Thursday, October 22, 2015

Cop shoots dog while checking on owner's home

FLORIDA CITY, Fla. - Police say an officer fatally shot a bulldog that "rushed" him as he knocked on the front door of a home in Florida City.
Florida City police spokesman Ken Armenteros says the officer was patrolling the area on Tuesday. He saw an open car door in the driveway and approached the home to make sure everything was fine. When he knocked on the door, he was met by Duchess, the family's bulldog mix.
Armenteros says the officer is on paid administrative leave pending an investigation.
But the family is asking for answers.

The Miami Herald reports Sage Raphael says the door open was open as she got ready to take Duchess to the veterinarian. The incident was caught on the home's surveillance video.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Corey Jones: Black man shot and killed by policeman as he waited by broken down car

Corey Jones was waiting next to his broken down car when an unarmed officer stopped to investigate the vehicle
Their band, Future Prezidents, had finished their gig almost an hour earlier, so bass player Mathew Huntsberger was surprised to get a call from drummer Corey Jones, 31, around 1:45 a.m. on Sunday.

Jones told Huntsberger that his SUV had broken down and asked if he could help, so Huntsberger drove to find his bandmate, who was stranded north of West Palm Beach, Florida, on Interstate 95. He brought along some oil, but when that didn’t work, the two decided to look up numbers for a tow truck.

“I tried to help him the best I could, but I’m not a mechanic or anything,” Huntsberger said in an interview with The Washington Post on Monday afternoon.

Huntsberger said he called roadside assistance for his bandmate and then, at about 2:30 a.m, left to head home while Jones waited for the tow truck.

About 45 minutes later, Jones was dead — shot and killed by a police officer.

“When I left him he was sitting in his car calling roadside assistance,” Huntsberger said. “I never would have thought that someone was going to come kill him.”

Few details have been released about the Oct. 18 shooting — which is one of more than 780 fatal police shootings so far in 2015, according to a Washington Post database of all deadly on-duty shootings by police officers in 2015.

In a statement issued Monday afternoon, the Palm Beach Gardens Police Department said that officer Nouman Raja was in plainclothes in an unmarked car when he stopped to investigate what he believed to be an abandoned vehicle on an Interstate 95 exit ramp.

“As the officer exited his vehicle, he was suddenly confronted by an armed subject,” the police department said in a statement. “As a result of the confrontation, the officer discharged his firearm, resulting in the death of the subject.”

Palm Beach Gardens is a roughly 50,000-resident city near Palm Beach, made up primarily of white residents.  The Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office has referred requests for comment to the Palm Beach Gardens Police Department. Officials with the Palm Beach Gardens Police Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

“They’re saying he was armed, but I don’t know if I believe it,” said Huntsberger, who described Jones as a really mellow, church-going guy. “If I was there, maybe it’s a different situation. I just don’t know what happened.”

Family members, several of whom are clergy members in the Palm Beach region, and friends have described Jones as a well-known and liked church drummer at Bible Church of God in Boynton Beach.  Jones family plans to gather tonight at a local church to share memories of him, and are making funeral plans for Saturday.

“He was a good kid, just coming home from a gig,” said Jones’s cousin Frank Hearst, 36, of Nashville, Tennessee. “He was just an all-around good guy who never got into any trouble, never had any record. It’s just an unfortunate situation.”

Hearst said family members are upset at how little information has been provided about the shooting. They want to know how many shots were fired, and what weapon he allegedly was carrying when he was killed. They say Jones never carried a firearm.

“They’re saying Corey approached him armed,” Hearst said. “That don’t make sense.”

Benjamin Dixon said he met Jones because they were both church musicians, occasionally filling in for each other’s bands when a member had to miss a service.

“When you play with someone two or three times, they become friends. Two or three times more, and they become family,” Dixon said.

He remembered Jones as a laid-back guy, often found wielding his drumsticks behind a kit in a church sanctuary.

“He was a very hard worker who you could also find in his church,” Dixon said.

Washington Post
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/man-shot-and-killed-by-policeman-in-florida-as-he-waited-by-car-a6701321.html

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Family sues Eaton County over son's traffic-stop death

By Rachel Greco, Lansing State Journal10:18 p.m. EDT October 15, 2015

The family's decision comes four months after Eaton County Prosecutor Doug Lloyd determined that Sgt. Jonathan Frost's actions were lawful when he shot and killed Deven Guilford during a traffic stop.

