Cop Tries to Shoot Dog, Ends Up Shooting Himself


Adan Salazar

A California sheriff’s deputy is feeling the sting of humiliation after he attempted to shoot a fenced-in dog, but failed, succeeding only in shooting himself.
The deputy, who works with the Riverside County Court Services Division, was reportedly serving an eviction notice at a Riverside home on Wednesday at around 2p.m. when a “large dog” approached him.
Police say the pit bull, who can be seen in footage shot by Los Angeles NBC affiliate KNBC being playful and friendly with several children, attacked the officer, forcing him to draw his weapon.
“A large pit bull breed dog attacked the deputy,” an investigator told KNBC. “In defense of himself, he fired one round at the dog and inadvertently struck himself in the leg.”
The dog’s owner, Jorge Rodriguez, says his dog never attacked.
“The officer got scared and unfortunately pulled his gun and he shot himself,” Rodriguez says. “He was in pain, man, I feel sorry for the officer.”
The officer sustained non-life threatening injuries and is being treated at the Riverside Community hospital.
Reports say the Department of Animal Services won’t take action against the dog as she was legally within a fenced enclosure. No word on whether the officer will be investigated for mishandling his firearm.


Brooklyn man tackled by cop while live-streaming Occupy march gets $55,000 settlement


Josh Boss, 26, says Thomas Purtell, an assistant chief and Patrol Borough Manhattan South commander at the time of the 2011 arrest, tackled him while shouting, 'Don’t resist!' Boss sued alleging false arrest, excessive force and nerve damage to his wrists from handcuffs.

BY DANIEL BEEKMAN

A Brooklyn man arrested by a top NYPD cop while live-streaming an Occupy Wall Street march with his cell phone has settled with the city for $55,000, he told the Daily News Thursday.
Josh Boss, 26, says Thomas Purtell, an assistant chief and Patrol Borough Manhattan South commander at the time of the 2011 arrest, tackled him and roughed him up while shouting, “Don’t resist!”
Boss’s disorderly conduct charge was ultimately dismissed — and he sued alleging false arrest, excessive force and nerve damage to his wrists from handcuffs.
“He turned around and sacked me,” the Bushwick man said in an exclusive interview with The News. “I was standing in the crosswalk … I was definitely not resisting. I had a 250-pound officer on me with his knee on my face and neck.”
Video of the arrest at Seventh Ave. and W. 34th St. shows Purtell throwing Boss to the pavement. “Kick his ass, Tom!” another cop yapped during the collar, according to Boss. “I’m not resisting!” Boss hollered on the ground.
The city’s Law Department and the NYPD didn’t return requests for comment Thursday.
“The circumstances of this arrest had an extreme chilling effect on the First Amendment rights of journalists in New York generally, and particularly on Josh, who stopped doing field reporting after this incident,” said Wylie Stecklow, a lawyer for Boss.
“For a senior commanding officer of the NYPD to... use excessive force like this, in front of so many subordinate officers and citizens, sets a terrible example.”
Purtell has since been promoted to chief and heads the department’s Organized Crime Control Bureau.
He ran the NYPD‘s rescue and recovery operations at Ground Zero after the 9/11 attacks and presided over a decline in crime as Patrol Borough Bronx commander.
The case was settled in January but Boss, who now works for the Huffington Post, went public for the first time Thursday.
“I was shocked by how aggressive the police were with me when I hadn't done anything,” he said.
Boss says he plans to use his settlement cash on physical therapy for his injured right hand.





