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Major League: Cop Busted for Steroids

Posted by Roy Edroso at 8:02 AM, July 16, 2008

nypdbadge.jpgAs a perhaps unintentional tribute to last night's All-Star Game, the New York Daily News reports that the NYPD has dismissed an officer who tested positive for steroids.

Officer Daniel Zehrer is "vigrously contesting" the charge, a PBA attorney told the News. Zehrer was suspended without pay on July 1, the first day of NYPD testing.

Zehrer is the first officer dismissed in an anti-steroid drive that began last fall with the announcement that six cops were being investigated for steroid abuse. The Village Voice reported in December that steroids were certainly more widely used on the Force: "The Voice has learned that the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office knows of 29 cops and at least 10 NYPD civilian employees — all well under the age of 60 — who have received prescriptions for hypogonadism. The treatment for it just happens to be steroids."

This is an issue because, as the Voice reported in a follow-up this month, some police busts have been tainted by allegations that the arresting officers were suffering "'roid rage" when they nabbed their suspects.

There's nothing about this at the PBA website, but at THEE RANT, the successor site to cop site NYPD Rant, posters are generally unsympathetic to steroid prosecution of cops. "If they can scrape up a million bucks extra a year to try and screw us, why can't they find it to help us?" wrote Douch Bigelow in an April discussion. "Until they start testing firefighters, teachers, san-men, etc," wrote NYPDiddy, "we should get additional compensation for our (necessary) loss of privacy."

comments: 0

Brian McLaughlin's Booze Excuse

Posted by Tom Robbins at 12:45 PM, July 3, 2008

Scandal-scarred ex-city labor leader Brian McLaughlin, the former Queens Assemblyman who has admitted to stealing $2 million from everyone from the local little league to electrical contractors, is finally talking about his misdeeds. The culprit, he tells Newsday’s Dan Janison, was that old devil booze.

“In my case alcohol was a factor in some of what I did," he told Janison during an interview in a Flushing coffee shop.

McLaughlin added: "You're out of touch with the emotional needs of your wife and family, those that matter the most to you, largely without recognizing it. And unable to recognize it, because every day your work schedule and your personal lifestyle kind of take on a habit and a culture of their own.”

Yes, and there was that million-dollar spread on Long Island’s north shore, the mistresses, etc. Totally out of touch.

McLaughlin is due to be sentenced September 12 in federal court in Manhattan. He faces 8-10 years in prison.

comments: 1

Domestic Workers Rally for Protection Outside of L.I. Slavery Sentencing

Posted by Maria Luisa Tucker at 3:05 PM, June 26, 2008

As the Muttontown millionaires convicted of enslaving and physically abusing their two housekeepers were awaiting sentencing at Suffolk County Criminal Court this morning, a crowd of nannies, housekeepers and activists rallied outside.

Last year, the husband and wife perfume magnates, Varsha Mahender Sabhnani and Mahender Murlidhar Sabhnani, were convicted of forced labor and several other charges and will be sentenced today and tomorrow. The duo faces up to 15 years behind bars and could be ordered to pay as much as $1.1 million in back wages.

Several activist groups based in New York City, lead by Domestic Workers United, used the dramatic day—and the shocking descriptions of abuse—to once again call for systemic changes in the way domestic workers are treated by the law.

"Our main message has been that this is not simply an exception, that there's case after case of these types of abuses," said Marisa Franco, a DWU organizer.

A survey of domestic workers, mentioned last year in a Voice story about legal protections for nannies, noted that 21 percent have been verbally abused and 1 percent physically abused by their employers. The more common complaints are low pay, little job security and no benefits.

For several years, housekeepers and nannies have been working for the passage of a "Domestic Workers Bill of Rights" that would offer health care provisions, overtime pay, vacation benefits and required pay that is above the state minimum wage.

comments: 3

Diane Gordon Gets Two-To-Six for Bribery

Posted by Tom Robbins at 6:10 PM, June 12, 2008

Diane Gordon—the Brooklyn Assemblywoman blinded by house envy—got slammed today with a prison term of two to six years for bribery.

