Victims of police brutality face circuitous path through legal system



Victims of police brutality face circuitous path through legal system By WALLACE McKELVEY Staff Writer 

Winston Bailey contested the charges of obstruction and resisting arrest he faced after an Atlantic City police officer allegedly mistook him for another suspect.
He’s had his day in court.
More than ten times.
Without resolution.
“I don’t have the money for all this stuff,” he said. “But I can’t just let somebody do this to me. I’m doing it on my own because I think it’s the right thing to do.”
Those who claim police brutality face a circuitous path through the legal system as they either defend against criminal charges or pursue civil claims. Many are set up to fail due to the realities of navigating the state’s legal system, said Alexander Shalom, senior staff attorney for the ACLU of New Jersey.
“People held in jail for a long time understand that the quickest way to get out is to plead,” Shalom said. “That’s not what we want in the criminal justice system. We don’t want to punish the faintest of heart.”
'The whole system was against us'
Similarly, most defense attorneys say they’ve advised clients to take guilty pleas based on an honest assessment of their chances in court. A guilty plea may make civil cases more difficult to win, but not in all cases.
“Even though things were looking good on our side, I was told there was an 80 percent conviction rate,” said Tiffany Baez, who alleges she was assaulted by police in an Atlantic City nightclub. “The whole system was against us from the start.”
Baez said her guilty plea meant six months of pre-trial intervention and a small fine. Considering the potential jail time and the resulting disruption to her life, she said, it wasn’t a choice at all.
Bailey said he wouldn’t have come this far without a supportive employer who allows him to leave work to appear in court and friends who helped him mount his legal defense. His boss bought him a car so he could make the trip out to Egg Harbor City, he said.
Not the same for officers
Although the odds appear to be against defendants who claim police misconduct, most say that isn’t true of police officers when they face charges of their own outside the Internal Affairs system.
According to the Internal Affairs statistics obtained through the Open Public Records Act, Atlantic City officers have had other criminal charges sustained in 3 of 27 instances in the last five years.
Baez said her criminal complaint against the officer in her case hasn’t gone to court after more than a year, her IA complaint has not been decided and Baez’s attorney has advised her not to press the issue until her pre-trial intervention program was complete.
Even those who are able to mount a vigorous defense can have a difficult time working their way through the courts.
Steve Scheffler, David Connor Castellani’s criminal attorney, said defendants who claim police brutality can see their cases take months and even years to wind through the legal system.
“I’ve represented individuals in similar circumstances,” he said. “A lot of times, they don’t end well for the common citizen.”
Criminal cases vs. civil cases
If criminal proceedings can be an arduous process, civil cases are worse. While the outcomes seem to favor plaintiffs who claim civil rights violations – at least 13 cases involving Atlantic City police have been settled for about $1.4 million in recent years – it can take many years for such claims to work through the system.
The rate at which such cases have been settled hasn’t changed significantly since before the city began pursuing a policy of vigorously contesting civil cases. Between 2002 and 2007, Atlantic City paid nearly $1.2 million in legal fees and settlements in at least 13 cases claiming excessive force, according to data obtained via OPRA requests. Those settlements include one alleged incident of domestic violence by an officer, in which the plaintiff claimed a prior IA complaint was ignored.
Unheard voices, low payouts
Not all plaintiffs have the wherewithal to even begin that process. That’s not necessarily because of the expense involved, as lawyers typically work on a contingency fee basis in which they agree to take a percentage of the eventual award.
“If you’re a poor person with a very compelling or lucrative case, you can usually find a lawyer who will take it,” Shalom said. “But knowing which attorney to talk to and when to talk to them is a different matter. And then there are time limits for filing the case. It takes a savvy person.”
And not all civil rights cases are equal.
“If police are systematically harassing a group of people but not beating them up — so no hospital records — it’s unlikely those people will get a large pay day,” he said. “Traditionally, incidents of misconduct far outpace lawsuits filed.”
One recent example was a case the ACLU was involved with in Camden. Police there had been planting drugs on suspects to secure convictions; a number of plaintiffs — 87 by the time the suit was settled last year — joined the suit.
“This was a very large settlement, $3.5 million when all was said and done, but individual clients didn’t walk away with lots of money,” Shalom said.
Proving 'a culture of misconduct'
Aside from eyewitness testimony and video, attorneys in civil cases typically have to prove a culture of misconduct in police departments. That involves procuring discipline files, Internal Affairs reports, performance evaluations and training logs. Attorneys say municipalities fight to keep these documents from the plaintiffs and, when they are released, are often restricted from public dissemination.
One example of this came in December in the ongoing case of Matthew Groark, who alleged two Atlantic City police officers assaulted him at a night club in Atlantic City. The city’s attorney argued that the involved officer’s Internal Affairs records were not relevant to the case, but a judge ruled they were.
One of the officers in the Groark suit, Sterling Wheaten, has already had a partial version of his Internal Affairs file released as evidence in another pending case. That document, which was not heavily redacted, provides a rare glimpse inside the city’s Internal Affairs process. Wheaten is named in Castellani’s pending civil case.
According to the file, 21 complaints were lodged against Wheaten over a three-year period between 2008 and 2011, including two from then-Chief John Mooney and Henry White, the current chief.
Simon Worrall, whose son Nicholas filed the lawsuit that exposed Wheaten’s Internal Affairs file, said their attorney had difficulty obtaining evidence. The younger Worrall alleged he was assaulted at a night club over Labor Day weekend in 2010.
“When we launched the lawsuit, the video tapes all disappeared,” he said. “The camera wasn’t working between midnight and 2 a.m. That’s complete hooey.”