EATON COUNTY — The family of a 17-year-old Mulliken teen shot who was shot and killed by an Eaton County Sheriff's sergeant following a February traffic stop filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday against the county and the police officer.
Deven Guilford's parents, Brian and Becky Guilford, said in a statement that their trust in law enforcement was "shaken to the core" by the shooting.
"As we take this action today we are outraged at the huge miscarriage of justice done to our son Deven Guilford," they said.
The lawsuit comes four months after Eaton County Prosecutor Doug Lloyd cleared Sgt. Jonathan Frost of criminal wrongdoing. Frost shot Deven Guilford, who was unarmed, seven times during the traffic stop.
The lawsuit against Frost and Eaton County alleges that Frost's "entire course of action was illegal and in violation of Deven's constitutional rights."
"Deven's tragic and totally unnecessary death represents a disturbing trend of demanding 100% compliance with police authority, coupled with zero tolerance of risk of harm to police officers," said Cynthia Heenan of Constitutional Litigation Associates P.C., a Detroit law firm specializing in police misconduct litigation and representing the family, in a statement.
The lawsuit asks for a jury trial but does not seek specific monetary damages.
Theresa O'Dell, executive assistant to Eaton County Sheriff Tom Reich, said county officials have been advised not to comment by their legal counsel. Eaton County Controller John Fuentes also declined to comment on the lawsuit.
Frost, an eight-year veteran, initiated the traffic stop around 8 p.m. Feb. 28 on M-43 in Roxand Township after Guilford flashed his bright lights at Frost because he thought Frost's brights were on.
According to his family, Guilford was driving home from a basketball game at Liberty Church in Grand Ledge and was on his way to his girlfriend's home to watch movies.
A Michigan State Police investigation included the review of video of the stop, both from Guilford's cell phone — the teen was recording the traffic stop — and Frost's body camera. Frost's new patrol vehicle did not have a dash camera, according to Lloyd.
Guilford refused to give Frost his driver's license, registration and proof of insurance, which would have been a misdemeanor, according to Lloyd. It was later determined Guilford's license was with his girlfriend. Frost declined requests from Guilford for his badge number.
Frost pulled Guilford from the vehicle and ordered him to lie on his stomach next to his vehicle. When Guilford would not put both his hands behind his back as Frost was attempting to handcuff him, Frost fired his stun gun into Guilford. The stun gun wasn't fully effective because only one of two probes embedded into Guilford, according to Lloyd.
Lloyd says the investigation determined an altercation then ensued, which ended in a snow-filled ditch. Guilford was shot seven times. There is no video of the final moments of the traffic stop. Frost's body camera came off during what Lloyd said was a struggle. Guilford's cell phone remained on the pavement, recording audio of the gunshots but did not capture video of the shooting. Frost was treated for facial injuries at a local hospital and released.
Toxicology results showed that THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, was in Guilford's system at the time of the stop.
"The officer did nothing to calm or de-escalate the situation," the Guilford family statement says. "Instead, Frost rapidly became argumentative and agitated when Deven asserted that the officer had been driving with his high beams on and resisted producing his ID."
Aaron Guilford, Deven's brother, called his death "senseless."
"I don't understand how an innocent situation can escalate so much to end in the death of a harmless kid," he said in a statement. "Deven was listening to Frost's commands, he never swore or used any profane language. He was confused and he never received any respect in return."
An internal investigation into the shooting released in August determined that the sergeant followed Eaton County Sheriff’s Office “regulations, general orders and training.”
It did, however, recommend the department “re-emphasize” training on stun gun use and continue to place an emphasis during training on communication and “defensive ground fighting tactics.”
Supporters of the Guilford family are planning to hold a rally at the State Capitol from 2 to 5 p.m. Oct. 24.
Contact Rachel Greco at 517-528-2075 or rgreco@lsj.com. Follow her on Twitter @GrecoatLSJ. 

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Cops Removed Clothes From Young Woman’s Dead Body, Took Nude Photo

AUTHOR APRIL 22, 2015 6:36 PM

Photos taken by police on the night that 20-year-old Jessica Mejia was killed show that the young woman was in the back of the vehicle, when police arrived on the scene. According to the Chicago Tribune, which was given access to the photos, pictures taken while she was inside the vehicle show that Jessica Mejia was dressed in a pair of jeans and a white tee-shirt when she died. Subsequent images of the young woman, taken by Sheriff’s deputies in Cook County, Illinois, however, are the subject of a pending lawsuit.


