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Only a few bad apples huh?...Bad Cops Thread

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/15/us/keeven-robinson-death-police-louisiana.html

Louisiana Deputies Are Investigated in Death of Black Man During Arrest

Four white sheriff’s deputies in Louisiana have been placed on administrative duty after the death of a black man who suffered “significant traumatic injuries to the neck” during an arrest near New Orleans last week, the authorities said.

With a criminal inquiry in its early stages, officials have not yet decided whether to charge any of the deputies in connection with the death of the man, Keeven Robinson.

Mr. Robinson, 22, died on Thursday after a foot pursuit and a struggle with deputies who were working as undercover narcotics agents, Sheriff Joseph P. Lopinto III of Jefferson Parish said. The sheriff said officials were examining whether the deputies used excessive force. Mr. Robinson, whose family has raised questions about his death, suffered from asthma.


“Our officers were read their rights, they cooperated, they gave statements,” Sheriff Lopinto said. “I understand that at the end, this investigation will be under a microscope. I understand it fully.”

Sheriff Lopinto, who declined to identify the detectives who are subjects of the inquiry, reached his decision to reassign the deputies after the parish’s coroner classified Mr. Robinson’s death as a homicide. The ruling — a medical judgment, not a legal one — reverberated loudly through the New Orleans region. More than 100 people protested on Monday evening in Jefferson Parish, among the most populous Louisiana parishes.

The coroner, Dr. Gerald Cvitanovich, said the findings of his office’s preliminary autopsy were that Mr. Robinson’s death was “consistent with compressional asphyxia.” A final autopsy report is not expected for several weeks.

Louisiana has had particularly tense debates about police conduct and race in recent years. Mr. Robinson’s death came less than three months after the Louisiana authorities declined to charge two Baton Rouge police officers in connection with the fatal shooting of Alton B. Sterling in July 2016. Federal prosecutors have also refused to bring charges in that case, which led to large protests in Baton Rouge, the state capital.

In Jefferson Parish this week, civil rights activists welcomed the inquiry into Mr. Robinson’s death. Gaylor A. Spiller, the president of the local N.A.A.C.P. chapter, said she was “so far satisfied” with the coroner’s review
and the sheriff’s decision to reassign the deputies.

Even so, she said, “I will not go away.”

Sheriff Lopinto has already rebuffed some calls for him to end undercover work, and he said he expected his office to proceed normally for now.

“The Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office has an obligation to the citizens of Jefferson Parish, and we get complaints all day long from drug activity within Jefferson Parish itself,” he said. “Our operations will continue. These particular officers will be put on administrative duty, but we’re not going to suspend operations because of one incident.”
 
https://abcnews.go.com/US/15-year-died-atv-crash-shot-police-stun/story?id=55161913

15-year-old who died in ATV crash was shot with police stun gun

A variety of dashcam, bodycam and surveillance video footage obtained by ABC Detroit affiliate WXYZ shows a 15-year-old who died last year after crashing an ATV was first shot by a state trooper's stun gun.

Damon Grimes died Aug. 26 following a Michigan State Police pursuit that ensued at around 5:30 p.m. near Rossini Drive and Gratiot Avenue.

In the video, Michigan State Trooper Mark Bessner can be heard saying: "He's slowed down, we Tased him and he crashed out."

Bessner added: "Have EMS step it up. He's got a pulse."

The video shows troopers attempting CPR on Grimes.

"They Tased his ass while he was cruising," said an officer at the scene, according to the video.

An ambulance arrived a few minutes after the crash and transported Grimes to St. John's Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

Bessner, who allegedly fired his stun gun at Grimes from the passenger window of a squad car, resigned from the force in October and is the subject of a federal lawsuit from Grimes' family alleging use of excessive force and gross negligence.

MSP Trooper Ethan Berger, who was driving the patrol vehicle, is also being sued.

Geoffrey Fieger, an attorney for the Grimes family, told ABC News that Bessner and Berger "killed [Grimes] whey they shot him with a Taser and electrocuted him and he ran into another vehicle and broke his neck."

"It was a drive-by shooting by Michigan state police that killed a child driving an ATV," he said. "They were doing it for sport."

The 25 hours of footage released to WXYZ does not include dashcam footage of the pursuit by Bessner or Berger, the station reported.