Police accused of false arrest, illegal search, excessive force




Team 5 Investigates has uncovered allegations that two Bellingham, Mass. police officers falsely arrested a woman, using excessive force. The
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Watch the Team 5 Investigates report here
The troubling events leading up to the arrest were all caught on camera. Team 5 Investigates' Kathy Curran obtained the exclusive video showing exactly what happened.
Watch video of encounter with police
Holly Graham, 29, struggled with the two police officers moments before she was placed under arrest in October 2012.
The events leading up to her arrest were recorded by Graham on her iPhone which show her questioning the officers as they were leaving her apartment.  Graham told Team 5 she wanted to know why they showed up at her apartment, knocked down her door and searched her home without a warrant.
According to the police report, Officer David Ayotte and Officer John Melanson were looking for Graham's friend who was wanted by police on an outstanding warrant.  Graham claims police told her they were responding to a complaint for loud music.
"Where's the warrant at? You came for loud music, right? That's what you came for? What's that? Loud music?" the video records Graham shouting as she followed both officers down stairs.
A short struggle then ensued in the stairway when the phone was dropped and the video shows Graham on the ground with Ayotte on top of her.
"Can you tell me what was happening at that point?" asked Team 5 Investigates' Curran.
"He had pushed my head into my stairs which split my lip and he was pushing my head against the stairs," said Graham.
Ayotte then accused her of threatening him with a fork as Melanson stood nearby.
"You got a fork in your hand, you come after me?" asked Ayotte.
"I'm not coming after you. I did not come after you," said Graham.
"Who the (expletive) do you think you are?" asked Ayotte.
"I did not come after you," reiterated Graham.
"You're going to jail now, (expletive)," said Ayotte.
According to the police report, Ayotte wrote he felt threatened and at a disadvantage. He said during the skirmish the fork struck the side of his head leaving abrasions.
"You never threatened with a fork?" asked Curran.
"Never," answered Graham.
"Why did you have a fork in your hand," asked Curran.
"I was cooking dinner, I didn't realize I had the fork in my hand," said Graham.
The officers threatened to use chemical spray on her twice. Graham was arrested and charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and assault and battery on a police officer. Prosecutors later dismissed all of the charges.
"Had she not had the videotape, she might have ended up being convicted because it would have been her word against the word of two police officers," said attorney Howard Friedman, who is representing Graham.
Friedman has filed a lawsuit in federal court against officers Ayotte and Melanson alleging they violated Graham's civil rights by illegally entering her apartment, falsely arresting her and using excessive force.
Ayotte declined Team 5's requests for an interview.
"We'd like to ask you some questions about the incident with Holly Graham," said Curran.
"I have no comment, I'm sorry," said Ayotte.
"You think this was a case of excessive force?" asked Curran.
"I have no comment," said Ayotte.
His attorney, Kareem Morgan, told Team 5 Investigates Ayotte believes his actions were justified and he did what was necessary to defend himself.
Melanson never got back to Team 5 Investigates despite repeated requests for comment.
"I look at police a whole other way now. You know, I don't look at them as protectors or public servants. I fear them and you shouldn't fear the people who are supposed to help you," said Graham.
Bellingham Police Chief Gerry Daigle told Team 5 Investigates his department did not conduct an internal investigation because he believes his officers' actions were justified.
This wasn't the first time the police officers involved had contact with Graham. At the time of this incident, Graham had faced charges in several different cases but was never convicted.


Ex-cop accused in cabbie assault in trouble before


City of Santa Fe settled civil suit for $32K

SANTA FE, N.M. —The former Santa Fe police officer accused of using excessive force on a cab driver was also at the center of a civil lawsuit less than a year ago.
On March 30, Jose Gutierrez pulled over taxi cab driver Dawn Burgeois for a traffic violation. Dash camera video from his patrol car showed Gutierrez wrestling Burgeois to the ground after she got out of her car, ignoring his orders to stay inside.
Soon after, she and her attorney filed a claim of excessive force.
Gutierrez resigned from Santa Fe police, but no reason was given.
This isn't the first time Gutierrez has been accused of breaching his duty. Last July, he pulled over Martin Pacheco for a license plate violation and failure to stop.
But Pacheco's attorney said in a claim notice to the city in 2013, Gutierrez's dash cam video showed Pacheco did stop.
Gutierrez told other officers he smelled alcohol on Pacheco's breath.
"When I asked how much he had to drink, (Pacheco) first told me he had Listerine, and then subsequently he said he actually had two Modelos," he said.
Pacheco was arrested and charged with DWI.
According to documents obtained by Action 7 News, Pacheco's attorney said his client is disabled and unable to perform filed sobriety tests. He claimed he was falsely imprisoned, falsely arrested and maliciously prosecuted.
That claim was dropped when the city settled for $32,500.
Pacheco's DWI case and charges associated with it were dism


