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  • 24Aug

    Cop Cleared in Killing of Unarmed Man in Marijuana Raid

    The family of Trevon Cole is preparing a lawsuit alleging wrongful death, civil rights violations, and possibly a RICO claim.

    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2010/aug/22/cop_cleared_killing_unarmed_man

    The Las Vegas police officer who shot an unarmed Trevon Cole during a June drug raid over small-time marijuana sales was justified, a coroner’s inquest found Saturday night….

    Of about 200 Clark County coroner’s inquests in officer-involved killings since 1976, only one has resulted in a finding of criminal negligence. Whether that near-perfect percentage of acquittals results from exceptionally good police work in Las Vegas, or an inadequate process and institution, depends on who one asks….

    Detective Bryan Yant said Cole rose to his feet while moving his hands in a shooting motion and that he saw something silvery or metallic in Cole’s hand. He then fired once, killing Cole… No gun or other silvery or metallic objects were found in the bathroom. But clutched in one of Cole’s hands was a yellow tube of lip balm…

    READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE

    READ PREVIOUS ARTICLES ON THIS INCIDENT FROM MALCOLM-CHE.COM

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  • 20Aug

    South Africa Police, State Workers Clash as Wage Strike Enters Third Day

    South African state workers are striking over a demand for higher wages. (Reuters: Siphiwe Sibeko)

    http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=22162

    As the recession bites many South African workers are questioning the logic of a system that forces the vast majority of the population to live in poverty, while multinational companies make profits and take their wealth out of the country.

    In South Africa the idea that workers won’t fight during a recession is being challenged.

    And with these strikes workers are looking for answers on how to root out the inequality that capitalism has entrenched.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-08-20/south-africa-s-police-out-in-full-force-to-monitor-state-workers-strike.html

    South African police clashed with state workers who protested outside government buildings on the third day of a wage strike that has shut schools and clinics.

    Police used water cannons to disperse protesters at Johannesburg’s Helen Joseph Hospital today, video shown by Cape Town-based e News Channel showed. Officers broke up a group of strikers who blocked roads to a hospital and a courthouse in the town of Chatsworth in the eastern KwaZulu-Natal province, police said.

    The government “has noted with concern the violent acts of intimidation and public violence” associated with the strike,’’ it said in an e-mailed statement today. “Steps will be taken against strikers or sympathizers who intimidate staff or members of the public, or commit acts of hooliganism, destruction of property or violence.”

    While state employees are demanding an 8.6 percent pay increase and a housing allowance of 1,000 rand ($136) a month, the government says it can’t afford to raise its offer of a 7 percent increase and a 700 rand allowance. South Africa’s annual inflation rate is currently 4.2 percent.

    Public Service and Administration Minister Richard Baloyi met with union officials today “to try and persuade them to understand the government offer,” Dumisani Nkwamba, Baloyi’s spokesman, said by telephone from Pretoria. Asked if the wage offer may be increased, he replied, “absolutely not.”

    ‘Intensifying’

    Unions representing about 1.3 million state workers say their members struggle to get by on their current salaries and that the strike will continue until their demands are met.

    “The strike will be intensifying all around the country,” Sizwe Pamla, a spokesman for the 250,000-member National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union, said today in an interview.

    The rand fell for a second day against the dollar, declining as much as 1.1 percent, to 7,3731. The FTSE/JSE Africa All Share Index shed 0.6 percent to 26,989.63 for a third consecutive decline.

    Government employees last struck in 2007, when schools, hospitals and immigration offices were disrupted for 29 days, the longest-ever walkout by state workers.

    South African laws prevent strikes by certain categories of workers who provide essential services, accounting for about a third of state employees. Even so, many nurses have joined the labor action, said Fidel Hadebe, a Health Ministry spokesman.

    ‘Quite Severe’

    “The impact of the strike has been quite severe in a number of facilities,” he said today by telephone from Pretoria. The provinces of “Gauteng, Mpumalanga and Kwazulu- Natal have been worst-affected.”

    Police fired rubber bullets yesterday to disperse workers who entered the grounds of the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital in Soweto township, south of Johannesburg, and tried to prevent patients and doctors from entering.

    “We abhor the inhuman conduct of denying doctors and patients access to hospitals and teachers and pupils access to their schools,” the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference group said today in a statement issued to the South African Press Association. “Care is being denied to the weakest and most vulnerable.”

