Friday 5 December 2014

Police brutality

Man who filmed Eric Garner in chokehold says grand jury was rigged
Ramsey Orta — who recorded the July 17 incident in which Officer Daniel Pantaleo put Eric Garner in a chokehold shortly before he died on his cellphone — told the Daily News the grand jury ‘wasn’t fair from the start,’ and claims his testimony only lasted 10 minutes. ‘I think they already had their minds made up,’ he said.


4 December, 2014

The Staten Island man who took the cellphone video seen around the world of a cop killing Eric Garner with a chokehold said Thursday the grand jury was rigged.
I think they already had their minds made up,” Ramsey Orta told the Daily News a day after the panel voted not to charge Officer Daniel Pantaleo with a crime.

I feel like it wasn't fair at all,” he said. “It wasn't fair from the start.”

Orta said he arrived at the Richmond County courthouse on Sept. 1 prepared to be grilled for hours about what happened on July 17, when cops confronted Garner on a Tompkinsville street for selling unlicensed cigarettes.

Ten minutes later, Orta said he was one.

When I went to the grand jury to speak on my behalf, nobody in the grand jury was even paying attention to what I had to say,” Orta said. “People were on their phones, people were talking. I feel like they didn't give (Garner) a fair grand jury."


Ramsey Orta speaks on Eric Garner chokehold case decision (HD)
NY Daily News
People was on their phones, people were having side conversations, like it was just a regular day to them,” he said of the jurors.


Orta, 22, said his appearance before the panel started two hours late because some of the jurors had not shown up. 

Then someone turned on the disturbing video of Pantaleo subduing Garner, which was first obtained by The News, and which shocked New York and the nation.

They were asking me piece by piece — where I was, where I was standing at, if I was the one who shot the video,” he said of the prosecutors.

A man he described as a prosecutor “wasn’t even asking no questions about the police officer, he was asking all the questions towards Eric,” Orta said. “What was Eric doing there? Why was Eric there?”

Nothing pertaining to the cop choking him,” he said.

Only a few jurors asked any questions.

Maybe three, that’s all,” he said. “The rest of them, they weren't even worried about nothing.”


T
Those that did pose questions were also more focused on Garner than Pantaleo, he said.

One grand juror asked me, ‘If you knew he was selling cigarettes why didn't you tell him the cops was there?’” he said.


Orta said he told the female juror, “Well miss, we know the cops is there every day, but the man has to make a living, some way, somehow.”

I said, ‘First of all, you ain't gonna tell me how to talk,’” he said. “These are my feelings and I feel like there should be no sugar coating.”


Garner died after the struggle with police. He allegedly yelled, ‘I can’t breathe’ during the incident.ACQUIRED BY: TOMAS E. GASTONGarner died after the struggle with police. He allegedly yelled, ‘I can’t breathe’ during the incident.


Orta said prosecutors “brushed it off.”

They actually cut my time short,” Orta said. “My lawyer told me I was supposed to be in there for at least a half an hour and I only stayed maybe 10 minutes.”

A spokesman for Donovan’s office refused to comment on Orta’s account.
Orta said he feels the Garner family was cheated and is glad the Justice Department will investigate the killing.

Orta says his grand jury testimony only lasted 10 minutes. ‘I think they already had their minds made up.’

The feds should pick it up,” he said. “Staten Island is too tied up. They all know each other. They won’t violate their own kid.”

Asked if was surprised by the decision, Orta said, “I knew this was going to be the verdict.”

Orta said the jurors saw the video that everybody else saw and still wouldn’t charge Pantaleo with a crime.

We shouldn't have to fight for it, it's plain, it's right there,” he said.

Otra’s remarks were echoed by 37-year-old Rodney Lee, manager of the beauty supply store in front of which Garner was killed.

The way the jury looked at me, I felt like they were suspicious of me,” Lee said. “I told them what I saw and that was it. They didn't ask me how I feel about it, what it looked like, what I thought.”

Lee said he appeared before the panel on Oct. 22 and testified for “about 10 minutes.”

I’m pretty sure there were about 20 of us saying the same thing, that this was not right,” he said. “They all treated us like we were dumb, like we didn't know nothing ... I mean, what was the point of us even being there if they weren't going to listen to us?”


The only person indicted over Eric Garner's death was the guy who filmed it




4 December, 2014

Remarkably, the video of unarmed black man Eric Garner being choked to death by Daniel Pantaleo didn't lead to the indictment of the police officer, yet the man who filmed it is now in prison.

The world was stunned today as a Staten Island grand jury decided Pantaleo did not act improperly when he placed Garner, whom he believed to be selling untaxed cigarettes, in a chokehold which caused him to plead "I can't breathe" before dying shortly after.

The incident was caught on camera and quickly went viral.

The man who filmed it, Ramsey Orta, was arrested in August a month after the tragedy for allegedly concealing a handgun in a teenage accomplace's waistband outside a New York hotel.

He testified that police brought the charges in retaliation to his dissemination of the Eric Garner video, but the grand jury ignored him, indicting him on multiple firearm charges.

Garner was the latest in a series of killings of unarmed black men by white police officers in the US this year that have not seen prosecutions, following on from Michael Brown whose death caused riots in Ferguson, Missouri.

It is incredibly rare for a grand jury not to return an indictment (according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, of the 162,000 federal cases US attorneys prosecuted in 2010 grand juries only declined to return an indictment in 11 of them), but the data tells a very different story when it is police officers in the dock





Lt Mike Denton, fired for beating this man on video, gets his job back






Perhaps the best way to deal with this is through satire
Police Officer Demonstrates Proper Technique For Subduing Grand Jury


4 December, 2014


NEW YORK—Saying that the maneuver was 100 percent effective if administered correctly, police captain Matthew Carlson demonstrated the proper technique for subduing a grand jury to a group of younger officers Thursday. 