The civil complaint filed back on Sept. 20, 2017, states that though the 15-year-old Grimes never posed "an immediate threat of harm" to Bessner, the teen was "unlawfully struck with the Taser while in motion on his ATV."

The complaint adds that Bessner allegedly "deployed his Taser directly at Damon Grimes through the open window" of the patrol car, which would have been against Michigan State Police policy and was "unconstitutional."

The stun gun's electrical force allegedly caused Grimes "to lose control of the ATV" and propelled him into the rear of another car, the complaint states.

The troopers' actions of pursuing and firing the stun gun at Grimes as he was operating the ATV were "extremely dangerous" and could be constituted as "excessive use of force," according to the complaint.

The complaint accuses both Bessner and Berger of failing to stop their patrol car after the firing of the Taser at Grimes. "Bessner and [Berger] did not stop the patrol vehicle and instead drove off," the complaint states.

Berger, who has been suspended pending the investigation, claims in an answer to the complaint that "he was driving and he pursued Grimes," but that he "otherwise denies the allegations as untrue." He also specifically denied leaving the scene of the accident and said the claims that Grimes was not threatening the officers "are untrue."

He also noted that he "acted under color of law and within the scope of his official duties."

An autopsy was performed on Grimes on Aug. 27 -- a day after he was pronounced dead -- ruled the manner of death as an "accident."

It indicates severe head trauma and contusions to the torso, but also that there were "leads from a conducted electrical weapon" embedded in the boy's lower back.

In December, the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office charged Bessner with second-degree murder and multiple counts of involuntary manslaughter.

He has pleaded not guilty. His jury trial is scheduled to begin on Aug. 20, a Wayne County prosecutor's spokeswoman confirmed. Berger is not facing criminal charges.
 
https://www.ktnv.com/news/mother-of-man-killed-by-las-vegas-police-officer-files-lawsuit

Mother of man killed by Las Vegas police officer files lawsuit

A rally was held on Sunday for a man who died at the hands of a Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officer.

Tashii Farmer Brown's mother, Trinita Farmer, led the rally on the Las Vegas Strip on Mother's Day.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal is reporting a lawsuit has been filed against LVMPD, claiming the department does not properly train its officers to intervene when other officers are using excessive force. The lawsuit names police officers Kenneth Lopera, Michael Tran, Michael Flores and Travis Crumrine.

Lopera is the police officer who put Tashii Farmer into a chokehold. Crumrine was the sergeant in charge of Lopera at the time.

The incident happened outside of the Venetian hotel-casino.

Lopera is facing charges of involuntary manslaughter and oppression under the color of office.
 
http://thehill.com/opinion/criminal-justice/387924-when-you-see-blue-run-if-you-are-black

When you see blue, run if you are black

The American Psychological Association has just published a book, “Something Happened in Our Town,” for children ages 4 to 8 that is intended to spark discussion about racial injustice in America by focusing on the shooting of a black man by a white police officer. While purportedly written as a means to promote tolerance, the book engenders prejudice against the police. A better title for the book would be: “When You See Blue, Run If You Are Black.”

The call for blanket recrimination against the police is reaching a dangerous and fevered pitch, which now emanates from the psychology profession. While the authors claim that the publication presents a “balanced” view because it depicts the reactions to the local shooting by a black family and a white family, both sets of parents tell their children the same message: police hate blacks and are not to be trusted.

In the book, the white mother tells her little girl that the shooting was “part of a pattern of being nice to white people and mean to black people. It’s an unfair pattern.” The little girl’s older sister decries her perceived unjust generalization, saying, “Some white people think most black men and boys are dangerous even though they are not,” and, “It wasn’t a mistake. The cops shot him because he was black.”

Meanwhile, the black father tells his son that the policeman will not go to jail and that “you can’t always count on them [cops] to do what is right.” The black boy’s older brother takes the recrimination of police a step further, declaring, “Cops stick up for each other. And they don’t like black men.”

Just to drive the point of white prejudice and its burden on African-Americans home, the background design of a two-page spread depicts ominous shadowy images of white master overseeing slaves working in the fields and the continent of Africa bound in chains.

The blanket distrust of law enforcement is accepted wholesale in this book. Rather than teaching tolerance, trust and understanding, the book demonizes the police with a message of “show tolerance for anyone and everyone except the police.”