    Members of the South African Defense Force were deployed to several hospitals to fill in for striking workers, while critically ill patients who were unable to access treatment at state facilities were transferred to private hospitals.

    Reports of Deaths

    A pregnant woman who was denied access to a state hospital in the eastern city of Durban gave birth in the parking lot of Netcare Ltd.’s St. Augustine hospital in the city, the company said in an e-mailed statement today.

    Several newspapers said patients had died because they had not been treated or received medication. The health department was still investigating the reports, Hadebe said.

    “As much as we offer our condolences to those families, we don’t want our members to be blackmailed when they have a legitimate right to strike,” Pamla said. “Hospitals by their nature are places that people go to get saved, but it doesn’t always happen that way” and it can’t be proven that strikers caused the deaths, he said.

    The National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa, representing 70,000 workers, said today that car and fuel retail-industry workers plan to strike from Sept. 1 after employers failed to meet their demands for a pay increase. Numsa members in the tire and rubber industries will begin a walkout on Aug. 30, the union said.

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  • 20Aug

    Ex-Salinas police officer pleads no contest to shooting at unarmed couple

    In this file photo from August 2009, former Salinas Police Officer Christopher Swanson leaves his arraignment with his attorney, Juliet Peck. (File photo by Richard Green)

    A former Salinas police officer who shot at an unarmed couple early last year has avoided trial by pleading no contest.

    Christopher Swanson faces up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine when he’s sentenced Oct. 1 for a misdemeanor charge of discharging a firearm in a grossly negligent manner.

    Swanson, along with fellow Officer Steve Mattocks, was involved in a routine traffic stop Feb. 3, 2009, that turned violent when both officers shot at a sport utility vehicle occupied by Hernandez and driver Adriana Velasquez.

    Police investigators have said that, after asking the driver and passenger for their driver’s licenses, Swanson thought he heard a “pop” and saw a muzzle flash and then felt something “hit” his chest.

    They have also said Swanson yelled out that he had been wounded, prompting Mattocks to fire, followed by Swanson, at the couple’s car.

    The couple were unhurt. But Swanson was never shot at, and no weapon was found in or near the vehicle.

    After the shooting, Swanson was let go by the Police Department

    Mattocks was not charged. The District Attorney’s Office said Mattocks had reacted reasonably to Swanson’s actions, believing he was protecting his colleague.

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  • 17Aug

    The article states that the “community is on edge following 18 Las Vegas police officer-involved shootings this year.”   In this case the warrants used to run up on this unarmed youth were trumped up and the youth was murdered for making a ‘movement’ (even though his girlfriend said he didn’t move and was clearly unarmed).

    Vegas police study policy after drug raid slaying

    Sequoia Pearce, who is 9 months pregnant, says she and her fiance, 21 year-old Trevon Cole, thought someone was breaking in to their apartment, so she hid in the closet. "I was coming out, and they told me to get on the floor. I heard a gun shot and was trying to see what was happening and where they had shot him," she said.

    http://www.cnbc.com/id/38564290

    LAS VEGAS – The head of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department promised a review of how drug search warrants are obtained and served following the slaying of an unarmed 21-year-old man during a police raid at a Las Vegas apartment.

    Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie told Las Vegas Review-Journal editors that he was troubled that a warrant affidavit said undercover officers bought less than 2 ounces of marijuana from Trevon Cole in the weeks before the June 11 raid.

    The officer who shot Cole, Bryan Yant, also claimed incorrectly in court documents that Cole had an “extensive” criminal history in Houston and Los Angeles. The Review-Journal found that was not true.

    “I can tell you that when I got my 48-hour briefing on that particular shooting, I had some concerns in regards to the level of narcotics purchased and the level of search warrant that was used,” Gillespie said in an interview reported Wednesday. “It definitely has given rise to me to take a look at what warrants are being served and who is serving those warrants.”

    Gillespie, who is running for re-election in November, also promised corrective action if necessary.

    Yant, 34, has been involved in three shootings in nine years as a Las Vegas police officer. He is on paid leave pending a departmental review and Clark County coroner’s inquest of Cole’s death scheduled for Aug. 20.

    A jury will hear witness testimony and a presentation from prosecutors before ruling whether the slaying was justified, excusable or criminal. The officer and witnesses won’t face cross-examination.

    Police have said Cole made a “furtive movement” before Yant shot him dead in the bathroom of a one-bedroom apartment while Cole’s pregnant 20-year-old girlfriend was in the next room. The woman told the Review-Journal that Cole made no movements toward officers, did not have anything in his hands and did not own a weapon.