Police brutality lawsuit filed against Roseville police officers


Man alleges excessive force used during arrest; seeks $500,000
Last week, a Minneapolis man filed a lawsuit against several Roseville police officers following his arrest last spring.
Victor Yair Hernandez-Rivera alleges that four officers used excessive force against him during a traffic stop that led to his arrest in May 2013, and is seeking $500,000 in punitive damages.
The suit was filed in U.S. District Court on Thursday, April 10, and the Roseville Police Dept. announced April 17 it had opened an internal investigation of the incident.
“The Roseville Police Department takes allegations of this nature very seriously,” a statement from the department says. “The internal affairs investigation can take considerable time to complete. We ask for the public’s patience as we investigate the allegations.”
In the meantime, however, Hernandez-Rivera’s attorney Paul Edlund says the lawsuit will move forward, and is “looking forward” to learning the results of the internal investigation.
Driver fled running
According to the complaint, Hernandez-Rivera, who was 24 at the time, was one of two travelers in a white Saturn sedan traveling eastbound on State Highway 36 that was pulled over for suspected speeding during the early morning hours of May 26, 2013.
After exiting the thoroughfare onto Lexington Avenue and pulling over on a residntial side street, the driver fled the scene on foot. Officer Justin Gunderson, whose squad car was equipped with a dashboard camera that captured the entire event, ran after the driver and allegedly pointed his pistol at the vehicle, yelling “Stay back!”
The driver can be seen running into the front yard of a home before disappearing behind a fence, Gunderson in close pursuit.
According to Hernandez-Rivera’s attorney, the driver has never been caught.
Three Taser cycles
After about a minute and a half, Gunderson returned to where the Saturn was pulled over, and Hernandez-Rivera opened his door to get out. The complaint states that Hernandez-Rivera then stood up in the door and held his hands up in front of his body “in a non-aggressive sign of compliance.” He had his cell phone in his right hand.
Gunderson notified other officers by radio that one of the occupants was exiting the vehicle and allegedly yelled, “Don’t you move, don’t you f-ing move!”
He then allegedly yelled, “Get on the ground,” and grabbed the back of Hernandez-Rivera’s neck, forcing him to the sidewalk on his stomach. The complaint states he was pushed “with enough force to shatter the cell phone” in his hand, which was trapped under his body.
Then, Gunderson allegedly shot a Taser into Hernandez-Rivera’s legs and back and yelled, “stop resisting, put your hands behind your back!”
Officer Erin Reski then arrived on the scene and allegedly yelled, “Stop resisting!” The complaint states that she allegedly struck Hernandez-Rivera in the side twice with her knee as she attempted to force Hernandez-Rivera’s hands behind his back.
Gunderson then allegedly deployed the Taser twice more. Hernandez-Rivera can allegedly be heard moaning, “no, no,” over the clicking sound of the gun.
Finally, Hernandez-Rivera was able to lift his arm out from under his body as two more Roseville officers, Kyle Eckert and Grant Dattilo, arrived on the scene.
Dattilo allegedly kicked Hernandez-Rivera in the side, got on the ground and punched him twice.
Officers then cuffed Hernandez and pulled him from the ground to be searched against the side of the car.
Arrestee allegedly knows ‘limited’ English
The complaint states that as Reski was performing a search, “it becomes clear that Hernandez does not understand” what she is saying. Reski allegedly asked him, “You don’t speak English at all, do you?”
After being directed to the squad car, Gunderson allegedly asked Hernandez in Spanish where “his friend” was, to which Hernandez-Rivera responded that he did not know.
“Oh, you don’t know, are you stupid?” Gunderson allegedly responded in Spanish. The complaint states that he also allegedly “taunted” Hernandez-Rivera for not knowing.
Hernandez-Rivera then sat, handcuffed, in the back of a squad car for “over an hour,”according to the complaint, before he was brought to the Ramsey County Law Enforcement Center.
The amount of English Hernandez-Rivera knows is “limited,” according to his attorney, Paul Edlund.
Misdemeanor charges dismissed
The Roseville city attorney then charged Hernandez-Rivera with misdemeanor obstruction of legal process without force and misdemeanor failure to obey a police officer under city ordinances.
Both charges were dismissed in court.
“[Hernandez-Rivera] stayed in the car because that’s what you do when you get pulled over by the police,”Edlund said. “He had no reason to flee or think he had done anything wrong.”
Ultimately, Edlund says, the reason the lawsuit was even able to be filed is because there’s a dash cam recording. “What’s really concerning is what happens to the cases where there’s not video,” Edlund said. “[In this case] their complaint is in stark contrast to what the video shows.
“[Hernandez-Rivera] filed this lawsuit because he thinks it’s very important for other people to see this video to deter this kind of police conduct and make sure this doesn’t happen again.”
To see a shortened version of the dash camera video from the May 26, 2013, traffic stop, see below or click this link.


Former Berthoud cop pleads guilty to child abuse


Jason Pohl 3
LOVELAND – A former Berthoud police officer who authorities say force-fed a 15-year-old girl hot sauce, bound her hands with zip ties and hit her with ropes, pleaded guilty on Friday afternoon to one count of child abuse.
Jeremy Yachik, 37, previously admitted to the acts and said they were punishment because his daughter wouldn't "communicate" with him, according to his arrest affidavit in Larimer County Court. The case and subsequent cover-up by others in the department ultimately prompted Berthoud police to be dissolved; the Larimer County Sheriff's Office has since taken over law enforcement operations.
Yachik was arrested and released on bond in October and had been scheduled for a May jury trial. However, Yachik this week agreed to plead guilty to the single count of Class 2 misdemeanor child abuse in an effort to stave off the lengthy trial. Yachik's attorneys declined to comment about the deal outside the courtroom.
The fired cop remains out on bond, and a three-hour sentencing hearing is set for July 14. The Larimer District Attorney's Office said it will not recommend jail and instead will leave sentencing up to the judge who could impose from three to 12 months in jail.
The investigation of the abuse allegations against Yachik was handled by Loveland police after Ashley Saint-Roberts, Yachik's ex-fiancee who turned him in, claimed Berthoud Police Chief Glen Johnson didn't respond to her attempts to report Yachik in July. The Larimer County Sheriff's Office in October took over numerous policing duties when the department came under fire for not responding to or reporting those abuse allegations.
Sheriff Justin Smith's top lieutenants conducted a top-to-bottom review of the department, concluding the eight-officer force and support staff struggled with "back-stabbing" and fear, and that ultimately led to the disbanding of the department.
"Clearly, the employees routinely fail to meet the standards set by town and police department policies and procedures, up to and including employees in leadership and management positions," Smith's aides wrote in the confidential report previously obtained by the Coloradoan. The report also said the department bought fully automatic military-grade machine guns, hired officers who showed "glaring" signs of illegal and inappropriate behavior, and then gave them "woefully inadequate" training.
The sheriff's office has since taken over all town law-enforcement duties as part of a multi-year agreement set to go into effect May 1.