What is even more shocking is that the publication includes guidelines for parent-child discussions, suggesting a video that is a heart-wrenching example of child cruelty where a father seated in a chair next to his young daughter goes through a litany of the dangers of police brutality, telling her he can never be sure he will make it back to his family in the evening. The little girl sums up the lesson her father teaches, saying: “White people hate black people.” After several overwrought, repeated examples of his fearful daily journey, the young daughter breaks out into tears and hugs her father as the segment ends.

By the time I finished watching that video I felt like calling 911 to have the father arrested for child abuse, using her as a tool to deliver his ideological screed.

The American Psychological Association should be ashamed of itself for perpetrating this false and misleading stereotype of police that defies reality. Just because they call themselves a professional association does not exempt them from relying upon facts in drawing their conclusion. According to FBI data, the number of black homicide victims in 2016 was 7,881 and the most were killed by other blacks. In 2016, the police fatally shot 233 blacks, the vast majority of whom were armed and dangerous, according to the Washington Post. The chances of that father in the video being shot by a white police officer is dwarfed by the likelihood that he would be killed by another black.

Self-righteous social justice warriors such as the authors of this book live in safe, upscale neighborhoods and do not have to suffer the consequences of their accusations. The demonization of the police exacerbates the mistrust between law enforcement and blacks living in high-crime neighborhoods who are left vulnerable and abandoned in a state of lawlessness in part because of this baseless, irresponsible narrative against police. The more the police are demonized, the less active they will be in enforcing the law; thus, more blacks will be killed by other blacks in these violence-plagued neighborhoods.

The American Psychological Association has just entered the ranks of the race hustlers. Enjoy your bounty.

Robert L. Woodson Sr. founded The Woodson Center in 1981 to help residents of low-income neighborhoods address problems of their communities. He has headed the National Urban League Department of Criminal Justice, and has been a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Foundation for Public Policy Research

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http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...almo-fatal-shooting-court-20180514-story.html

Judge blocks city's bid for separate trials in fatal police shooting of Quintonio LeGrier and Bettie Jones

A Cook County judge has denied a bid by city of Chicago lawyers to hold separate civil trials over the 2015 police shooting of a bat-carrying teen and an innocent bystander.

The lawsuits stemming from Officer Robert Rialmo’s shooting of 19-year-old Quintonio LeGrier and Bettie Jones, 55, appear headed to trial June 6 after the judge also declined the city’s request to delay the proceedings to allow more time to prepare.

In a motion filed early this month, private lawyers for the city sought to sever the cases. They argued in part that jurors’ sympathy for the bystander — a churchgoing grandmother who opened the door for officers before she was accidentally shot — could influence their assessment of Rialmo’s decision to shoot at the teen who approached officers with a bat in his hands.

“Denying severance would severely prejudice the city in the LeGrier case because their sympathy for the Jones plaintiffs is likely to affect the jury’s analysis of whether Rialmo’s use of force against Quintonio was justified,” the city’s motion said. “As such, the cases should be severed for trial so that each case can be decided on its merits, as opposed to on sympathy grounds.”

The city’s lawyers in court Wednesday asked that the judge order that the trial for LeGrier’s shooting go forward first. The result of that trial might have changed the dynamic of a subsequent trial over Jones’ killing or played into any pretrial settlement talks.

Rialmo also has filed an unusual lawsuit against the city alleging in part that he was poorly trained. The city’s motion also sought to have that litigation severed from the LeGrier case.

In court Wednesday, one of the city’s lawyers, Brian Gainer, spoke to a need to delay the trial, saying a litany of documents still needed to be produced, among other tasks.

“There’s just a lot to do,” he said.

Attorneys for the Jones and LeGrier families objected to the motion, saying they are ready to go to trial and the cases should stay joined.

“What this is is one shooting incident involving one officer and two victims,” said Larry Rogers Jr., a lawyer for the Jones family.

In a brief ruling from the bench, Judge Kay Hanlon rejected the city’s motion.

The judge acknowledged that going to trial in less than a month “may be burdensome, but I think it can be accomplished,” she said.

The Chicago Police Board is considering whether Rialmo should be fired for the shooting. He also faces a disciplinary investigation and misdemeanor charges from a bar fight late last year. He is on desk duty and stripped of his police powers.