According to the Chicago Tribune, photos provided to them by the family attorney show that police removed Jessica Mejia’s body from the vehicle. They then proceeded to undress her at the scene. Jessica’s naked body was laid out on a tarp. Police then photographed her naked corpse, which they manipulated into various poses.
The accident that took the young woman’s life occurred on New Year’s Eve, 2009. Shortly after, her family filed a lawsuit against the Cook County Sheriff’s Department. Jessica Mejia’s mother says she filed the suit to restore her daughter’s name.
According to the young woman’s mother, the officers who removed Jessica Mejia’s clothing at the scene of the accident created a false impression of what happened that night. Christian Mejia told the Chicago Tribune that:
“(People) think my daughter died from having sex, not from somebody being drunk and killing her. Because they took these photos, by the time everybody else got to the scene, all the ambulances and everybody else, she was partially naked because they made her naked… So the rumors, and the allegations … they made it believable.”
In December of 2010, a spokesman with the Cook County Sheriff’s Office denied that the pictures existed. Department spokesman Steve Patterson called the family’s claims “bizarre,” saying:
“There were multiple independent witnesses on the scene that night and crime scene photographs taken which would have prevented the scenario described from happening. We’re sorry for the family’s loss.”
This story certainly is bizarre, but the Sheriff’s department is no longer disputing the fact that the photos exist. Instead, they now claim that it was “medically necessary” for deputies to remove Jessica Mejia’s clothing and take nude photographs, as her dead body lay on the ground, sprawled out on a tarp. That claim seems beyond bizarre.
Don Perry, one of the family’s attorneys said in a statement to the Chicago Tribune:
“This was a young lady that just died and was treated with less dignity than a deer carcass you find on the side of the road.”
Here’s more on the story from WGN News, in Chicago.

*Featured image credit: video screen capture WGN News Chicago

Friday, April 17, 2015

Cop Sexually Assaults Teen Still Has Law Enforcement Certification

Omaha, Nebraska (TFC) – A cop took a deal in relation to charges of sexually assaulting a teenage girl and will not receive a felony conviction, will not have to register as a sex offender, will only serve a year in jail, and still currently has his law enforcement certification.
The rapist cop used a small amount of marijuana found during a traffic stop to extort a young lady into performing sexual acts. The officer made her boyfriend walk down to a nearby lake and wait for him to finish assaulting the girl. The former deputy, Cory Cooper, is 31 years old. The victim is 19.
The plea deal means he won’t have to go to trial on the charge of first-degree sexual assault. That was a felony that could have landed him in prison for twenty-five years. Instead, he’ll go to a jail where he knows the staff and will be protected from other inmates who would typically provide some form of real justice in a case like this. He will still be able to possess a firearm. There is nothing prohibiting him from being a police officer again after he serves the time for his minor crimes. In fact, he still has his law enforcement certification, even though that is expected to be stripped eventually.
Don’t worry though, he’ll be able to requalify for law enforcement work soon because he doesn’t have a felony record. Thanks to Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine, this man will be able to exit jail, obtain another job in law enforcement, and force another teenage girl to perform oral sex on him soon.
This is the American justice system. If you wonder why people riot, if you wonder why people celebrate when cops are killed, if you wonder why law enforcement in the United States is no longer respected and is viewed as an enemy of the people; remember the name Cory Cooper. It might be wise to remember the name of the prosecutor that protected the thin blue line as well. That name is Don Kleine.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Kentucky: Lawsuit Restored Against Cop Caught Lying About Traffic Stop

Video catches Kentucky State Trooper harassing motorist. US Court of Appeals rules cop can be sued for false arrest.

Lieutenant Phillip BurnettVideotape proved essential for Freddie Gregory, a motorist falsely accused of traffic violations by a high-ranking Kentucky State Police trooper. The US Court of Appeals on Friday allowed Gregory to pursue false arrest charges against Lieutenant Phillip Burnett.

Since February 2009, Lieutenant Burnett had stopped Gregory on three occasions under what the motorist considered to be bogus circumstances. The 53-year-old decided to install a video camera to document the harassment. The device was ready on April 4, 2009, when Gregory decided to take his granddaughter to lunch in his pickup truck. As he was leaving his driveway, Gregory spotted Lieutenant Burnett about twenty yards away.