Knox County cop fired immediately after photos show brutal choking of student



By Nick Kirkpatrick

Usually, after charges of police brutality, police officials take their time reacting while they follow procedure to determine who did what. But this episode in Knoxville, Tenn., was so extreme and well-documented that the local sheriff fired the officer immediately.
Frank Phillips, a Knox County Sheriff’s officer, was fired Sunday night after a series of pictures taken by photographer John Messner were published in the Daily Mail in Britain. They showed an officer identified by the Sheriff’s Office as Phillips grabbing 21-year-old college student Jarod Dotson around the neck and squeezing him until he fell to his knees.
An officer identified by the Sheriff’s office as Frank Phillips is seen choking college student Jarod Dotson while he was being arrested for public intoxication and resisting arrest. (John Messner)

WBIR reports that law enforcement responded to a “disturbance” near the University of Tennessee where a house party with about 800 people had reportedly become unruly and spilled out into the street.
According to a police report, Dotson ignored repeated instructions to go inside, the Knoxville News Sentinel reported. Deputy Brandon Gilliam wrote in the official report that Dotson “began to physically resist officers’ instructions to place his hands behind his back, and at one point grabbed on to an officer’s leg.”


Messner, a freelance photographer who documented the incident, told The Washington Post that Dotson showed no signs of resisting arrest.



Messner’s still pictures, arranged by The Post in the GIF below, show two officers cuffing Dotson’s hands behind his back when Phillips came over and choked Dotson until he collapsed to his knees. Messner said that as Dotson was being pulled up he was smacked in the back of the head, “a snap-out-of-it kinda smack under the circumstances.”

The haunting norm of police brutality


by Jimmy Hall

I’m driving down I-15 and catch a glimpse of a police vehicle parked on the side of the road. My heart rate goes up. I check my speed. I involuntarily push the brakes out of pure instinct. I then realize I was on cruise control at exactly the speed limit. So, what am I so afraid of?
Besides not wanting to pay the couple hundred dollar ticket or the hassle of being late to my destination, most of it comes from the fear of the boys in blue: the police.
“To Protect and To Serve” is the LAPD’s motto that has applied to all other police forces around the country. Yet, in the past few years, there has been a growing and frightening trend involving those who are sworn to do the protecting and the serving.
YouTube is a major factor that brings this issue to light. Recently James Boyd, a homeless man “had held off officers for four hours at an illegal camp site with a small knife, threatening to kill them, before agreeing to exit the Sandia foothills with the police,” according to Examiner.com.
Boyd wasn’t armed with anything that could reasonably be called deadly, yet the policemen took upon themselves to sick their K-9 on him, pelt him with bean bags, tasered and shot six live rounds killing him.
Although we can’t fully know the extent of what happened, the camera footage only shows a few minutes of their confrontation, it is safe to say that this would be considered excessive and deadly force.
On our own campus a UVU staff member was aggressively handled by campus police for writing on a campus map. If this isn’t excessive, then I don’t know what is.
These are different types of situations, but both should raise serious concerns about whom we are giving authority to and how are they using it.
The men and women in uniform have a job to do. I understand this. And not all people are compliant or respect authority as they should. These type of people are usually found in mass protests and have the crowd mentality. In these situations, the authorities need to use force to control the crowd. It’s unfortunate, but that’s what we have in this ugly world.
Not all the men and women in uniform who police our streets are the power-hungry ones who we see on YouTube or the news. There are kind and respected ones as well and that needs to be appreciated.
What this all comes down to is knowledge and accountability. The police need to know the rights of the people and their own stretch of authority. Without this we will just have police officers thinking they can do whatever they want to whomever they want and whenever they want.
“The only thing that the Sheriff’s Office gives us is a Policy and Procedures to follow,” Austin McDonald, of the Provo Police Department, said. “When it comes to training there is none that we have to take. Policy and Procedures may vary between agencies.”
Also, citizens are carrying around cameras to capture these kinds of hot-headed police officers as they are in the real world. But this isn’t the only thing that should deter officers. Departments everywhere, our campus included, need to take the initiative to properly train and educate their officers to know what is and isn’t acceptable in any given situation.
Not only that, they need to be held accountable for abusing that given authority. This can only come from the powers-that-be to discipline those officers and not give into a public apology letter or, even worse, a false rationalization.
The old and extremely troubling adage, “If you have nothing to hide, you’ve nothing to fear” doesn’t have any grounds in this discussion.
We shouldn’t have to fear the ones who are responsibility for protecting us. Our society is slowly becoming a police state and one I don’t want to live in.