The shooting has drawn widespread attention both because of the bystander's death and that it was the first fatal police shooting after the court-ordered release of video of a white officer shooting black teen Laquan McDonald 16 times. The video, released in November 2015 on the same day Officer Jason Van Dyke was charged with first-degree murder, outraged Chicagoans, particularly blacks and Latinos who aired long-standing objections about their treatment by police. Efforts to overhaul the Police Department continue more than two years later.

On the day after Christmas 2015 at about 4:30 a.m., Rialmo and his partner responded to 911 calls about a domestic disturbance at the apartment in the 4700 block of West Erie Street where LeGrier was staying with his father. LeGrier, apparently suffering mental health problems, had behaved strangely as a student at Northern Illinois University and had run-ins with police and other students, records show.

Jones, who lived downstairs, pointed police to the second floor. Then LeGrier came down the stairs with a baseball bat, according to an analysis released last year by State's Attorney Kim Foxx's office, which declined to bring criminal charges against Rialmo. As Rialmo backed down the stairs, he fired eight times, hitting LeGrier six times, prosecutors said. Jones, who stood behind the teen during the incident, was shot once in the chest. Joel Brodsky, Rialmo's lawyer, has said his client was justified in firing in self-defense.
 
Pigs in Wisconsin have a pretty powerful state pig union.. So I’m guessing pigs across that state feel emboldened to do whatever they want...
 
https://www.courier-journal.com/sto...uisville-officer-homeless-shooting/633817002/

Louisville police officer won't be indicted in shooting of homeless man

Jefferson Commonwealth’s Attorney Tom Wine talking about why his office decided to present case against LMPD officer to the grand jury. Matthew Glowicki, Louisville Courier Journal

Body camera footage from LMPD officers at the shooting scene in the 2600 block of Magazine on Wednesday. Provided by LMPD

A Louisville police officer who shot and wounded a man hiding behind a box spring inside an abandoned home last year was not indicted Tuesday by a Jefferson County grand jury.

The grand jurors heard from multiple police witnesses and listened to evidence over more than five hours before deciding against indicting Louisville Metro Police Officer Sarah Stumler on a single count of second-degree assault.

"This one presented some particular problems," said Jefferson Commonwealth's Attorney Tom Wine, whose office reviewed the case and decided to bring it before the grand jury.

Bruce Warrick, 38 at the time, was shot almost immediately after being found by Stumler on March 2, 2017, as she and other officers searched a house at 26th and Magazine streets on reports of a man inside doing drugs.

Stumler's body camera footage released by the department showed that as she looked behind a box spring that was leaning against a wall she found Warrick, who was standing in the shadows.

"Show your hands," she yelled, before raising her gun and firing once.

An unarmed Warrick was shot in the stomach, but survived.

It was a rare presentation of a police shooting case to the grand jury, but one Wine said he felt the community needed to hear.

"We felt that there were issues about training that the grand jury needed to hear and that there were issues concerning giving this individual an opportunity to respond," he said.

Wine said in both her interview with police investigators and before the grand jury on Tuesday, Stumler said she didn't intend to shoot Warrick.

"Her explanation was that she accidentally, in attempting to turn on the flashlight that’s mounted to the gun, actually pulled the trigger," Wine said.

Warrick, who survived the shooting and underwent multiple surgeries, filed a civil suit against the city and Stumler in February.

"Today’s grand jury decision does not have any impact on the civil suit filed by Mr. Warrick," said his attorney Adrian Mendiondo. "We will continue fighting for justice for Mr. Warrick and look forward to the bringing the facts of his case to light."

Most cases of police shootings in Louisville do not make it to the grand jury stage, as prosecutors usually review the case, determine criminal charges are not appropriate and find officers acted within the scope of the law.

Wine said he could recall one other time since he took office in 2013 that he presented a police shooting case to the grand jury.

The grand jury's decision was not unanimous, Wine said, noting at least nine of the 12 grand jurors needed to agree to issue an indictment.

Steve Schroering, Stumler's attorney, said he was relieved the grand jury did not find his client's actions criminal.

Stumler, who has been with the department since February 2009, remains on the force but has her police powers suspended and is not on patrol duty.