Gregory stopped his car and removed his seatbelt to reach the on switch for his camera. Lieutenant Burnett pulled alongside the pickup truck and demanded to see Gregory's license. After pointing out he was on his own property, Gregory produced his license and complained about the traffic stops.
GREGORY: I'll tell you this: You're gonna quit this harassment.
BURNETT: Do what?
GREGORY: You're gonna quit this harassing me, because I ain't done nothing illegal.
BURNETT: Well, let's see here. Your window is tinted. And you're getting ready to get out here, and you didn't have your seat belt on. So I can stop you now. Okay?
GREGORY: Where you see my windows tinted at? Where you see my windows tinted at?
BURNETT: Look right here. Look right here. You can't even see through that.
GREGORY: Well, I can't help it that you got them dark glasses on and can't see nothing.
BURNETT: I'll tell you what. I'm gonna take you to jail for menacing.
Gregory was searched, given a seatbelt ticket and arrested for menacing and disorderly conduct. Gregory spent three hours in jail.

After seeing video of the incident, Bell County Prosecutor Neil Ward dropped the charges. Although the US District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky rejected Gregory's malicious prosecution lawsuit against Lieutenant Burnett, a three-judge appellate panel reinstated it.

"A review of the tape shows that Gregory did nothing that would legitimately constitute either disorderly conduct or menacing," the panel wrote in its decision. "Gregory had a protected right to request that Burnett stop harassing him, and a jury could conclude both that Burnett's conduct in arresting Gregory was in response to Gregory's exercising that right and that the arrest would deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising that right."

The appellate court cleared the way for Gregory's claims to be resolved by a jury at trial. Instead of sanctioning Lieutenant Burnett for his conduct, Kentucky State Police promoted him to captain in 2012 and put him in command of all troopers in Bell, Harlan and Knox counties last year.

A copy of the decision is available in a 300k PDF file at the source link below.

Electrical engineer tased at his housewarming party sues Madison County deputies

By Challen Stephens | cstephens@al.com 
Email the author | Follow on Twitter 
on March 02, 2015 at 5:11 PM, updated March 02, 2015 at 10:58 PM

Dominique Kenebrew says he was celebrating the purchase of a new home just outside Huntsville when sheriff's deputies knocked on the door, refused to say why they were there, tried to enter the home and tased Kenebrew in the back when he refused to let them in.

Kenebrew, an electrical engineer, today sued two Madison County deputies and Sheriff Blake Dorning in federal court for illegal search, illegal seizure and excessive force.
The complaint filed today states Deputy Daniel Dejong "shot Kenebrew in the back with his taser, delivering a five-second electrical shock... pulled the taser trigger two more times, delivering two more five-second electrical shocks."

Kenebrew was arrested, taken to jail and charged with obstructing government operations. He was later acquitted.
The encounter took place on Kenebrew's front porch on May 18, 2013, as about 25 to 30 guests were inside the home on Somerset Park Drive, just over Chapman Mountain in northeast Huntsville.
The suit says guests included a nurse, two college instructors, a graduate student and a store manager, "all successful individuals, either gainfully employed or completing their education."
"Kenebrew and his guests were also African-American," reads the suit.
Was race a factor? "I really don't want to go that route," said Kenebrew, 28, on the phone today. But he added: "I don't think they expected me to be the owner of the house."
The lawsuit and the police incident reports largely agree on basic facts.
It was around 11 p.m. Deputy Dejong knocked, Kenebrew stepped outside. Kenebrew closed the door behind him and asked what officers wanted. Police did not have a search warrant. Kenebrew refused to grant them permission to enter the house.

The stories differ on some of the details of what happened next.
The suit alleges deputies repeatedly informed him they wanted to search the home, but would not provide a reason and tried to walk around Kenebrew. "He said I'm going in the house," recalled Kenebrew on the phone today.

Dejong instead wrote that he had seen inside the door and had noticed liquor, beer and what he thought might be under-aged drinkers.

 "I once again advised the suspect that I needed to check on the welfare and ages of the persons inside the residence, and that at this point, I was not asking his permission to enter," reported Dejong.

Since Kenebrew would not grant permission, Dejong wrote that he tried to force his way in, but Kenebrew puffed his chest and blocked the way.

Dejong wrote that he tried to grab Kenebrew's wrist and pin his arms behind him, but Kenebrew was too big and turned his body to block the door. Dejong notes that Kenebrew never raised his hands nor threatened deputies.

The suit puts it this way: "Kenebrew refused permission each time and asked what the problem was."