Gordon, 57, was found guilty on April 8 after a month-long trial in which Brooklyn District Attorney’s office played hours of videotapes that showed her oohing and ahhing over architectural drawings that a developer seeking city-owned property promised to build for her—for free.

“You’re making me so excited. Oh my Lord,” Gordon, a Democrat, is heard on one tape as the developer showed her blueprints that included five bedrooms, a Jacuzzi, and a rear patio.

The developer, Raj Batheja, was actually taping the meetings for the city’s Department of Investigation which had caught him in his own scams.

The Youtube clip showcases her negotiating style: the lawmaker discusses how “if everything goes through” she won’t have to pay the $2,000 a month mortgage cost for her fantasy home.

For more on Gordon's treachery, read the Voice's story from March.

comments: 1

The Problem with Ray Kelly, the NYPD and Tasers

Posted by Sean Gardiner at 2:00 PM, June 12, 2008

If you think that Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly—who as a young deputy inspector in 1985 was tasked by then PC Ben Ward to clean up the 106th Precinct after officers there tortured a prisoner with a stun gun—wasn't just blowing smoke when he said he would consider a a pilot program that would arm police officers with stun guns, check out what some cops think an appropriate use of those zappers is.

A drug suspect who Southampton police said they had to Taser twice to stop him from swallowing a potentially lethal amount of cocaine died nine hours later at a Riverhead hospital, Suffolk police said Tuesday.

Det. Lt. Jack Fitzpatrick, commanding officer of the Suffolk County Police Homicide squad, which is investigating the death, said the ingested cocaine, not the Taser shocks, likely caused the death, but a final determination of a cause from the Suffolk County Medical Examiner's office is not expected for several weeks.

No way with a run at the mayor or possible consideration for the top Homeland Security or FBI jobs that Kelly's opening that pandora's box.

After Kelly's announcement this week, Amnesty International has also asked the department to limit its use of tasers:

"Given their questionable safety record, TASERs should be used with extreme caution and not become a weapon of first resort for the NYPD," said Larry Cox, executive director of AIUSA. "Too often police departments have used these weapons as simply an alternative to lower-impact policing techniques."

Amnesty International has tracked more than 300 cases in which individuals in the United States died after being shocked by a TASER. Nine of the deaths were in New York state, and two of them in New York City. In at least 20 cases, coroners have found TASERs to be a causal or contributory factor in the death. In only a small fraction of the 300-plus cases — about 10 percent — were the individuals carrying any kind of weapon.

comments: 1

Hedge Fun Scammer's Disappearance May Be His Latest Con

Posted by Tom Robbins at 6:59 PM, June 11, 2008

The con artist who went over Bear Mountain and never came back yesterday had 300 million good reasons to want to disappear on his way to federal prison to start a 20-year sentence.

Just before his April 18 sentencing for a massive investment con, Samuel Israel was ordered to come up with $300 million in restitution to investors he fleeced, court records show.

Israel’s GMC Envoy was discovered abandoned on the Bear Mountain Bridge yesterday, with a note scrawled in pollen dust on the SUV that “suicide is painless.” Law enforcement officials think the bridge dive gambit is just Israel’s latest con.

Israel left behind a swarm of angry investors. One of them, Edward Conrads, vice president of Colchis Capital Management wrote federal Judge Colleen McMahon in December urging her to throw the book at the scamster.

Israel and his fellow con-artist Daniel Marino “literally ruined many investors’ lives by stealing their hard–earned savings for their personal gain,” wrote Conrads, adding that Israel continued to lie to the investors even after trading was halted in Israel’s Bayou Group LLC hedge fund.

Mark Crossen, executive director of RayneMark Investments, also wrote the judge relating that Israel was bragging to ex-employees that “he ‘knows’ he will never serve a single day in jail due to his current medical condition.” Crossen added that “It is staggering to think of the incredible damage that has been done by the Bayou con artists who plotted systematically to cheat, steal and deceive from those who entrusted them with a basic fiduciary duty.”

Nice guys.

comments: 2

The NYPD's Post-Sean Bell Firearms Study Ignores Race; RAND is Sorry

Posted by Sean Gardiner at 9:29 AM, June 10, 2008

Six weeks after Sean Bell, an unarmed black man, was shot to death in a 50-shot fusillade of police bullets in the fall of 2006, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly held a press conference to announce he was hiring RAND Corp. to undertake an assessment of the NYPD’s weapons use and firearm training procedures.