    Gillespie has pleaded for patience from a community on edge following 18 Las Vegas police officer-involved shootings this year. Five cases have resulted in death.

    Critics and family members have called for police to release store surveillance tapes following the fatal police shooting July 10 of Erik Scott outside a Costco membership warehouse store in northwest Las Vegas. Scott, 38, was a U.S. Military Academy graduate who had a concealed weapon and permit.

    Gillespie said surveillance footage of Scott’s shooting might not exist but store video hard drives had been sent to experts in California for review.

    “As it stands right now, we don’t have any (footage),” he said.

    An inquest in Scott’s slaying, initially scheduled for Sept. 3, has been postponed indefinitely.

    Another Link On The Topic:  Pregnant woman watches as police storm apartment, kill fiance

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  • 17Aug

    “Our community is literally in a state of police, it’s a police state!” said Overtown resident Grady Muhammad to a panel of community leaders.  Jesse Jackson also weighed in on this case.

    Residents Get No Answers In Police Shooting Case

    Decarlos Moore RIP "Moore reportedly reached inside the car for some sunglasses and the reflection off the lenses lead the officer to believe Moore had a gun."

    Decarlos Moore's casket is carried by his friends and family. He was killed by police during a "routine traffic stop." He was unarmed.

    http://cbs4.com/local/miami.Overtown.police.2.1827739.html

    Tuesday night angry citizens met with the Miami Police chief hoping to get answers on the fatal shooting of a civilian, but police say they can’t talk about the investigation at this point.

    While Miami Police continue to investigate the shooting of the unarmed man, just a few blocks away dozens of Overtown residents gathered demanding to know why this happened at the. They want to know what will happen to the shooting officer.

    Passion and frustration spread through the Overtown church community center during the meeting.

    “Our community is literally in a state of police, it’s a police state!” said Overtown resident Grady Muhammad to a panel of community leaders.

    The answers many of the residents were seeking did not come.  Police gave no new information on the shooting death of 36-year-old Decarlos Moore. Army vet and rookie Miami officer Joseph Marin shot Moore in the head during a traffic stop July 5th. Moore was not armed.

    Miami Police Chief Miguel Exposito told the residents his hands are tied.

    “We can’t really discuss the aspects of this case, the law does not allow us to do that,” said Chief Exposito.

    That was hard for many, including Moore’s cousin Charles Jackson to accept. “We came here for an answer, what happened to our loved one. And no one gave us those answers. We don’t know no more today than what we knew 21 days ago,” he told CBS4’s Natalia Zea.


    Moore’s family members stormed out of the meeting.

    “This is not about a brother that lost his life, this was a waste of time,” stated Moore’s brother.

    The Reverend Richard Dunn, who is also a Miami Commissioner, announced a new blue ribbon panel with leading pastors, lawyers, and scholars — tasked with improving relations between police officers and residents in Overtown.

    And, the Police Chief has brought a new Lieutenant to Overtown, who helped bring down crime in Liberty City. But some residents believe Overtown needs to strengthen itself.

    One resident told the panel and her fellow community members, “The police might think because there’s so much black on black crime in Overtown that maybe we don’t care or we won’t notice – when there’s a blue on black crime, so maybe we need to come together as a community.”

    The Moore family now vows to turn to the State Attorney for answers on the police-involved shooting.

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  • 17Aug

    We first covered this story here, back in May 2009. The fact that this trial is being moved is yet another injustice in this tragic story of one more murder of an unarmed man by police. Roy Glenn Jr.’s father said it right:  “Everything is crooked; it has been from day one. They want to send this trial somewhere where there is nobody but whites. My son is not going to get justice.”

    Trial of officer moved

    A march in Humboldt, Tennessee in support of Roy Glenn Jr., an unarmed black man who was murdered by a white police officer after running from a "routine traffic stop."

    Officer Paul Carrier

    http://www.jacksonsun.com/article/20100814/NEWS01/100814004/Trial-of-officer-moved

    TRENTON — The judge who ordered a change of venue in the reckless homicide case against Humboldt police officer Paul Carrier said people have told him they would be afraid to serve on a jury for the trial.

    “They are afraid if the defendant were not found guilty, there would be a problem,” Judge Clayburn Peeples said during a hearing Friday in Gibson County Circuit Court. “I don’t blame the family, but saying they are going to get justice can have a chilling effect … I do think the atmosphere in the community has been such that we could not pick a jury in this court.”