Finding he couldn't move Kenebrew, Deputy Dejong wrote that he backed up and drew his stun gun.
Both accounts agree that twice a guest opened the door and Kenebrew told the guests to go back inside.

According to the suit, the second time a guest peeked out, Kenebrew turned and "Dejong shot Kenebrew in the back."

The suit also names Deputy Ryan Countess. The suits contends Countess stood by on the porch, where could have intervened to stop "the use of obviously excessive force, yet did nothing."

Dejong writes that he was waiting as the stun gun "was cycling through the boot-up procedure" and fired when it was ready. He also notes he fired into Kenebrew's back.
Dejong wrote that he stunned him twice more when Kenebrew did not respond to commands to roll over and put his hands behind his back.

After stunning Kenebrew, Madison County deputies entered the home. They handcuffed two guests, according to the suit, "all without a warrant, probable cause or reasonable suspicion."
Dejong says they waited on backup. Kenebrew said there were about 10 deputies there already.

All agree they found nothing illegal.
There were no minors at the housewarming.
"It was determined that the patrons inside the house were not violating any laws within the residence," wrote Dejong in the original police report.

The suit contends that Deputy Dejong said deputies were responding to a noise complaint, although the suit claims that is likely fiction, that Kenebrew at that time only had in his home one wireless speaker "incapable of disturbing the peace even on maximum volume."
As for Dejong's written statement that they entered to see if Kenebrew's guests were old enough to drink alcohol, the suit says deputies never checked driver's licenses of the guests.
The suits says a different officer told Kenebrew that the deputies were responding to a complaint about a blocked driveway. Deputies did make some guests move their cars.
"The suspect was arrested for obstructing my investigation," wrote Dejong.
On Nov. 13, 2013, Madison County District Judge Allison Austin found Kenebrew not guilty of obstructing a government operation. 

"Dejong's use of force was completely unnecessary and was excessive," argues the suit in U.S. District Court, claiming illegal search, excessive force and illegal arrest in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment.

Kenebrew is represented by civil rights attorney Hank Sherrod, who last year represented Robert Bryant of Kelso, Tennessee.

Sherrod argued that Madison County deputies in the summer of 2012 conspired to stalk, beat and falsely arrest Bryant. Bryant sued Sheriff Dorning and eight deputies, including Countess, in federal court last year.

The county settled with Bryant for $625,000 last year and the FBI then announced it was investigating the deputies.

This lawsuit invokes the Bryant case and related newspaper articles to argue that Dorning and the Madison County Sheriff's Department have a record of ignoring or even covering up police misconduct. The suit claims the department did not investigate the Kenebrew incident.

Sheriff Dorning could not be reached for comment late Monday.
"Deputies under Dorning's command have learned that their justifications for using force and other unlawful actions will never be questioned," reads the Kenebrew suit, "and that they can act with impunity."

Friday, January 16, 2015

Judge Dismisses Brooklyn Gun Case as Police Are Investigated


A Brooklyn man who claimed the police manufactured gun-possession charges against him had his case dismissed on Thursday, amid two investigations into the practices of a group of police officers in the 67th Precinct in East Flatbush.

The man, Jeffrey Herring, had maintained his innocence ever since his arrest on June 4, 2013, asserting that officers had planted the gun on him and fabricated the circumstances of his arrest.

The officers claimed that they got a tip from a confidential informer that Mr. Herring had a gun. Prosecutors had been instructed to bring the informer to court on Thursday; the defense had challenged whether that informer even existed.

At the hearing, prosecutors offered no evidence or mention of that informer.

“Based upon information provided to us by defense counsel” and on the office’s own investigation, said Paul Burns, an assistant district attorney, “we do not believe at this time that we can prove beyond a reasonable doubt the charges against Mr. Herring.”

Justice Dineen Riviezzo of State Supreme Court dismissed and sealed the case, saying she was “glad to hear there’s an ongoing investigation.”

In researching the case, a lawyer for Mr. Herring, Debora Silberman of Brooklyn Defender Services, found others that mirrored it, involving the same group of police officers. In the other cases, defendants also said the guns were planted, with the police saying that officers saw the suspects storing the guns in plastic bags or handkerchiefs.

After the arrests, more similarities arose: The use of confidential informers was suddenly mentioned months into the proceedings, and the informers were never produced in court even after judges’ and lawyers’ requests. Judges had called some of the police version of events “incredible,” and the accounts “extremely evasive.”

The Brooklyn district attorney, Kenneth P. Thompson, said, “We will investigate the arrest of Mr. Herring and other arrests by these officers because of the serious questions raised by this case.”