The police department will now launch an internal, administrative review of the case to determine if the officer broke an departmental policies or procedures.
 


http://www.nbc12.com/story/38259517/chesterfield-police-on-viral-video-of-traffic-stop-facts-matter

Traffic stop video goes viral; police say social media doesn't tell full story


The Chesterfield County Police Department says it is aware of a video circulating on social media that shows "part of an incident" during a traffic stop on Hollow Wood Court on Tuesday.

In a tweet from Elkanah Odembo's account, his girlfriend writes: "A cop follows us into my boyfriends driveway and claims it is because we have a brake light out. The cop calls backup immediately. He proceeds to viciously pull him out of the car for absolutely no reason. I was forced to sit in the car until another cop came and detained me."

Col. Jeffrey Katz responded to the large social media response to the video in a tweet on Wednesday, saying that the viral tweet "falls short of telling the entire story. Facts matter."

Wednesday, Odembo's girlfiend spoke about what she called a "scary and frightening" encounter with a Chesterfield police officer. Elizabeth Smith filmed a minute-and-a-half of the traffic stop, and she feels the situation went too far.

"He's asking about the brake light, and next thing I know, he has his hand on Elly," she said. "After it was continuing to happen, I thought, 'okay, something bad is about to happen, and I need to record this.'"

Smith can be heard in the video telling the officer that she and Odembo were cooperating and asking why he was trying to detain him.

Smith says at one point, she was ordered not to get out of the car and was eventually detained. As the situation continued to escalate, Smith says Odembo was pulled out of the car, but he ran from the officer into a house.

"We're all in this together. They're supposed to be protecting us. Why was he so scared that he had to run? That's not normal," Smith said. "He was tazed two times inside the house, I saw five of them attacking him on the ground on the front porch."

Smith says Odembo was scared - the reason he ran from the officer.

"Innocent black people are being targeted and killed every single day. How would you not be scared?" she said. "We've seen so many stories time and time again, how many times does it have to happen?"

In a statement Wednesday, the police department issued a full statement of the incident:

The officer attempted to stop a vehicle in the area Hollow Wood Court. The vehicle pulled into a driveway in the 3400 block of Hollow Wood Court. As the officer approached the vehicle, the driver had the car door open to exit the vehicle. The officer asked the driver for his identification. The officer told the driver he had been stopped because a tail light was out on the vehicle, and the officer had received information that the occupants of the vehicle had been gesturing and yelling things at a school bus.

The driver did not have his ID, and the officer began to take his information (name, date of birth, etc.). The driver said he didn’t see a problem and attempted to exit the vehicle, and the officer told him to stay in the vehicle. The driver continued to not cooperate with the officer, so the officer told the driver he was being detained and asked him to step out of the vehicle. The driver then refused to exit the vehicle. The officer repeatedly directed the driver to exit the vehicle and attempted to remove the driver from the vehicle; the driver resisted.

At one point, a passenger in the vehicle exited the car and the officer ordered her back into the vehicle. The driver then exited the vehicle as he was being pulled by the officer; he pushed past the officer and fled around and then into the residence. The officer pursued the driver. The officer caught up to the driver and the two engaged in a physical altercation as the driver resisted being taken into custody. Other officers arrived on scene to help take the driver into custody, and the driver continued to resist, at one point reentering the residence.

The driver was tased and taken into custody. He continued to passively resist as officers escorted him from the house. The officer who conducted the traffic stop received non-life threatening injuries during the altercation and was taken to an area hospital.

The driver, identified as Elkanah A. Odembo Jr., 19, was arrested and charged with assault on a law enforcement officer, three counts of obstruction of justice with force and defective equipment.

The Chesterfield Police Department says it is also reviewing body camera footage worn by the officer. That footage was reviewed by NBC12 and other media outlets Wednesday afternoon.

The four-and-a-half minute video shows the intense moments between the 19-year-old and the officer. In the video, Odembo is seen running from the officer towards his house, and at that point, the video ends.

"We recognize there are going to be people who are fearful when we stop them. I would say the best thing to do is be cooperative - this traffic stop would have and could have gone a very different way," explained Col. Katz.

Col. Katz says the response to the video on social media shows the empathy of the community who may have been concerned that Odembo was not treated fairly, but he says it is important to know all of the facts of a situation.

"My hope is that people will realize strong feelings don't equate to strong facts," said Col. Katz. "It is not a good representation of the entirety of that encounter, and that's probably the downside of social media."