    After the hearing, family members of Roy Glenn Jr. said they are upset about the change of venue and the implications that they would cause trouble at the trial.

    “We are not threatening anyone,” Steve Jennings said. Jennings is married to Glenn Jr.’s cousin and has served as a spokesman for the family on various occasions. “They are stereotyping us. Not once have we spoke about doing anyone harm … I don’t get it. It’s sad.”

    Glenn Jr.’s father, Roy Glenn Sr., added, “Everything is crooked; it has been from day one. They want to send this trial somewhere where there is nobody but whites. My son is not going to get justice.”

    Carrier is charged in the Feb. 22, 2009, shooting death of 29-year-old Glenn Jr. His trial is scheduled to begin on Sept. 8.

    Police have said Glenn was a passenger in a car stopped by officers and that he jumped out and ran when officers stopped the car. They said Carrier chased Glenn to Mitchell Street, where the shooting occurred.

    Members of Glenn’s family and the driver of the car have said Glenn had already gotten out of the car when officers pulled up. They say Glenn was unarmed and was running from Carrier when he was shot in the back.

    Carrier is suspended from the Humboldt Police Department without pay and is free on $15,000 bond,

    In February, Peeples moved the venue from Humboldt to Trenton after Carrier’s lawyer, Randy Camp, filed for change of venue. Camp filed a second change of venue motion in June to request the trial be moved out of the local media coverage area.

    Carrier was not in court on Friday. Camp said he had advised his client not to attend the hearing because he didn’t think it was in Carrier’s best interest.

    During the hearing, Camp argued his client can no longer receive a fair trial because of the media coverage, the fact that Carrier’s statement to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation was made public after it was filed in a court document and the question of whether Glenn Jr. was shot once or twice.

    “The seed has been planted, and people forget about facts,” Camp said when talking about the question of the second gunshot wound.

    Glenn Jr.’s body was exhumed in March for a second autopsy. Peeples noted in court that the second autopsy conclusively showed only one gunshot wound.

    District Attorney General Garry Brown argued jurors could be trusted to decide the case based on facts presented during the trial.

    “We need to at least try to pick a jury in this area,” Brown told the judge. “I don’t think any juror will be shocked that the family of the victim is demanding justice.”

    Peeples said at least eight people have approached him about the case, a number he called “unprecedented.”

    “Almost everyone of them said, ‘I’d be afraid to be on that jury’ or ‘I sure hope I don’t get picked on that jury,’” Peeples said.

    After the hearing, Peeples met with lawyers to decide where the trial should be held. He said he would announce the venue on Monday.

    As he was leaving, Camp said he and Brown gave their opinions on where it should be held, but the judge will make the final decision.

    “I told the judge it should be similar demographics to the Trenton district but not in this area,” Camp said.

    Several members of the Glenn family wiped away tears as the judge ordered the trial moved.

    “He (Carrrier) has gotten everything,” Jennings said, sounding angry and frustrated. “This family is a good, decent, wholesome family. We want justice.”

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  • 17Aug

    The cop that beat this man to death had prior complaints against him for brutality. “One filed in 2006 says Williams repeatedly punched a man in the head, stomped him in the chest, and sprayed him with pepper spray.  Two additional complaints from 2006 and one in 2010 accuse Williams of brutality.”

    This coverage follows a bunch of other articles we have posted on the New Orleans Police Department.  There is also a new CNN documentary about the NOPD’s conduct called “Shoot To Kill” and I have a link to the transcript here and the link to the video here.

    Two New Orleans cops charged in 2005 beating death

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hR2VEqQYVZqM6wxHd8opyZHm7fBw

    NEW ORLEANS — Two New Orleans police officers were indicted Thursday on federal charges in connection with the beating death of a civilian in their custody in July 2005, the Justice Department said.

    The indictment charges officer Melvin Williams with violating the constitutional rights of Raymond Robair and alleges that the policeman kicked the man and beat him with a baton, resulting in his death, on July 30, 2005.

    Williams and fellow office Matthew Dean Moore were also charged with obstructing justice in a federal probe of the case.

    Williams faces a possible maximum sentence of life in prison. Moore faces a possible maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.

    According to the indictment unsealed in Louisiana federal court, the two policemen took Robair into custody on Dumaine Street in New Orleans on July 30. The man, who suffered fractured ribs and a ruptured spleen, was pronounced dead at Charity Hospital later that day.