East Hartford settles police brutality case


By Steven Crighton

EAST HARTFORD — The Town Council has approved a $35,000 settlement in a lawsuit that claims police used excessive force against a suspect and refused him medical attention.
Council Chairman Richard Kehoe said today that when the council reviews settlements for litigation, it has to “weigh the potential significant cost to the taxpayer should we lose” a case if it’s brought to court.
“While the council did not feel the police officers involved had done anything wrong, there was a concern that a jury might feel otherwise and impose a significant damage award on the town,” Kehoe said. “We therefore felt this was a reasonable settlement to eliminate the potential of a much larger award.”


Hammonton man settles 2009 police brutality case for $70,000


 By MICHELLE BRUNETTI

HAMMONTON - A Collings Lakes man has settled a police brutality lawsuit against Hammonton for $70,000, over a 2009 incident involving two police officers he said directed a police dog to attack and repeatedly bite him, according to court documents.
Robert Keeler stated in a 10-count 2011 Atlantic County Superior Court action against the town, its police department, officers Richard Jones and Tom Percodani and unnamed others that he was repeatedly bitten by a police dog on April 8, 2009. He also claimed that the officers involved did not have a lawful or reasonable basis to detain or arrest him, or to search and seize him.
Keeler claimed to have suffered severe and permanent physical and psychological injury from the incident.
The town and Keeler signed the settlement papers March 26, and they were filed with the court April 8. They included a confidentiality and non-disclosure agreement, according to court papers. The paperwork also stated the payment was not an admission of liability, but “is made for the sole purpose of terminating the litigation between the parties.”
The suit states that Hammonton police charged Keeler with five counts of resisting arrest, criminal mischief and hindering apprehension, which he alleged constituted malicious prosecution. The first four charges were downgraded to disorderly persons charges and dismissed in Hammonton Municipal Court; the fifth criminal charge was administratively dismissed, the suit said.



Albuquerque Police Brutality Reaching Boiling Point



by Tyler Collins

In 2009, the Albuquerque police department (APD) chased a young man, aged 19, and shot him down as he attempted to run away from him. Then, as he dropped to the ground, one police officer shot him point blank in the chest, killing him in cold blood. The police also killed a 25 year old war veteran who suffered from PTSD. Last month, members of the APD carried out a merciless murder against a homeless man. In addition, the police abuse their method of deploying tasers against people in non-threatening situations. Indeed, very sadly, Albuquerque’s police brutality has reached a boiling point.
As the chilling murders come to light, protesters and activists have taken to the streets of Albuquerque to protest the institutional violence running rampant in the state’s most populated city. Anonymous, the ragtag collection of hackers and social justice activists, have organized  the political onslaught of the police department. It is not the first time the internet collective has inserted itself in corruption. During Occupy Wall Street, many members of Anonymous took to the streets of New York and Boston, wearing “Guy Fawkes” masks on their faces to protest the economic inequity in the United States. This was seen by many that were involved in the Occupy movement as hijacking the cause. Anonymous is notorious, in part due to their fame on underground sites like 4chan and Reddit, for inciting chaos and turning the lives of the corrupt upside down. They were also responsible for the leaked video that implicated the Steubenville rapists.
Anonymous has power, and for better or worse, they are using it to take to the streets of Albuquerque to bring about change. However, as is often the case with protests overseas, riot police infiltrated the peaceful protests and dispersed tear gas among the demonstrators. This was the direct provocation that resulted in the protesters to throw rocks at the police and vandalize the police station. The violent standoff has been widely condemned by people across the nation, with most – if not all – aligning themselves ideologically with the protesters and Anonymous.
With widespread violence in recent weeks, and a wanton disregard for the own law they swore to uphold, Albuquerque’s police department and their brutality has reached a boiling point. That point is a point of no return, and things will surely change now that an entire national audience has its eyes on APD’s every move.
The U.S. Department of Justice has released a scathing report on the brutality, citing over 20 killings by the hands of the Albuquerque police. Those who were not killed, have been systematically abused and harassed with beatings, and tasers. In one instance, a man who doused himself in gasoline was engulfed in flames when the police responded to the self immolation with a taser. Though he lived, there is no excuse for the severity of systemic misconduct. There is no excuse for over 20 people killed by people sworn to protect. There was no situation in which the police had to fear for their own lives. Further, any impeding investigation into these tragedies have been buried by the architects of the police institution in the city, effectively allowing the abuse to continue. Those days are minimally numbered, however, as these abuses come to national light. As in Turkey, it is possible that America will see a purge or re-shuffling of the members of the Albuquerque police station. Hopefully, it will be the former, so they can stand trial for their actions.