Because of the timing of the announcement, it was assumed in the media the next day that the study would include a look at the racial breakdown of victims and the police shooters in the hopes of either proving or putting to bed a belief widely held in minority communities that blacks and Latinos are disproportionately the targets of police bullets.

Today, a year and a half after that presser, Kelly again trotted out a lead member of the “think tank” organization to offer RAND’s findings. (FYI, the fact that it was done on a Monday morning instead of Friday evening was the tip off that the "news" would be to Kelly's liking.)

Dr. Bernard Rostker, a former Deputy Secretary of Defense who did the talking for RAND, explained how they reviewed 455 police shooting investigations closed by the department between 2004 and 2006. The gist of his overall message was that the statistics show that NYPD officers are among the most restrained cops in the nation when it comes to shooting their guns. He also spent a lot of time talking about Tasers, even though he said they're more substitutes for fists than firearms.
What Rostker and the $350,000 RAND study didn’t address was race — either of the victims or the police shooters.

When questioned by this Voice reporter about why race wasn’t a component of their study, especially given the proximity of the Bell shooting and the announcement they'd be studying NYPD firearms issues, Rostker admitted “it was not posed to us.” In other words, the NYPD didn’t want them to touch it.

He stammered that a “casual” look at the data suggested that the police officers invovled in shootings roughly followed the ethnic populations of the department.

As for they victims? Nada. Though the NYCLU and other civic rights organization would give their eye teeth for such victim data, RAND didn't go there.

“The point is well taken,” Rostker conceded at the presser. “I would say it was an oversight. Sorry about that.”

comments: 0

Deputy Chief Faces Departmental Charges in NYPD Steroid Scandal

Posted by Sean Gardiner at 12:43 PM, June 6, 2008

As a rookie cop getting pushed around in Harlem, Mike Marino transformed himself from a scrawny 152-pounder to a rock-solid 190-pound gorilla with 18-inch arms and a bench press of 350 lbs.

Twenty years later, Deputy Chief Marino is now reportedly facing NYPD charges of conduct prejudicial to the department after allegedly getting nabbed buying human growth hormones from a doctor at the center of Brooklyn steroid and HGH ring.

Twenty-six other cops have also been implicated in the scandal, as reported by the Voice in December. The still relatively buff Marino's stated his reason for obtaining the juice: low sex drive and a desire to lose weight, reasons an expert told the Voice was "not a legitimate reason" for using the muscle-building drugs.

comments: 1

Carpenters Union Big Goes Back on Trial for Bribery

Posted by Tom Robbins at 10:00 AM, June 3, 2008

What may be the city’s longest running bribery case is back in court this week — ten years after the alleged crime was committed.

Mike Forde, executive secretary of the 25,000-member New York District Council of Carpenters was charged back in 2000 with taking a $50,000 bribe from a mobbed up contractor while dining in 1998 at a midtown Hooter’s restaurant.

Forde didn’t go to trial on those charges until 2004 when he was convicted, along with union business agent Martin Devereaux, of taking cash to allow the builder to violate union work rules during the renovation of the Park Central Hotel on Seventh Avenue.

But the trial judge later overturned the conviction, stating that jurors had improperly discussed the case during deliberations. The judge also said jurors had read an article about it —in the Voice!(“A Mob Soprano Sings", April 13, 2004).

So yesterday Forde and Devereaux were once again facing a jury, as lawyers delivered opening summations.

Manhattan assistant district attorney Michael Scotto, who tried the first case, said the state would prove both men had sold out their membership for money. Rod Lankler, representing Forde, said key witness Sean Richards, a contractor whose father in law was a New Jersey mobster, “was a man who would do anything to avoid his obligations.”

Lawyer Michael Dowd, who is also on his second time around on the case, represents Devereaux. “This is a case based on fabrications,” Dowd told the jury.

The trial is expected to take three to four weeks.

comments: 0

La Di Da Di: Governor Paterson Pardons Slick Rick!