After inquiries from The New York Times, the Police Department opened an Internal Affairs Bureau investigation into the officers’ conduct.

As the charges were dismissed, Mr. Herring, 53, a rangy man dressed in gray slacks and a blue oxford, brought his hands up to his face, his eyes tearing up. If convicted of the top charge of gun possession, he could have faced up to 15 years in prison.

In 2013, Mr. Herring was arrested as he stood next to his bike outside his apartment on a sunny afternoon. He had just gone shopping, and had several plastic bags with him.

The police said Mr. Herring reached into a white plastic bag, removed a gun, put it in a black plastic bag and tossed that bag into the bushes as a plainclothes officer watched him.

Mr. Herring says he lives a quiet, nonviolent life, mostly taking care of his collie, Snowy. His last arrest, for drugs, was in 1997; he says he has been clean since then.

Eight months into the case, prosecutors gave defense lawyers papers showing that the police had requested a $1,000 tip for a confidential informer in this case. The informer had given a highly detailed description, according to the police paperwork, saying “one male black” matching Mr. Herring’s approximate age, height, weight, skin color, hairstyle and outfit, standing where Mr. Herring was standing, “near a bike with several shopping bags,” was carrying a firearm “believed to be a .380 caliber semiautomatic” that was “inside of a shopping bag.”

Police officers arrived about 10 minutes after the call. Mr. Herring “had conveniently not moved an inch, and then like clockwork, chose to display exactly what the supposed C.I. had described at exactly the right time,” Ms. Silberman and another lawyer, Scott Hechinger, wrote in a filing.

The officers involved in Mr. Herring’s case have had their conduct and methods questioned before. One, Lt. Edward Babington, had testified along with other officers in a federal case including a gun charge, prompting District Judge Dora L. Irizarry to call the officers’ testimony “just incredible, and I say ‘incredible’ as a matter of law,” adding that she believed “these officers perjured themselves.” In another federal gun case, prosecutors said they considered Lieutenant Babington to have given inconsistent testimony.

Leaving court on Thursday, Mr. Herring said, “I dreamed of this day.” However, he said, he was still thinking about two other defendants accused of gun possession by these police officers; while Mr. Herring had been out on bail as he fought his case, others spent far more time in jail.

One man, Eugene Moore, could not afford bail. He spent a year in jail until a hearing in which a judge said he did not find the testimony from a detective, Gregory Jean-Baptiste, “to be credible” and dismissed and sealed the case. Another man, John Hooper, also spent almost a year in jail after his arrest. After a hearing in which a justice said he found it “incredible that they thought it was a gun,” speaking of the officers, prosecutors offered Mr. Hooper time served and he accepted.

“I look at my journey, but they were incarcerated,” Mr. Herring said.

A version of this article appears in print on January 16, 2015, on page A21 of the New York edition with the headline: A Gun Case Is Dismissed as the Police Face Inquiries. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Police Cruiser Responding to Call Strikes, Kills Boy: Police

By David Chang

Monday, Dec 29, 2014 • Updated at 7:42 AM EST

A 10-year-old boy who was walking to a friend's home for a sleepover was struck and killed by a police cruiser Sunday night in Franklin Township, Gloucester County, New Jersey.
The child's family told NBC10 the boy was walking with two of his friends on Delsea Drive and Paul Street. The boy was crossing the street to attend a sleepover when he was suddenly struck by a Franklin Township Police cruiser passing by. Police told NBC10 the officer was responding to a call.
Man Struck, Killed by Car in New Jersey
The boy later died from his injuries. The boy's two friends were not hurt and are currently being interviewed by detectives.
Family members and a witness claimed the police cruiser was traveling fast and did not have on any lights or a siren at the time of the accident. Investigators did not confirm nor deny that the use of the vehicle's lights and siren.

The police officer was taken to Kennedy Hospital though officials have not yet revealed whether he was injured.
"The matter is currently under investigation," said Gloucester County Chief of Detectives John Porter. "We offer our deepest condolences to the family of that child."

http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Child-Struck-Killed-by-Car-in-Franklin-Twp--286975061.html?_osource=SocialFlowTwt_PHBrand

10-Year-Old Struck, Killed by Cop's Car in New Jersey; Mother Intends To Sue

Michelle Harding said she will sue the Franklin Township Police Officer cleared of wrongdoing in the death of her son.