Roseville officers accused of beating immigrant


by Maury Glover

ROSEVILLE, Minn.

He says he was wrestled to the ground and had a Taser used against him during a routine traffic stop in Roseville, and he's doing more than claiming the cops went too far -- he's taking them to court.
The attorney representing Victor Hernandez told Fox 9 News police used excessive force last year, assaulting a young man and violating his civil rights even though he had done nothing wrong.
Video footage shows police pull over a car that was spotted speeding near Lexington Avenue and Highway 36 last May. Once the car stops, the driver runs off and an officer chases after him. A full minute and a half later, Hernandez starts to get out of the front passenger seat -- but that's when the officer who chased the driver returned and threw Hernandez to the ground.
The force of the takedown broke the cell phone Hernandez had in his hand at the time, but his attorney said the violence didn't stop there.
The officer used a Taser on Hernandez, who does not speak English, a total of three times while yelling at him. Within seconds, three other officers join in, punching and kicking the 25-year-old Mexican immigrant while he lay moaning on the ground.
"I don't think he understood what the order was because of the language barrier," attorney Paul Edlund, who is representing Hernandez, told Fox 9 News.
Hernandez's attorneys say Roseville police not only used excessive force by assaulting Hernandez during what they call a "false arrest," but they say officers also violated his civil rights.
"Citizens have a right to be free of unlawful, excessive force from the police department," Edlund said. "Victor has that right, and that's clearly not what happened here."
According to attorneys, the dashcam video proves Hernandez did not resist or obstruct the legal process, which is why prosecutors eventually dropped all charges against him.
"I think a lot of people don't believe defendants because they are seen as criminals and I think people tend to believe the police," Edlund said. "Without the video, it's hard to prove a lot of times they've done what they've done."
While Edlund says the bruises visible in Hernandez's mug shot have healed, the emotional scars remain open and raw.
"Had the officers not encountered someone who was not a young Hispanic male, they would have dealt with the situation much differently than they did from the inception," Edlund contends.
Edlund also said he is concerned by the way those officers behaved in front of a camera, and said the ordeal is "a prime example of a case where the officer is making decisions that don't reflect the reality that is unfolding before him."
"I think this message needs to get hammered home to officers: This behavior isn't acceptable at all," Edlund said.




Off-duty North Bergen cop charged with biting man's thigh



By Michaelangelo Conte 

An off-duty North Bergen police officer has been charged with biting a man’s thigh and causing serious injury during an early morning fight in North Hudson Park, officials said.
Officer Alex J. Guzman, 34, of Wood-Ridge, made his first court appearance Wednesday on the charges of aggravated assault and making terroristic threats in connection to the incident which occurred just after midnight on April 8 in James J. Braddock North Hudson Park, officials said.
Arrested on the night of the incident was the other person allegedly involved, Joffre Alcantara, 35, of Cliffside Park, who was charged with aggravated assault and weapons offenses related to a knife, officials said.
Guzman assaulted Alcantara by “biting the victim’s inner right thigh through blue jeans, causing serious bodily injury to Mr. Alcantara,” the criminal complaint says.
The officer threatened to kill Alcantara and put him in “imminent fear of death” by calling him four times within a 10-minute time span, saying “I’m going to kill you. I will end this now,” the complaint says.
Alcantara used a knife “to cause bodily injury to the victim Mr. Alex Guzman by slashing him behind his ear,” says the complaint against Alcantara.
That night Guzman was taken to Palisade Medical Center, where he was treated and released, officials said. The warrant for his arrest was signed on Tuesday.
Guzman was released into his own custody.
The amount at which Alcantara’s bail was set was not available, but an official at the Hudson County jail in Kearny said yesterday that no one by that name is being held at the facility.