    The case comes two weeks after six New Orleans police officers were indicted in the shooting of unarmed civilians in the days after Hurricane Katrina devastated the city.

    In the incident known as the Danziger Bridge case, two civilians were shot dead and four others wounded in two separate shootings on September 4, 2005 — one week after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, causing massive flooding and displacing thousands of people.

    The indictment Thursday follows guilty pleas from five former New Orleans Police Department officers who admitted to helping cover up the incident.

    Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved

    HERE IS THE LINK WITH THE ARTICLE ON PRIOR COMPLAINTS.

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  • 17Aug

    Witness: Cop shot unarmed man

    "By all accounts, Kemp was unarmed, and blinded, before being murdered."

    http://www.gjsentinel.com/news/articles/witness_cop_shot_unarmed_man/

    Jason Kemp was unarmed when a Colorado State Patrol trooper fatally shot him in the doorway of a Redlands home Tuesday night, according to a man who claims he was inside the home.

    Kemp was among a group of river-lovers who’d just returned to the home of Kemp’s common-law wife after a trip in which they’d been drinking alcohol, said 30-year-old Ian Olson of Grand Junction.

    “This was completely unjustifiable,” said Olson, who described himself as a longtime friend of Kemp. “He (Kemp) was holding the door shut, and just asked them for a warrant.”

    Olson said he was detained and questioned by investigators in the immediate aftermath of the incident. He said he and Kemp were alone inside 103 Glade Park Road, unit B, shortly after an alcohol-fueled traffic accident in which Kemp crashed his Ford pickup in the yard at nearby 2501 South Broadway.

    Olson said he was upstairs at the three-level duplex when he heard a pounding or kicking on the door.

    “They said they were police officers, open the door, with a few expletives in there,” Olson said.

    Kemp went to the doorway, engaged the officers in a verbal back-and-forth, yelling out, “Get a search warrant,” among other demands, Olson said.

    Olson described Kemp as engaged in something of a “tug of war” with a trooper or troopers, with the door cracking open slightly before shutting again. Olson said he ran down the stairs, grabbed his friend and said, “You’re just making it worse,” and urged him to let the officers in.

    Olson said Kemp responded, “No, they don’t have a warrant.”

    A liquid, suspected to be pepper spray, was shot through the slightly opened doorway, hitting Kemp in the face and partially spraying Olson, according to Olson’s account.

    “It (the struggle at doorway) just kind of stopped for about 20 seconds after that,” Olson said.

    Olson claimed he used the opportunity to run downstairs, where he aimed to exit the back door, when he heard a single gunshot. Turning to look, Olson claims he watched his friend collapse onto a chair and then the floor.

    “He was blinded (by pepper spray) by the time he was shot,” he said. “I guarantee it.”

    Trooper Nate Reid, a spokesman for the State Patrol in Denver, said Thursday the State Patrol had no comment on Olson’s claims.

    HERE IS A LINK TO A STATEMENT FROM JASON’S FAMILY.

    HERE IS A LINK TO WEST DENVER COPWATCH ON THIS INCIDENT.

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  • 13Aug

    This is a good article that is an overview over more than a decade of police terrorism in New Orleans.  And by police terrorism, we mean police terrorizing the communities.  For a great book about life coming up in and around New Orleans (among many other things) please check out From The Bottom Of The Heap:  The Autobiography Of Black Panther Robert Hillary King .  This article mentions Adolph Grimes, the young brother who was murdered by police a little while back upon his return from Texas to New Orleans.  Please check out what we posted on this brother before. A lot of people are familiar with names like Sean Bell, Oscar Grant, Rodney King, and Amadou Diallo, but there are a lot of others as well; this not a rare occurrence.  The police perform the role of the modern day occupation colonial army.  They have to hold us down and protect the rich, this job will never be tidy, clean and neat.   Check out what we have to say about police on our About page for more.

    New Orleans Police Struggle In Post-Katrina Era

    Sherrel Johnson, the mother of James Brissette who was killed on the Danziger Bridge in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, speaks to reporters on April 7 outside a federal court in New Orleans. Former New Orleans police officer Michael Hunter pleaded guilty that day in connection with a police cover-up of their shooting of unarmed civilians.