Posted by Michael Clancy at 1:47 PM, May 23, 2008

Here's some news to make that Memorial Day BBQ that much sweeter: The Ruler's back and it looks like he's here to stay.

Governor Paterson has pardoned Ricky Walters. Who? The Grand Wizard aka MC Ricky D aka Slick Rick aka The Ruler. Not frosted flakes.

"Mr. Walters has fully served the sentence imposed upon him for his convictions, had an exemplary disciplinary record while in prison and on parole, and has been living without incident in the community for more than 10 years,” said Governor Paterson in a statement. “In that time, he has volunteered at youth outreach programs to counsel youth against violence, and has become a symbol of rehabilitation for many young people. Given these demonstrated rehabilitative efforts, I urge federal immigration officials to once again grant Mr. Walters relief from deportation, so that he is not separated from his many family members who are United States citizens, including his two teenage children.”

If you're not familiar with Ricky's immigration troubles check out Chisun Lee's "Slick Rick's Alien Rap":

"We got a knock on the cabin door, and it was the INS officers," the rapper, formally known as Ricky Walters, told the Voice last Thursday in his first interview from detention. A British native who came to the U.S. legally at age 11 but never bothered to obtain citizenship, he is charged, according to an INS document, with having "self-deported" and illegally re-entered the U.S. by working the cruise. The agency is seeking to deport him and refuses to release him on bond while legal action unfolds, which could take months.

The pardon won't make all of Slick Rick's immigration troubles go away just yet, but should allow the rapper to finally extricate himself from his ongoing immigration nightmare.

Some more background from the governor's press release:

Mr. Walters faces deportation under a federal statute that mandates the removal of a lawful resident alien upon conviction of an aggravated felony or a weapon offense. For certain offenses removal can be avoided by a Governor’s pardon, but for weapon offenses, even after receiving a pardon, a non-citizen must seek discretionary relief from deportation from the immigration court. Mr. Walters was granted such relief by an immigration court in 1995, but that decision was later vacated because the Board of Immigration Appeals issued its decision 33 days after the expiration of a statutory deadline. Mr. Walters has been unable to re-apply for discretionary adjustment of his immigration status because of his attempted murder convictions, but he will be eligible to do so as a result of the Governor’s pardon.

In 1991, Mr. Walters pleaded guilty in Bronx County Supreme Court to two counts of attempted murder and eight weapons offenses arising from an incident in which Walters shot his cousin and an innocent bystander, both of whom survived the shooting. Walters’ cousin had made previous threats against Walters, and Walters believed his cousin had arranged at least one previous attempt on his life. Mr. Walters, who was 25 years old at the time of the incident, was sentenced to a term of 3⅓ to 10 years in prison. He was released to parole in 1997, and was discharged from parole supervision in 2000.

In June 1995, an immigration judge terminated deportation proceedings against Walters and granted him a waiver of inadmissibility and an adjustment of status that allowed Walters to remain in this country despite his convictions. The judge’s decision was based on, among other things, the “unusual and outstanding equities” of his case. Later that year, the Board of Immigration Appeals found that this relief “appears to be in the best interest of the country,” but the Board later vacated its decision on a technical ground – that it had no authority to act because on the day of its decision, Walters had served five years and 33 days in prison, 33 days more than statutorily permitted for a waiver of inadmissibility. Walters’ legal challenges to this decision have been unsuccessful, and he could soon be deported, unless the immigration courts agree to reconsider his request for adjustment of status in light of the Governor’s pardon.

Mr. Walters, who is now 43 years old, has lived in the Bronx without incident since his release from prison in 1997. He is presently employed as a landlord and rap musician. Mr. Walters has a wife and two children, all of whom are American citizens.

comments: 0

Sean Bell and Anonymous Protesters Join Forces in Midtown

Posted by Candice M. Giove at 3:18 PM, May 15, 2008


The YouTube video doesn't embed, but as you can some from the above screen grab, the Black Panthers briefly joined forces with Anonymous last Saturday. Only in New York, kids, only in New York.