Asbury Park to investigate reports of police brutality in large fight



Nicquel Terry  

ASBURY PARK — The city Police Department has launched an internal investigation into reports of police brutality against citizens during a large fight early Saturday on Springwood Avenue.
Police Chief Mark Kinmon said Wednesday that a number of community members contacted police last weekend and said officers were overly aggressive during the fight. However, no one has filed a formal complaint, he said.
“They were upset that the police were rough and used excessive force,” Kinmon said. “That’s when Monday morning, we sat down and I instructed our internal affairs unit: ‘Don’t wait for someone to come forward; look into it.’ ”
Who is policing police conduct?
The fight started outside Porta, a popular restaurant nightclub, about 2 a.m. Saturday and then spilled over to Springwood Avenue, where six people were arrested and one person was hospitalized, Kinmon said.
The incident prompted City Councilman John Moor to call on city police to put restrictions on the nightclub, saying the fights and other disruptive behavior have become “a disgrace to the city.”
At the council meeting Wednesday, at least three residents expressed concerns about police brutality stemming from the fight. Among those was Duanne Small, who brought 25-year-old Shakeria Hill to the podium with him to show the audience her broken arm.
Hill was one of the six people arrested after the fight that involved 100 people, police
Small said a police officer pulled Hill by her hair and slammed her on the ground. He also said 24-year-old Knoryl Hammer was hospitalized for a concussion, brain bleeding and bruised lungs because of police aggressiveness.
Hammer, charged with aggravated assault on a police officer, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and obstructing the investigation of a police officer, also attended the meeting.
“The police viciously beat them in the streets and claimed that it was a fight to justify their actions,” Small said. “No one was ever out there on that street fighting. I watched seven videos, and not once did I see any of these kids fighting.”
Kinmon said neither Hill or Hammer has filed complaints, but he encourages those who believe they experienced police brutality to assist the department in its investigation.
Moor said Wednesday was the first time he had heard of the reports of police brutality. And Councilwoman Amy Quinn said the city would be following up on the incidents.
Kinmon said this is not the first time police in Asbury Park have been accused of brutality.
“Am I concerned about widespread police brutality or police misconduct by the Asbury Park police? No,” Kinmon said. “But when we can identify an officer involved and that he or she acted inappropriately ... we take action.”
'Wild, wild West'
Meanwhile, Moor on Wednesday demanded city officials put restrictions on Porta, which attracts hundreds of people on weekend nights and often has a line wrapped around the building.
The venue serves as a restaurant specializing in pizza during the day hours and also hosts events.
“It’s like the wild, wild West down there,” Moor said. “We continue to bring (the owners) in and slap them on the wrist, and it’s doing no good.”
Kinmon said he and City Manager Jack Kelly planned to meet with Porta’s owners Thursday to discuss solutions to the issues. The club owners did not immediately respond Thursday to an emailed request for comment.
Kinmon said Porta attracts a “dangerous-sized crowd that is somewhat unmanageable at times.” Also, there have been reports of disorderly drunken patrons in nearby neighborhoods, as well as trash on the streets.
The club also is putting a strain on the city’s police department because many patrol officers have to respond to calls at Porta on weekends, Kinmon said. Porta employs one or two off-duty police officers, but it’s not enough, he said.
“We assign our personnel where we think they are needed the most,” Kinmon said. “When they are pulled away from there to respond to large fight calls at Porta, it takes away from what we want them doing ... addressing violent crime, gangs and gun violence.”
If conditions don’t improve, the club could risk having its liquor license suspended, be forced to reduce its hours or temporarily close, he said. The City Council would have the authority to make that decision.
Moor said he wants to see a signed agreement between the city and Porta owners that requires the club to hire more security.

“My intentions are not to close the venue down,” Moor said. “My intentions are to make them a nice establishment that isn’t killing the police department and making everyone in that general area miserable.”

Baltimore officer jailed for assaulting suspect in break-in of girlfriend's home


By Ian Duncan

A Baltimore judge sent a police officer to jail on Wednesday for 45 days after he was convicted of beating a drug suspect who had broken into his girlfriend's home, a rare punishment for a police misconduct case.
A sheriff's deputy clicked handcuffs around Anthony Williams' wrists as his family screamed and sobbed from the public benches. Williams was led out of the court, across the busy public area of the downtown courthouse and into the lockup. The door slammed behind him.
 "This case was very troubling to this court," Judge M. Brooke Murdock said before handing down the sentence. "The community has a right to expect the police will respect the law."
Few Baltimore police officers have been locked up as the result of convictions for crimes ranging from misconduct to assault in recent years. Out of 23 officers prosecuted since State's Attorney Gregg L. Bernstein took office in 2011, Williams is the second sentenced to incarceration, according to court records.
Prosecutors say they have asked for jail time in other cases, but have seen their sentencing requests rejected by judges. Data on prosecutions before Bernstein's tenure were not available Wednesday.
Prosecutors hope the next to be locked up is Sgt. Marinos N. Gialamas who was convicted of misconduct in connection with the Williams case. They have asked the judge to give him a 60-day term at his sentencing Friday, according to court documents.
"In this case, Sgt. Gialamas strayed far outside the boundaries of legitimate police power," prosecutors wrote, "and used his status in a manner that violated the public's trust and dishonored the badge of the Baltimore Police Department."
Gialamas' attorney could not be reached for comment.
The case underscores the difficulty of investigating police misconduct. A detective who testified against the two officers told Baltimore County police that he returned to his car one morning to find a dead rat on the windshield. Nobody has been charged in that incident, and the two officers have denied any involvement.
The two officers were convicted in the beating of Antoine Green, who had fled police investigating a suspected drug deal and broke into the home of Nakishia Epps, Williams' girlfriend. Police arrived, took Green into custody and began to drive him away in a wagon, but Gialamas ordered him brought back to the house after the off-duty Williams arrived.
As a crowd watched in the street, according to court documents, Green was taken back into the home — still in cuffs — and attacked by Williams.
In February, a jury convicted Williams of assault and obstructing a subsequent internal affairs investigation into the 2011 incident.
In one interview with detectives, Epps said that Green had tried to attack Williams. But she later recanted the story, saying Williams had told her what to say when she spoke to internal affairs.
In an interview on Wednesday, Epps maintained that the first account is true — that Green did attack Williams. She said that Williams did not coach her and that she only said that because she was angry after learning that he had a wife.
 A year after the break-in, Epps told Baltimore County police that Williams had assaulted her, which officers later deemed to be untrue and charged her with making a false statement. That case was ultimately placed on an inactive docket, meaning prosecutors aren't likely to pursue it.
Williams' wife, Nicole Williams, testified on his behalf at the sentencing. "I love my husband," she said.
Williams said he became a police officer because he wanted to be like a superhero in the community. He maintained that he had done nothing wrong and was merely trying to protect his girlfriend.
"Would I change what I did that day? No," Williams told the judge.
But prosecutor Paul Pineau said the situation at the house was under control until Williams arrived. Pineau said Green had feared for his life during the beating because he was surrounded by armed and emotional men.
Green did not testify at the sentencing.
Pineau sought a slightly longer sentence for Williams and said he thought jail time would help send a "powerful message" to other police officers tempted to do wrong.
Prosecutors previously dropped drug, burglary and assault charges against Green in the case. Epps said she felt that she had not received justice.
Baltimore Police Deputy Commissioner Jerry Rodriguez said in a statement that the sentence reflected the department's commitment to holding its officers accountable and "to hold ourselves to a higher standard."
Detective Joseph Crystal had agreed to testify against the two officers. He also reported to Baltimore County police that he found the dead rat, which he took as a sign that he had been branded as a snitch.
Crystal didn't attend the sentencing, but his wife, Nicole Crystal, did. Nicole Crystal said that while she is proud of her husband for taking the stand against his fellow officers, she still fears for his safety.
"I'm scared because I don't know if another officer is going to put him in the morgue or the hospital," she said after the hearing.