Odembo appeared in court Wednesday. He was released on bond, but he is scheduled to appear in court again in July.
 


http://www.ksn.com/news/local/winfi...ial-stop-no-longer-with-department/1198785539

Winfield police officer involved in controversial stop no longer with department
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WINFIELD, Kan. (KSNW) - A Winfield Police officer who was involved in a controversial police stop two weeks ago is no longer with the department, according to the Winfield Police Department.

The department confirmed that, as of Thursday, Officer Sean Skov is no longer with the department. They would not go into any other details and said they are conducting an investigation into the incident.

The victim of the alleged racial profiling incident, Rudy Samuel, is considering legal action. He recorded the incident on his cell phone.

Samuel said that he was stopped for a turn signal violation in Winfield and during that stop, an officer questioned some vegetation that was found in the window sill of his car. Samuel told the officer it was from a tree. Officer Skov asked Samuel to step out of the car and he was detained. The cell phone video cut out, but audio continued.
 
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_ro...cle_1ccc5434-635f-11e8-b57f-ffb143de2b0c.html

Baton Rouge police union president faces possible discipline in Alton Sterling shooting

The head of the Baton Rouge police union has been placed under internal investigation and faces possible discipline for his actions the night of the 2016 Alton Sterling shooting.

The union president, Sgt. C. Bryan Taylor, said Police Chief Murphy Paul issued a "predisciplinary letter" last week accusing Taylor of violating department protocol that requires officers involved in a shooting to be separated from each other. That requirement is intended to preserve the integrity of an investigation and to prevent officers from colluding on a version of events before they have been interviewed by the department.

The investigation is the latest sign of strife between the police union and Paul. Taylor, who has consistently butted heads with the new chief, is accused of failing to "carry out orders" after responding to the Sterling scene.


In a telephone interview Tuesday, Taylor described the internal inquiry as political payback for the police union's criticism of Paul after the chief fired Blane Salamoni, the officer who fatally shot Sterling outside the Triple S Food Mart. Paul also suspended Howie Lake II, the second officer involved in the deadly encounter with Sterling.

Taylor said he had been off duty and responded to the scene of the shooting only as a union representative. He said there were a number of other supervisors on scene tasked with separating Salamoni and Lake.

"Sometimes, when you stand up for what's right, and what you were elected to do, there's retribution," Taylor said, adding he intends to fight the allegation when he appears before the chief at a predisciplinary hearing in July. "I clearly was not the supervisor on scene that night. Obviously, this is an attack on me, for one reason or another.

"Out of all the supervisors on scene that night, I'm the one being investigated. At no time did I control that scene."

Paul declined to discuss the matter Tuesday, referring The Advocate to his media relations division. A Police Department spokesman, Sgt. L'Jean McKneely Jr., said the chief would have no comment on the "ongoing" investigation.

The development came just days after Taylor was transferred from his role as commander of the department's intelligence division to patrol — a significant demotion that Taylor said has not been explained to him.

McKneely said more than a dozen officers were transferred the same day, adding Taylor was not singled out by the chief in being reassigned. "It was the for the betterment of the department," McKneely said.

The police union has been sharply critical of Paul's decision to fire Salamoni, which came after state Attorney General Jeff Landry this year announced that neither officer in Sterling's death would face criminal charges. The union issued a statement in support of both Salamoni and Lake, saying "our police officers are faced with many complicated and highly intense situations."

Both Salamoni and Lake have appealed their discipline.

It's not clear what prompted the investigation of Taylor, and the Police Department has not released a copy of the letter outlining the allegations against him.

"I don't understand the investigation whatsoever," Taylor said. "I am under a microscope."


Louis Reine, president of the Louisiana AFL-CIO, noted that Baton Rouge police officers involved in shootings are allowed union representation under the city's collective bargaining agreement.

"I'm hopeful that this investigation has nothing to do with (Taylor's) official position as a union leader representing his membership," Reine said.

The inquiry could deepen the divisions between Paul and the police union, which has been skeptical of several decisions the chief has made since taking office earlier this year. Tensions have risen since Paul fired Salamoni, a move that also drew criticism from the International Union of Police Associations.

That organization's president, Sam Cabral, released a statement last month criticizing Paul's boss, East Baton Rouge Parish Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome, for calling for Salamoni's termination before the criminal probe into the fatal shooting was even complete.