Causes collided in Times Square this past weekend when Sean Bell protesters glimpsed an Anonymous member’s sign. On it was a quote you’d never find in Bartlett’s, “You shouldn’t be scrubbing the floor on your hands and knees. Get yourself a nigger; that’s what they’re born for.” Allegedly plucked from a letter L. Ron Hubbard sent to his first wife, the placard’s inflammatory, racist pull-quote, with the N-word pronounced in red letters, momentarily united the two groups.

Former high ranking Scientologist and L. Ron Hubbard confidant Gerald Armstrong claimed that those words could be attributed to the Scientology founder. While the validity of his claim cannot be verified because no copy of the letter is available, critics believe it when put in the context of other racist Hubbard statements.

Scenes from the Sean Bell Protest

Posted by Michael Clancy at 5:48 PM, May 8, 2008

Cary Conover captured some powerful images from the Sean Bell protests yesterday, including this photograph of the hands of the father of Nicole Paultre-Bell as an NYPD bus got ready to pull away from the Brooklyn Bridge. Check here for a full gallery of Conover's shots.

comments: 0

Sharpton, Nicole Paultre Bell Among Scores Arrested at Sean Bell Protests

Posted at 5:15 PM, May 7, 2008

UPDATE: 6:30

by Sean Gardiner and Michael Clancy


Photos by Cary Conover

The Rev. Al Sharpton, Nicole Paultre Bell, Joe Guzman and Trent Benefield were among scores of people arrested at a series of demonstrations throughout the city protesting the acquittal of three cops charged in the fatal shooting of Sean Bell.

Bell's fiancee, and Guzman and Benefield—the two men shot with Bell in a hail of 50 NYPD bullets—were among the first people to be taken away by police after blocking traffic on Centre Street, at the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge, just minutes before 5 p.m.

Hundreds of protesters watched from the sidewalks by City Hall and the municipal building at One Center Street chanting “We are Sean Bell" and “No Justice No Peace," as scores of demonstrators repeated the same phrases when police asked them to vacate the street and allow traffic to pass.

"If you refuse to leave you will be placed under arrested and charged with disorderly conduct," said Lt. Wolf of the NYPD to the protesters blocking traffic.

"We are Sean Bell," came the reply, and soon the protesters were bound with plastic restraints and loaded aboard NYPD buses.

A senior citizen from Rosedale, Queens, Lee May was one of many people who volunteered for arrest—although many in the crowd opted to make a vocal protest without civil disobedience.

"I have no idea what will happen but it's a small sacrifice to make sure black people don't keep getting shot down in the streets by the police like dogs," said May. "If the police had shot a dog fifty times, that policeman would not walk out of a court without some type of charge."

According to new accounts, protesters disrupted the evening commute at Queensboro Bridge, the Triborough Bridge, the Brooklyn Bridge and the Manhattan Bridge and the Holland Tunnel and Queens-Midtown Tunnel as part of an effort, coordinated by Sharpton, to temporarily shut down the city.

The arrests appeared to be orderly and coordinated, according to early accounts. At One Police Plaza, those who wanted to be arrested were called forward and lined up. Police and organizers made sure that they had proper identification as not to get caught up in the system. They followed Sharpton from the plaza in front of One Police Plaza to Centre Street.

Other protesters continued the chants, "1, 2, 3, 4, 5" they counted until 50, marking each shot fired by police. "This whole damn justice system is guilty," and "What do we want? Justice. When do we want it? Now," were also chanted as protesters held aloft signs including one that read "My 3 Sons are Sean Bell" above pictures of three small children.

The orderly arrests and protests were temporarily marred when one protester refused to kneel down and pray on Centre Street. “The black man is god. Stop praying to some mystery god,” said the protester as he ignored the calls to kneel down and pray.

After he refused to to take part in the civil disobedience and walked away, one protester yelled “Hey God, why aren't you getting arrested?"

Sean Bell's great aunt, Gloria Porter made the trip from New Haven—a journey she cancelled on Nov. 25th when Bell was shot and killed on his wedding eve when a police operation at Club Kalua went horribly—many say criminally— wrong.