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129090179

    Five years ago this month, a powerful hurricane crashed into the Southern coast of the U.S., killing more than a thousand people. Katrina wiped out whole towns in Mississippi and left a major American city under water. New Orleans and the Gulf Coast have recovered in surprising ways since 2005, but many scars remain.

    One New Orleans institution that was already in deep trouble when the storm hit was the police department. The NOPD has long battled a bad reputation. But after Katrina, the department’s flaws unraveled: Officers deserted their posts, others got caught looting — even the police chief quit.

    In the weeks following the storm, things went from bad to awful — and the city and its people continue to pay a heavy price.

    With lawlessness engulfing the city and the cops’ leadership absent, individual acts of police heroism were overshadowed by allegations of brutality.

    In a tape shot by an NBC News crew, police officers were filmed in a chaotic scene on the Danziger Bridge. Unarmed residents were shot. Two died of their wounds. Seven New Orleans officers would be accused in the shootings and a subsequent cover-up. In another case, five more officers were implicated in the death of a man whose burned body was found in an abandoned car near a police station. Both cases were never fully prosecuted by local officials.

    Continued Mistrust

    That perceived impunity and a persistent murder rate that remains more than eight times the national average have led to five years of increasing mistrust in New Orleans police.

    You can see it on the streets as cops like Lt. Michael Brenckle work a minor burglary case.

    “Did you all witness who stole this gentleman’s speaker?” Brenckle asks more than a dozen neighbors sitting on their porches.

    “No, no, we just came from Bible school,” a kid replies.

    Brenckle, a 20-year veteran of the force, grew up in this rough St. Roch neighborhood near the Mississippi River. He says people are afraid to be seen talking to the police, let alone coming forward as witnesses.

    But times are changing.

    Federal prosecutors have come to town and are looking into as many as eight unresolved police cases, including the Danziger Bridge shootings. Eighteen officers have been indicted.

    And New Orleans’ new Mayor Mitch Landrieu has asked the federal officials to stay on and help clean up the department.

    “The level of danger on the streets of New Orleans — the number of murders — is unnatural. We have to find an answer to it, and we’re going to work really hard to see if we can,” he says.

    Landrieu also hired a new police chief — Ronal Serpas.

    “We are going to make a difference, we are going to turn this police department around. We are going to make New Orleans safer,” Serpas says.

    Serpas was an assistant chief in New Orleans before leaving to head the Washington state police and later the force in Nashville. He says his nine years away from New Orleans have given him the experience he needs to clean up the NOPD once and for all.

    “We are going to support the officers who are professional in every way,” he says. “But I can’t be more crystal clear than this: If you have a different agenda as a member of this department of being professional and service-oriented, you might as well leave now, because I will go to bed every night thinking of ways to get rid of you.”

    Misconduct, Murders

    But many in New Orleans have heard this tough talk before.

    In the mid-1990s, Len Davis was a cop who ran a cocaine ring out of the Lower Ninth Ward. When a resident filed a complaint with the police department, Davis called in a hit man — and it was caught on an FBI wiretap:

    “Brown skin with light brown eyes … I’ve got the phone on and the radio … after it’s done go straight uptown and call me.”

    Local civil rights lawyer Mary Howell says corruption on the force was unbelievable — you couldn’t make this stuff up.

    “We had police officers involved in kidnappings, rape, murders, drugs, bank robberies. There was a guy who used to do, like, bank robberies on his lunch hour. It was just astonishing — at one point we had four police officers facing first-degree murder charges,” she says.

    Back then, a reform mayor and police chief came in and pledged to work with federal officials. Changes were implemented; nearly 100 cops were fired. The murder rate dropped, community relations improved — but sadly the reforms didn’t stick.

    By 2001, a different mayor and police chief took over and federal oversight began to wane. By 2005, when Katrina struck, the department had returned to its old ways.

    And residents today say the misconduct and murders just keep coming.

    In the back room of a community organization that protests police violence, relatives of family members who say they’ve been victims of the police were eager to tell NPR their stories.

    Patricia Grimes talked about her son who was shot New Year’s Day in 2009 by nine plainclothes cops. She says the entire confrontation lasted minutes.

    “I heard all the shooting — and it only took three minutes. That ain’t nothing but somebody ganging up on you. That’s hate, torture, murder,” she says.

    Another mother told about police beating her son to death after a traffic stop. One man recalled how cops shot and killed his mentally ill brother in their home.

    Theresa Elloie says her son was beaten by police inside the family-owned bar. There were 12 witnesses. The lead lieutenant in her son’s case has recently been indicted by federal prosecutors.

