re just security guards,’ ” Domenici said during testimony in Alameda County Superior Court.

    “We’re outnumbered and nobody’s complying with our orders,” she said.

    “They were just all over the place. At that point, yeah, you feel for your life and safety.”

    Domenici said that at one point, Grant also grabbed her left arm as she tried pushing one of his friends to the ground. Her partner, Tony Pirone, then came over and hit Grant, pushing him to the ground, she said.

    Mehserle’s lawyer, Michael Rains, said his client, who has pleaded not guilty, had intended to use his stun gun but accidentally fired his pistol instead.

    Rains said Tuesday that Pirone would testify that he heard Mehserle say he was going to use a stun gun moments before shooting Grant.

    Pirone is scheduled to testify as early as today.

    Pirone and Domenici remain on paid leave.

    Their names are both mentioned in a $50-million wrongful death lawsuit filed by Grant’s family in March against the transit agency.

    During other testimony Tuesday, BART Officers Jon Woffinden and Emery Knudtson described a tense scene between transit police and passengers shortly before the shooting.

    Deputy Dist. Atty. David Stein, however, tried to point out inconsistencies in their testimony, comparing video footage of the shooting with their written police reports.

    Tags: , ,

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