"We weren't surprised because we knew the history of New York," said Porter, 64. "A black man in New York is killed by a policeman and nothing never ever happens. If we go to jail, we go to jail for justice."

comments: 3

Sharpton to Lead Pray-In Protests Throughout City Today

Posted by Michael Clancy at 11:50 AM, May 7, 2008


On December 6th, thousands of protesters filled Foley Square to express their outrage over the Sean Bell shooting. Today, the Rev. Al Sharpton is promising civil disobedience, slow-downs and pray-ins at six locations around the city to protest the acquittal of three cops charged in the shooting.

From a press release:

Reverend Al Sharpton, President of National Action Network, will lead a citywide "pray-in" on Wednesday, May, 7th at six locations around New York City to lead up to an eventual citywide shut down this Spring. Joining Rev. Sharpton in civil disobedience will be Nicole Paultre Bell, Joseph Guzman, Trent Benefield and other community and religious leaders to call upon the United States Department of Justice to intervene in the case.

According to Rev. Sharpton, participants in Wednesday's "pray-ins" at six locations across the city should be prepared to go to jail to protest the acquittals of the three detectives. "If you are not going to lock up the guilty in this town, then I guess you'll have to lock up the innocent," says Rev. Sharpton. Rev. Sharpton said protesters at each location would get down on their knees in prayer.

The protest will begin at 3:00 p.m. at the following locations:

Site A: 125th and Third Avenue (led by W. Franklyn Richardson, Chairman of National Action Network)

Site B: Third Avenue and 60th Street (Led by National Action Network senior staff)

Site C: 34th and Park Avenue (Led by National Action Network Senior Staff)

Site D: Varick and Houston Street (Led by Hazel Dukes, NAACP and Labor leaders)

Site E: One Police Plaza (Led by Rev. Al Sharpton. Nicole Paultre Bell, Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield will be at this location)

Site F: House of the Lord Church, Brooklyn, New York (Led by Rev. Herbert Daughtry)

Brooklyn Man Shot By Cops Faces Sentencing in Scooter Swing

Posted by Chris J. Petropoulos at 4:34 PM, May 5, 2008

As the protests following the Sean Bell verdicts continue throughout the city, one Brooklyn man is more concerned with the resolution of charges related to another police shooting: his own.

Robert Ramirez, 29, faces up to seven years in prison on Tuesday morning in Brooklyn Supreme court. He was convicted on April 15th of one count of second-degree assault.

It all started with a summer BBQ. On July 24th, 2006, two police officers were attempting to deal with some amplified music without a permit at an informal gathering in a courtyard at the Glenwood Houses in East Flatbush. According to police documents, Robert's stepfather Jose Morales approached the officers "muttering obscenities, acting belligerent, and…intoxicated."

But a according his stepson, his lawyer and Jose Morales himself, his English isn't exactly great, he trembles as a result of a surgery some years back, and his knees are wobbly so he lurches as he walks.

What happened next is open to debate.

The police claimed they were shoved, though civilian witnesses contradict that claim. The officers cuffed Morales. Several witnesses reported them beating him with their metal batons. Robert was not far way, and when he got a cell phone call alerting him to what was happening he rushed to the scene, picked up a child's Razor scooter, and struck one of the officers.

"I hit the officer once to get him to stop hitting him (Morales). I hit him once, somebody grabbed me, I dropped the scooter and the cop turned around and just shot me" Ramirez recalled.

He was shot in the chest at very close range. His story nearly ended right there. He lost 8 pints of blood (the body contains just under 10), lost a lung, and carries the bullet, lodged to close to his spine to be removed safely.

Officer Jason Jeremiah, who fired the near fatal shot, was not interviewed by investigators after the shooting "in co-operation with the Brooklyn D.A.'s office" according to police documents. He remains on duty and Commissioner Kelly himself has publicly called this shooting "justified." However, Ramirez's attorney David Epstein revealed that this was the second time in his scant 14-month career that officer Jeremiah fired his weapon. "He shot at a dog, a pit bull,” Epstein said. “He claimed that the dog was a threat to him. He maced the dog first and the dog kept coming so he shot at it."

