New Orleans Cops charged with battery ON VIDEO

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Apr 1, 2002
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http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/10/10/taped.beatings.ap/index.html

A videotape made by the Associated Press Television News crew shows two patrolmen repeatedly punching a man identified as 64-year-old Robert Davis. The tape shows a third officer grabbing and shoving an APTN producer.

After a brief hearing, at which trial was set for January 11, the officers were released on bond. They quickly left in cars without commenting.

They were suspended without pay Sunday, police spokesman Marlon Defillo said. The police promised a criminal investigation.

"It's a troubling tape, no doubt about it," Defillo said. (Watch raw footage of the beating -- 1:26)

The confrontations come as the department -- long plagued by allegations of brutality and corruption -- struggles with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the resignation last month of Police Superintendent Eddie Compass.

The APTN tape shows an officer hitting the suspect, Davis, at least four times in the head Saturday night outside a French Quarter bar. Davis appeared to resist, twisting and flailing as he was dragged to the ground by four officers.

Another of the officers then kneed Davis and punched him twice. Davis was face-down on the sidewalk with blood streaming down his arm and into the gutter. ( Watch video of what Davis looked like after the beating -- 2:27)

Then a fifth officer ordered APTN producer Rich Matthews and the cameraman to stop recording. When Matthews held up his credentials, the officer grabbed the producer, leaned him backward over a car, jabbed him in the stomach and unleashed a profanity-laced tirade.

"I've been here for six weeks trying to keep ... alive. ... Go home!" shouted the officer, who identified himself as S.M. Smith.

In addition to Smith, the other officers charged were identified as Lance Schilling and Robert Evangelist. Smith is an eight-year veteran of the force, while Evangelist and Schilling have served three years each.

"The incidents taped by our cameraman are extremely troubling," said Mike Silverman, AP's managing editor. "We are heartened that the police department is taking them seriously and promising a thorough investigation."

Police said Davis, of New Orleans, was booked on public intoxication, resisting arrest, battery on a police officer and public intimidation. He was treated at a hospital and released into police custody.

A mug shot of Davis, provided by a jailer, showed him with his right eye swollen shut, an apparent abrasion on the left side of his neck and a cut on his right temple.

Davis, who is black, was subdued at the intersection of Conti and Bourbon streets. Three of the officers appeared to be white, and the other is light skinned. The officer who hit Matthews is white. Defillo said race was not an issue.

Two of the officers in the video appeared to be federal officers. Numerous agencies have sent police to help with patrols in the aftermath of Katrina, and Defillo said it would be up to their commanders to decide if they would face charges.

Under normal circumstances, it takes unusually offensive behavior to trigger an arrest on Bourbon Street. But New Orleans police have been working under stressful conditions since the hurricane. About 300 officers apparently either died, abandoned their posts or disappeared for some other reason.

Those who stayed slept in their cars and worked 24-hour shifts after the storm. Three-quarters lost their homes and their families are scattered across the country.

"Our police officers are working under some very trying times," Defillo said. "So it's a difficult time, but it doesn't excuse what our jobs are supposed to be."

Conditions have improved -- officers now have beds on a cruise ship -- but they don't have private rooms and are still working five, 12-hour days.

Compass, the police superintendent, resigned September 27. Despite more than 10 years of reform efforts dating to before he took office, police were dogged by allegations of brutality and corruption.

On Friday, state authorities said they were investigating allegations that New Orleans police broke into a dealership and made off with nearly 200 cars -- including 41 new Cadillacs -- as the storm closed in. (Full story)



YOU KNOW they would of gotten away with it if it wasn't for the video tape and reporters. Fucked up this is the by-standers just watching knowing damn well the cops were using excessive force. Look at the beating and afterwards, they didn't even send an ambulance, just left him in pain bleeding.
 
Jul 10, 2002
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They some of the most if not THE most corrupt PD in the nation. Why do you think half of 'em threw away their badge a gear during the heat of the Chaos in the storm... Them crooked cops didn't want anything they had coming....
 
Jun 17, 2004
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JoMoDo said:
They some of the most if not THE most corrupt PD in the nation. Why do you think half of 'em threw away their badge a gear during the heat of the Chaos in the storm... Them crooked cops didn't want anything they had coming....
To be honest i would have done the same.. that is throw away my badge and get me and my family the hell outta there. Police brutality happens everywhere.
 
May 4, 2002
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he was tryin to get his face out of the pool of his own blood and the cop kept kickin him back into the blood, some fucked up shit..... notice how the cops threatened everyone who tryed to say something, and tryed to block the beating with the cop on the horse
 
Oct 5, 2005
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#10
No, 250 officers were unaccounted for, which means they were missing. I'm sure plenty of them fled the Hurricane, but I can garuntee a ton of them died.
 
May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
#13
No, I’m telling you that your claim of “a ton of them died” is unsupported and false.

Do you know why I know this? Because the officers have been accounted for and may be held accountable and receive disciplinary actions.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4288374.stm

Earlier, the police department said it would conduct an investigation into nearly 250 officers who failed to report for duty after the hurricane.

The officers - about 15% of the force - could face discipline for going absent without permission.
 
Oct 5, 2005
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Yes, I'm sure there were officers who fled like cowards and are probably living it up in some hotel somewhere, but there's no way in hell that out of 250 officers in a hurricane that not one of them died
 
May 13, 2002
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#15
Ok, for one, the total police force is not 250 police officers - as I pointed out, 250 officers is 15% of total amount of the N.O police force, second, I'm not saying any police officers did not die, I'm saying that a total of 250 officers are under investigation for NOT doing their jobs and deserting N.O. These aren’t men who died or were fucked up in some way by the storm, these are cowardly men/women who decided they didn’t want to help the people of N.O. Comprende?
 
Oct 5, 2005
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OK. THERE ARE 249 PEOPLE MISSING. NO ONE CAN MAKE THE JUDGEMENT CALL AT THIS POINT AND ASSUME WHERE THEY ALL ARE, ALL THEY KNOW IS THAT THEY'RE MISSING.

AND BY POSTING THIS LINK U BROUGHT UP ANOTHER POINT THAT MAKES U LOOK EVEN MORE WRONG.

At a news conference September 5, Deputy Police Superintendent Warren Riley had said between 400 and 500 officers on the 1,600-member police force were unaccounted for.

Some lost their homes and some are looking for their families. "Some simply left because they said they could not deal with the catastrophe," Riley said.
 
May 13, 2002
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#19
And of the 400 to 500 249 officers are being investigated for abandoning their post. The 249 officers are NOT missing. Comprende? 249 officers were found to have been absent without permission.

There is no denying the fact that some police deserted their post and even participated in the looting (and even stole 200+ cars, see below), which is my entire point about the corruption that exists in the N.O police department.

As far as I know, only two police officers died and that was a result of suicide, not Katrina. There is speculation over whether they committed suicide because of the horrible things they saw or if the two officers were afraid of being exposed for corruption that they may or may not have been involved in.


Car theft:

State authorities are investigating allegations that New Orleans police officers broke into an auto dealership and made off with nearly 200 cars -- including 41 new Cadillacs -- as Hurricane Katrina closed in.

"It is a very, very active investigation," Kris Wartelle, spokeswoman for the Louisiana attorney general, said Friday. "We expect developments quickly." Wartelle would not comment on why the officers may have taken the cars or whether…

http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we...rpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&xcal_useweights=no