“First and foremost, it’s important to get a strong, firm hold on the state-level district attorney’s office before you do anything else—that way, you’re making sure you never put yourself in any direct danger,” said Carlson, who explained a series of self-defense moves that would ensure grand jurors interpret the law in such a way as to give police the widest latitude in justifying the use of force, adding that performing the moves correctly would cause jurors to submit to the officer’s will “in no time at all.” 

“When you’re out there facing a prosecutor’s questions about whether you were acting lawfully and with discretion, you won’t have time to think. And that’s why it’s important that all of you master this technique now, because inevitably, many of you will find yourselves in a situation where you’ll need to call on this training. But used properly, these methods will stop any prosecution in its tracks well before there’s an indictment.” 

Carlson went on to stress that subduing a grand jury is a last-ditch option, and that officers should always try to thwart any investigation well before there are official proceedings

DOJ: Cleveland police have exhibited a pattern of excessive force


U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.(Reuters / Yuri Gripas)


RT,
4 December, 2014

United States Attorney General Eric Holder said Thursday that the police department of Cleveland, Ohio has engaged in a pattern of excessive force during the last few years.

Speaking from Cleveland, Holder said that a year-and-a-half-long investigation launched by the US Department of Justice has uncovered evidence of “systematic deficiencies,” “inadequate training” and “ineffective policies” exhibited by local law enforcement between 2010 and 2013.

There have been examples of “unreasonable and unnecessary use of force by the Cleveland division of police” during that span, Holder said, evidenced by 600 examples within just three years’ time, along with what he described as “inadequate engagement with the community” on behalf of the police.

The attorney general’s remarks came roughly 24 hours after a grand jury in New York declined to indict a police officer there in relation to the chokehold death of Eric Garner earlier this year. Combined with other instances of deadly force demonstrated by police in Ferguson, Missouri and, even more recently, Cleveland, Holder said these incidents have “raised urgent national questions.”

Last month, a Cleveland police officer fatally shot a 12-year-old boy holding a toy gun at an area playground.

On the heels of that ordeal and others, Holder said that a “sense of trust” must be renewed between law enforcement personnel “and the communities that they serve and protect.”

The DOJ and the city of Cleveland have come together to set in motion a process that will remedy these issues,” Holder said.


It's not only America where the police are totally out of control


Brutal police beating of model shocks Australia
A video showing three Sydney police officers brutally beating a young woman has gone viral, with over 750,000 views on Facebook. During the clip, the victim is repeatedly hit with a police baton and appears to be kicked in the head by a male office.


Reuters/Darren Whiteside

RT,
4 December, 2014


Police brutality has been hitting the headlines in the US, but now it seems the unfortunate trend has made its way to Australia. The woman in question, Claire Helen, who works as a model and actress and was on the receiving end of recurring blows from a police officer, said: It was the most frightening and humiliating experience of my life.”

Law enforcement officers allege that Helen punched a policewoman in the mouth, as well as resisting arrest – an action that the model stringently denies. "They pushed me down. They hit me and kicked me. They pulled my dress over my head," she said, speaking to Channel Nine. Onlookers could be heard shouting, 

"Let her go," and, "She's not resisting arrest.”




Helen, who is 1 meter, 60 centimeters tall and weighs 55 kilograms, insists she was just enjoying a quiet night out when she was accosted by law enforcement officers, who were much bigger than her.

"We weren't drunk. We'd been with people playing soccer and went out to have a few drinks. I'm not the sort of person who goes out getting pissed on a Wednesday night. I'm trying to make it as a model and actress. I can't go out every night getting wasted. I definitely don't ever get in circumstances like this,"she told Channel Nine news.

The incident happened in the Kings Cross area of Sydney, which is home to a number of bars and nightclubs, after Helen and a group of friends haggled over a taxi fare, according to police. The law enforcement agency also added that a male member of the group punched the taxi driver in the stomach.
However, Helen alleges that the taxi driver had charged the group the wrong amount, which led to the trouble starting.
View image on Twitter
Sydney actress says she's the victim of brutal police assault....details on @7NewsSydney at 6
"He had the meter running before we got in, so we got out," she said. "He said something to us and we said something back, but then he pushed one of my friends and called the police. Then the police showed up and you saw what happened," she added, Channel Nine reported.


The video has taken the internet by storm and has already been viewed by over three quarters of a million people on Facebook. Many users criticized Helen and defended the police. 

One woman wrote:She deserved it. You’re supposed to respect your elders and respect the law,” with another adding,She’s not resisting arrest?? Really... I thought that if you weren't resisting they would’ve had the cuffs on you 1 sec into the video… she got what she deserved.... hopefully that taught her a lesson.”

Kings Cross Superintendent Michael Fitzgerald said he was satisfied police had used appropriate force, adding: "Police are not punching bags, neither are taxi drives."

Darlinghurst Rd, Kings Cross, Sydney (Photo from wikipedia.org)
Darlinghurst Rd, Kings Cross, Sydney (Photo from wikipedia.org)

He added that police have reviewed CCTV footage of the incident, and they say it justified why they took such a heavy-handed approach.


"I have viewed the footage that has been uploaded on social media," Fitzgerald said. "But I've also had the opportunity to view the entire CCTV from the City of Sydney cameras which shows the entire incident. [It] clearly shows the female offender punch the female police officer in an unprovoked assault which caused the wrestle that you see on YouTube," Fitzgerald added, ABC News reported.

The officer who repeatedly struck Helen with a police baton will not face any charges, police said. Helen and three men have been arrested with a range of offences, including assaulting a police officer, assault, affray and resisting arrest. 
They have been granted bail until a court hearing on January 6.

Commentary from RT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.