Ramirez and Morales were charged with various resisting arrest and assault on an officer offenses. Morales was convicted of one misdemeanor resisting arrest charge, punishable by up to a year in jail. Ramirez was convicted of second degree assault. Justice Deborah Dowling will determine their fate Tuesday morning.

comments: 3

Feds Pledge Bell Shooting Probe and Sharpton Promises Hit-and-Run Protests As Cops Walk

Posted at 2:48 PM, April 25, 2008

By Sean Gardiner and Michael Clancy

The three detectives charged in the shooting death of Sean Bell, gunned down outside Club Kalua in a hail of 50 NYPD bullets on the eve of his wedding, walked out of court free men this morning as Justice Arthur J. Cooperman declared them not guilty on all counts.

Noting the unreliability of prosecution witnesses, through their renunciations and inconsistent statements, past criminal convictions, demeanor while testifying and motivation to lie on the stand, Cooperman acquitted the cops following a bench trial, saying "These factors played a significant part in the people's ability to prosecute their case and had the effect of eviscerating the credibility of the people's witnesses....at times the testimony just didn't make sense. "

The judge noted that the Detectives Michael Oliver, Gescard Isnora and Marc Cooper’ actions didn’t rise to the level of criminal act and noted that any "questions of carelessness and incompetence must be left to other forums," referring to possible departmental charges the detectives still may face.

In the aftermath, the Justice Department has said it will conduct a probe to see if any civil rights violations occurred and Rev. Al Shaprton has promised hit-and-run demonstrations, such as sit ins and civil disobedience arrests, at unnamed locations across the city starting tomorrow.

In the run up to Cooperman giving his verdict, the courtroom was ringed with 17 court officers, who remained standing in front of the pews, while another 11 jammed the aisle separating supporters of Bell, filling the pews on the right side, and the backers of the cops, seated to the left. Before the judge entered the audience was asked to refrain from making any outbursts and remain sitting after the verdict until Cooperman had exited the court.

Entering shortly after 9 a.m., the 74-year-old judge began laying out his reasoning when the toddler daughter of Trent Benefield, who was shot while in the car with Bell that night, began yelling out what sounded like, “Mama.” Cooperman abruptly stopped and glared at the child’s mother who was holding her.

“I’m not going to continue unless the child is removed,” Cooperman said, causing the child’s mother to slink out of the courtroom with the daughter.

Shortly after, the judge finished up his reasoning and announced he was acquitting the officers on all charges. Ignoring the pre-verdict instructions, Nicole Paultre Bell, Bell's fiancee and widow, stood up immediately and walked out of the courtroom. Rows of Bell supporters followed her. “Unadulterated bullshit,” one man said on his way out. In a second row pew, Bell's father, dressed all in white, buried his face while shaking his head as Bell’s mother broke into tears while being consoled by a family member next to him.

About one hundred people—guarded by what looked like three times as many cops—gathered outside State Supreme Court in Kew Gardens as police and news choppers buzzed overhead. PBA president Pat Lynch was the first to react to reporters, saying this "was a case where there is no winner and no losers, we still had a death that occurred... we still had officers who had to deal with that death."

As an angry crowd nearly drowned him out with screams of "Murderers," Lynch added that the verdict sent a message to New York City police officers that says "you will get fairness" which was important to officers out on patrol because "there is never a script... we have to deal with circumstances as they come."

A short time later, Bell's family and friends—including the Rev. Al Sharpton, attorney Sanford Rubenstein and shooting victim Joseph Guzman who wore a soft cast on his right leg and a white T-shirt emblazoned with a sparkly silver "Sean Bell's Boys" logo—walked past the assembled media without comment and marched onto Queens Boulevard, shutting down traffic for a short time.

Carrying banners that said "50 Shots" and "Justice for Sean Bell," many Bell supporters chanted "Racist Cops You Can't Hide, We Charge You with Genocide” a brief scuffle broke out when a Bell supporter took exception to a cameraman getting too close.

Calling for possible federal civil rights charges for the involved officers, Leroy Gadsden, of the Jamaica chapter of the NAACP, told WNBC Channel 4. "This is court is bankrupt when it comes to people of color."

Hours later, the Department of Justice announced that its Civil Rights Division and the United States Attorney’s Office will “conduct an independent review of the facts and circumstances” surrounding the Nov. 25, 2006 killing of Bell who was unarmed when shot while sitting in his car along with Guzman and Benefield. Bell’s two friends and his relatives have filed a lawsuit against the city seeking $50 million in damages.