    “If they would have handled my son case, not swept it underneath the rug and got those officers off the force, then these other people kids would be living,” she says.

    Elloie’s family won a judgment against the NOPD, but can’t disclose the terms of the award.

    Mounting Lawsuits

    In addition to the significant human cost, the city is bearing a huge financial liability as the lawsuits mount.

    Police Chief Serpas says he will get better training for his officers and new technology. He wants an early warning system to alert supervisors about potentially abusive cops — a standard in most big city departments.

    And he says this time he’ll make sure that federal overseers stay longer, so reforms stick.

    “This time, the difference is gonna be when we work collaboratively at the end of this process, there is going to be a document signed with the force of law so that if I won the lottery three years from now and I left, the next chief behind me couldn’t go back and change the stuff that we put in place,” Serpas says.

    Serpas says all this will take time — especially if the culture of the NOPD is to be changed. At a minimum, he says, give him five years — right around Katrina’s 10-year anniversary.

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  • 11Aug

    Point 4 of the Black Panther Party’s 10 Point Program:  “We Want Decent Housing Fit For The Shelter Of Human Beings.”

    Europe – France:  Police Brutalize Immigrants During Eviction

    Sarkozy’s racist scapegoating

    http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=22045

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy is using vicious scapegoating to try to distract attention from a government expenses scandal and a revolt against his pensions attacks.

    He is part of a trend across Europe to spread hatred and division in an effort to blunt opposition to our rulers’ plans to make us pay for the crisis. Such manoeuvres can pave the way for open racists and fascists to prosper.

    Over the last week Sarkozy called for a new “war on crime”. He said that foreign-born individuals would be stripped of their French nationality if they attacked police or public officials, cynically meshed ideas of “immigrant” and “criminal”, and lashed out at Roma people and travellers.

    “We are suffering the consequences of 50 years of insufficiently regulated immigration which has led to a failure of integration,” he said.

    Sarkozy is no stranger to virulent and racist scaremongering. He has repeatedly used the idea of a feral and alien “racaille” (scum) to scare voters into backing him.

    He divides France into those who work hard and respect the law and those who are criminal and worthless. But his latest comments went further than ever before.

    Several of the measures he called for ape the policies of Jean Marie Le Pen’s fascist National Front party. Several French commentators criticised the plan as similar to measures used against the Jews by the pro-Nazi Vichy regime in the 1940s.

    Sarkozy hopes to scoop up far right voters, but is more likely to strengthen and legitimise the National Front.

    His tough rhetoric was followed by the interior minister, Brice Hortefeux, who warned that citizenship could also be revoked for those found guilty of other offences such as polygamy or other “serious criminal acts”.

    Actions

    Words lead to actions. When the president gives a lead, the state’s attack dogs know what’s required.

    Police drove about 50 Roma from a squat in Montreuil, east of Paris, on Friday of last week.

    Even before the “get tough” campaign, police broke up a demonstration by 150 people, mostly African immigrant women, protesting against their eviction from squats in a council tower block in a suburb of Paris.

    Almost all were completely legal and had lived in France for a decade or more.

    A video of the eviction (available at www.socialistworker.co.uk) shows police assaulting women, children and men. One particularly vile episode shows officers dragging off a woman with a baby on her back.

    The onslaught was on the same estate where Sarkozy threatened to use an industrial hose to clean out drug gangs. The local police authority rejected charges of brutality—a spokesman said that the woman with a baby on her back had “thrown herself on the ground which meant the officers could not at first see her baby”.

    The opposition Socialist Party criticised Sarkozy’s most extreme phrases. But its own representatives have demanded more spending on the police and said that Sarkozy was not doing enough to tackle criminality.

    And Sarkozy would have been encouraged by the 335 to one vote in the French parliament to ban the wearing of the Islamic full-face veil.

    France shows the danger of the right coming up with divisive measures to break resistance to the cuts.

    Some of those victimised are already hitting back. In the small town of Saint-Aignan, in central France, a group of around 50 Roma armed with axes attacked a police station after police shot and killed a 22-year old.

    There has to be clear resistance to racism and Islamophobia, and a class alternative to the idea that workers must pay for the crisis.

    Millions of French workers are set to take part in strikes and protests on 7 September against pension “reform”. That unity, combined with political arguments against racism and the cuts, can defeat Sarkozy’s strategy.

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