By January 15, 2015 at 7:49am

he mother of a 10-year-old boy who was killed in an accident involving a Franklin Township Police Officer intends to sue the township after the officer was cleared of wrongdoing in the accident.
Franklin Township Patrolman Nicholas Locilento was responding to a call when he hit 10-year-old Matthew McCloskey while McCloskey was crossing Route 47 around 7 p.m. Dec. 28, 2014. McCloskey was pronounced dead at the scene.
Locilento was speeding, at a rate of 74 mph in a 50 mph zone, and didn’t have his emergency lights on, NBC 10 reports.
Police are not required to activate emergency warning lights when responding to a non-emergency call, as Locilento was.
McCloskey’s mother, Michelle Harding, intends to sue Locilento, according to the report.
“I am genuinely upset that the prosecutor’s office was making a concerted effort to place blame on my beautiful child trying to play in his neighborhood instead of the grown responsible adults hired to protect Matthew,” Harding told NBC 10.
McCloskey was one of three children involved in a foot race to his friends’ home, crossing Route 47 in the process. Police said Locilento attempted to break before hitting McCloskey, but was unable to. He also exited his patrol car and attempted to save McCloskey, police said.
An investigation conducted by the Gloucester County Prosecutor’s Office has cleared Locilento, who has been on administrative leave since the incident and is under administrative review.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Albuquerque police charged in homeless killing

12 January 2015 Last updated at 12:22 ET

Two police officers in Albuquerque, New Mexico, will face charges for killing a homeless camper, their lawyers say.
Former detective Keith Sandy and officer Dominique Perez will face a murder charge in the death of James Boyd, 38.
Their lawyers argued the two will be cleared of wrongdoing.
The fatal shooting in March last year sparked city protests, some violent, and came amid a federal investigation into the police department's practices.
A year-long US investigation found Albuquerque police had inappropriately killed suspects and used more force on those with mental illnesses.
Protests against the city's police department happened before nationwide protests over the shooting deaths of unarmed black men and women by police in various US cities.
The Albuquerque police department has had more than three dozen police shootings since 2010.

The justice department ordered the city to reduce the use of deadly force in April, but another woman suspected of stealing a lorry was shot and killed weeks later.
Boyd was killed in the foothills of the Sandia Mountains on the east side of Albuquerque following a stand-off.
Protests against Boyd's killing occurred after a video emerged of police shooting Boyd.
It was filmed by the police using cameras and posted online following a public information request.
Lawyers for Mr Sandy and Mr Perez were confident their clients had done nothing wrong.
"To the contrary, he followed his training and probably saved his fellow officer's life," said Sam Bregman, Mr Sandy's lawyer.
Luis Robles, Mr Perez's lawyer, said he was "confident that the facts will vindicate Officer Perez's actions in this case".
City officials recently signed an agreement with the justice department that requires police to provide better training for officers and dismantle troubled police units.

Park Forest officer charged in World War II vet's death goes on trial Tuesday

By Steve Schmadeke
Chicago Tribune
JANUARY 12, 2015, 5:14 AM

Was Park Forest police Officer Craig Taylor acting out of a reasonable fear for his life or recklessly when he shot five beanbag rounds inside an assisted ­living facility, killing a knife­ wielding 95­year­-old resident? It's a question that's expected to be decided this week inside a first­floor Markham courtroom, where Associate Judge Luciano Panici will determine whether Taylor's actions were criminal or not. The bench trial starting Tuesday over World War II veteran John Wrana's death comes amid national discord over police accountability after unarmed black men died at the hands of officers in Missouri and New York and no one was indicted.

While race has not been an issue in this case — Wrana was white and Taylor is black — similar concerns over aggressive police tactics have been raised. In bringing a rare criminal prosecution against an on­duty police officer, State's Attorney Anita Alvarez said that "other viable options" could have been used to subdue Wrana other than the "violent extrication" chosen by Park Forest police. Taylor, one of five on a team of officers, fired a series of rapid beanbag shots at close range at the senior citizen. But all the officers told state police investigators that Wrana ignored their repeated warnings to drop the weapon and approached them with the serrated knife raised above his head. And Taylor's attorney, Terry Ekl, has said Wrana, who was acting erratically, could have killed himself with the knife if officers didn't act quickly.