Asked Tuesday whether Paul has the support of rank-and-file officers, Taylor said, "Overall, I would say no." But he dismissed rumors circulating within the department about planned "sick-outs," in which officers had discussed calling in sick en masse to protest Salamoni's firing.

"The men and women of the Baton Rouge Police Department, especially union members, will not punish the community for the actions of politicians," Taylor said.
 


http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-jesse-romero-shooting-video-20180529-story.html

Video released of LAPD encounter that ended in fatal shooting of Boyle Heights teen

This video is edited from a version released by an attorney of the family of Jesse Romero, a 14-year-old boy fatally shot in Boyle Heights in 2016 by a Los Angeles police officer.

An attorney for the family of a 14-year-old boy killed by a Los Angeles police officer released body camera footage Tuesday of the controversial 2016 encounter, arguing that the recordings show that the boy had tossed his gun and was unarmed when he was shot.

Humberto Guizar released two clips recorded by the body cameras of two officers who responded to a vandalism report behind a North Chicago Street apartment complex, where the teen, Jesse Romero, was with a group of boys tagging graffiti.

Two-and-a-half minutes into the footage, the officers spot at least two boys outside the complex. One starts running, and the two officers give chase down Cesar Chavez Avenue. At least one shouts multiple times for the boy to stop.

Less than a minute later, as the officers approach a street corner, a gunshot is heard. Officer Eden Medina, who is in front, pauses at a pay phone and appears to peek around the corner.

"Shots fired," one said.

"Shots are fired, shots fired, officer needs help," the other said.

Medina turns onto Breed Street with his gun drawn, and gunfire echoes.

"Get down!" a voice shouts.

"Let me see your [expletive] hands!"

As the officers approach, Jesse is lying on the sidewalk, wounded. A revolver is seen on the other side of a wrought-iron fence.

The recordings do not show Jesse getting shot. But his family's attorney argued that if Jesse was holding a gun when Medina peered around the corner, the officer would not have walked into the line of fire.

Because the gun was found several feet away, Jesse tossed it before he was shot. There's "no way" he could have thrown a gun over a fence while wounded, Guizar said.

He said Jesse was struck twice: in his stomach and chest.

"The video shows that when the officer fired at the kid, he fired at him when he wasn't a threat," Guizar said. "He didn't have a gun in his hand, and he killed him."

In a statement released Tuesday, the LAPD said it was aware of the video release and pointed to its "thorough investigation" of the shooting. The department said the inspector general and the Los Angeles Police Commission determined that the use of force was appropriate.

The department "understands that any time that an officer uses deadly force that ends in a fatality it is a painful tragedy," the statement said. "This is why the LAPD, its oversight bodies and the Los Angeles district attorney's office scrutinize these incidents as closely as possible to ensure that the use of deadly force was appropriate to defend the life of the officer or members of the public."

The shooting set off protests in Jesse's Boyle Heights neighborhood and reignited the debate over how officers use deadly force. It was the second time in 12 days that Medina had fatally shot someone.

The boy's parents filed a federal lawsuit against Medina and the city, alleging that police violated their son's civil rights, used excessive force and denied him timely medical care.

Los Angeles County prosecutors declined to file criminal charges against the officer, saying in an 11-page memo that Medina reasonably believed the teenager posed a deadly threat and used "reasonable force" to defend himself and others.

Central to the controversy surrounding the shooting was whether Jesse fired at police or whether the gun went off after the teenager tossed it away. After examining and testing the revolver, prosecutors wrote, an investigator said the "most likely explanation of the evidence was that the revolver was fired, then dropped."

According to a report from LAPD Chief Charlie Beck last year, one officer saw Jesse crouched on the sidewalk, his right arm extended toward them. Thinking Jesse was going to shoot, Medina fired his gun twice, hitting the teenager.

But a woman who said she saw the shooting told The Times that as Jesse ran, she saw him pull a gun from his basketball shorts and throw it toward a fence. The gun hit the fence and fell to the ground, she said, and she heard the weapon fire.

Three people who saw the shooting from a nearby car told investigators they saw Jesse throw a gun up and toward the fence, the prosecutors' memo said. The gun hit the top of the fence, fell on the sidewalk and "discharged upon impact with the ground," according to the memo.
 
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