City pays heavy price for police brutality

Andy Shaw

In Chicago, the term “police brutality” is inextricably linked to former Cmdr. Jon Burge’s sadistic South Side homicide squad, which imposed extreme measures, including torture, to extract false confessions from dozens of suspects.
Burge’s “Midnight Crew” may be the most visible symbol of excessive force, but from a legal and fiscal standpoint they’re actually a relatively small part of a shockingly pervasive citywide problem uncovered by a Better Government Association investigation the Sun-Times published a week ago.
Brutality-related lawsuits have cost Chicago taxpayers $521 million over the last decade — that’s more than half a billion dollars — and Burge’s team accounts only for about 15 percent of that staggering figure.
In 2013 alone, the city paid out $84.6 million in settlements, judgments, legal fees and other expenses, more than triple the budgeted amount.
That’s a huge expenditure for a city with billions of dollars in unfunded pension obligations, and a budget crisis severe enough to force mental health clinic shutdowns, reduced library hours and higher fees for water, parking and other services.
We’re not suggesting victims of police brutality don’t deserve to be compensated — in some cases no amount of money can make up for ruined lives and lost loved ones — but at a time when Mayor Rahm Emanuel is contemplating painful tax and fee increases to deal with the pension crisis, the budget impact of police misconduct is huge.
The half-billion spent on these cases could have built five state-of-the-art high schools and more than 30 libraries, repaved 500 miles of arterial streets, or paid off a big chunk of the pension bill.
An Emanuel spokesman says the city is dealing with the problem of excessive force by expanding police training, and hoping to discourage lawsuits by taking more cases to trial instead of settling out of court.
Obviously, the mayor doesn’t want alleged victims to view City Hall as an ATM, but with nearly 500 misconduct-related cases still pending, the image is unavoidable, and more seven-figure payouts seem inevitable.
Chicago, sadly, is beating the competition in a race it doesn’t want to win.
Los Angeles, which has a similar-sized police force, paid out $20 million in brutality-related legal claims last year, less than a quarter of Chicago’s outlay.
The last time Chicago spent less than that was $18.5 million in 2005.
Philadelphia, with a force half the size of Chicago’s, shelled out $9 million.
New York City’s last available payout figure is $152 million, almost double last year’s Chicago number, but its population and police force are three times as large.
Just to be clear, many brutality claims are fabricated, and most of Chicago’s 12,500 cops do good work and never face misconduct charges, despite the violence they confront on a daily basis in too many neighborhoods.
But criminal justice experts say the department has deep-seated problems, including a tendency to circle the wagons and protect officers who misbehave, a reluctance to punish serial brutalizers, and a “code of silence” that encourages cops not to report rogue colleagues.
Until that culture changes, experts say, bad behavior will continue, and so will super-sized payments to victims and lawyers.
Silence may be golden in some places.
But when it enables police misconduct, it’s intolerable, unaffordable and in desperate need of major reform.