"My job was to protect and serve, and that's whatI did that night," Taylor, 44, a Park Forest officer since 2004, told the Tribune in October in his first mpublic comment since he was charged with reckless conduct. Police were called to the Victory Centre retirement home in southwest suburban Park Forest on July 26, 2013, after Wrana resisted efforts by staff and paramedics to take him to the hospital for a psychiatric evaluation, striking one paramedic with his cane. By the time the five officers gathered outside his apartment, Wrana was holding a knife with a 7­inch blade and threatening to throw it or cut officers with it.

Moments later, police Cmdr. Michael Baugh led the way into Wrana's apartment carrying a ballistic shield and tried to subdue the elderly man with a Taser, but the prongs missed. Taylor, who had been instructed by Baugh to use the beanbag rounds if the Taser didn't work, then fired at Wrana until he dropped the knife — five rounds in all. Wrana died about five hours later after refusing surgery to stanch the internal bleeding that resulted after he was struck in the abdomen. With few of the facts about what happened that night in dispute, the trial may hinge on testimony from expert witnesses. The one hired by Taylor — Steve Ijames, a former Springfield, Mo., assistant police chief who now consults on use­of­force cases — has said Taylor acted properly and would have been justified in using his service weapon to stop Wrana. Park Forest Deputy Chief Christopher Mannino, who was Taylor's training supervisor, is expected to testify in much the same way. Prosecutors intend to call an expert of their own — Francis R. Murphy, a Florida­based consultant on police tactics — to rebut those claims. In his 17­page report, Murphy said the officers should have used their ballistic shield to knock Wrana to the ground and acted improperly in deploying a Taser and beanbag rounds.

"The situation went from the refusal to provide a voluntary urine sample to death at the hands of police use of unreasonable force," wrote Murphy, noting that officers never used pepper spray or gave Wrana time to cool off. "The existing situation demanded patience and it is obvious that the police just wanted to quickly end the stand off and seize Wrana." Ekl has sought to bar some or all of Murphy's testimony, arguing that he has no expertise in the use of beanbag shotguns. Ekl also wants to block Murphy from testifying that Wrana was mentally ill at the time because he has no medical expertise and his testimony would contradict statements from doctors who found that the elderly man was lucid that night. Panici has not yet ruled on the request. Another police consultant contacted by the state's attorney's office concluded the officers followed proper procedure, according to a letter that the prosecutor assigned to the case sent Ekl. Along with the knife Wrana was holding, Taylor's attorney has indicated he wants the judge to see the ballistic vest and shield used by the Park Forest
officers. Wrana's family has filed a lawsuit against Taylor and Park Forest that has been put on hold until the criminal case concludes.

sschmadeke@tribpub.com
Twitter @SteveSchmadeke

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-wrana-beanbag-shooting-trial-met-20150111-story.html

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Domestic Disturbance Ends with Fatal Shooting of Burlington Woman

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Denver set to settle another lawsuit over a mistaken arrest

By Noelle Phillips
The Denver Post


POSTED:   01/05/2015 06:10:10 PM MST3 COMMENTS| UPDATED:   ABOUT 14 HOURS AGO
The city of Denver is on the verge of settling another lawsuit after police and sheriff's deputies jailed the wrong man for 12 days.
Christian Robinson sued after he was arrested in 2010 by a Denver police officer, who failed to determine that he was not the person who was being sought on an arrest warrant.
The federal lawsuit was slated for trial this month, but a court order shows a settlement was reached. The settlement was reported first by 7News.
Raymond Bryant, Robinson's lawyer, said the amount was $88,530.
City Attorney Scott Martinez declined to comment.
Robinson's problems started when he was told by a potential employer in Las Vegas that he had an outstanding warrant in Denver.
Robinson went to Denver Police Department headquarters to straighten out the confusion. But he was arrested and held in the Denver jail for 12 days, Bryant said.
Another man, who had been arrested on drug charges, used Robinson's name and birth date as an alias. That man had failed to appear in court after paying a bond to get out of jail.
Police could have looked at photos and other identifying records to determine Robinson was not the man they were looking for, Bryant said.
To further complicate the situation, a Denver Sheriff Department employee saw the two names on the warrant and changed a state identification number to Robinson, rather than the man who was wanted, Bryant said.
Denver has had a problem with wrongful arrests before.
Last month, the city settled a 6-year-old lawsuit for $337,250. Payments were made to three people and the ACLU of Colorado, which had filed the suit.
The city has continued to work with the ACLU to change its practices in hopes of avoiding wrongful arrests.
But Bryant said work remains to be done.

"The city has failed to implement a city-wide law enforcement policy to address this," Bryant said.