After the potentially explosive verdict was given, Mayor Michael Bloomberg conveniently attended an unscheduled ribbon-cutting ceremony about a mile away from where Bell was shot to announce the opening of a job center in Jamaica. "There are no winners in a trial like this,” the mayor said. “An innocent man lost his life, a bride lost her groom, two daughters lost their father, and a mother and a father lost their son. No verdict could ever end the grief that those who knew and loved Sean Bell suffer. Judge Cooperman’s responsibility, however, was to decide the case based on the evidence presented in the courtroom. America is a nation of laws, and though not everyone will agree with the verdicts and opinions issued by the courts, we accept their authority. Today’s decision is no different. There will be opportunities for peaceful dissent and potentially for further legal recourse—those are the rights we enjoy in a democratic nation. We don’t expect violence or law-breaking, nor is there any place for it. We have come too far as society—and as a City—to be dragged back to those days.

“When I spoke with Nicole Paultre Bell on the steps of City Hall this week, I told her that while we can’t bring back the man that she was in love with, we can and will build and make things better. She replied ‘Yes, and make sure it doesn’t happen again,’ and I agreed, ‘Yes, that’s exactly what we have to do.’ All of us have a responsibility to improve our neighborhoods and our City, and we can only do that by working together, respecting each other, and doing everything possible to prevent future tragedies and injustices.”

Curiously, Bloomberg announced that one of the ways they hoped to instill public trust in the NYPD was by bolstering the staff at the Civilian Complaint Review Board so that now “complaints are dealt with swiftly and efficiently.” What Bloomberg didn’t mention was that since bolster the CCRB last year the NYPD has “swiftly and efficiently” been dumping a record number of the agency’s substantiated cases.

A week into the trial, in "many legal observers were puzzled by some of the strategies employed by prosecutors working for Queens DA Richard Brown.

"A week into the trial of three cops in the Sean Bell case, the prosecutors' theory that two of the cops were "acting in concert" when the bridegroom was gunned down in a hail of police bullets is striking a sour note with some observers.

For Judge Arthur Cooperman, who's hearing the case without a jury, to convict on the top counts of first- and second-degree manslaughter, he'd have to believe "that they planned it and they all had the same mind-set," says veteran defense attorney Marvyn Kornberg. "And that's ludicrous."

If anything, the prosecutors undercut their own theory during the first week of the trial by stressing the lack of planning by the accused officers' unit on the night of the shooting and the chaos that followed."

Assistant District Attorney Charlie Testagrossa, the lead attorney who has been a prosecutor for 31 years, called this case, “possibly the most difficult case I’ve ever had to try.”

He added, “we can’t say we’re not disappointed with the verdict but we have a tremendous amount of respect for Judge Coopoerman.”

District Attorney Richard Brown called their case, “as thorough and complete a presentation of all available evidence as I have ever seen. In all, some 60 individuals testified over a 28 day period—and more than 900 exhibits were introduced into evidence. The trial transcript alone runs 5,400 pages. Both sides had their day in court.”

Brown said that the case has “raised important issues about current law enforcement practices,” especially when it comes to undercover operations. Some steps have been taken to improve undercover recruiting, training and supervision and have implemented an alcohol test requirement for all officers involved in a shooting, Brown said, “but it is clear that more needs to be done.”

In "Guns Gone Wild," a Voice examination of the frequency with which cops fire their weapons, and NYPD tactics in the wake of the Bell slaying, some observers questioned the efficacy of deploying details of detectives to stake out a two-bit strip club in Jamaica, Queens.

"Eugene O'Donnell, a former NYPD cop and prosecutor who is now a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, calls such initiatives "overpolicing." "What are these cops doing in a strip bar in Jamaica at four in the morning listening to trash talk?" O'Donnell says. "You've got alcohol and drugs being used and then you have cops bringing firearms and deadly force into the picture. So you have trouble. . . . We've got to stop overpolicing everything."

After the verdict, the family traveled to Long Island to visit Sean Bell’s gravesite. Bell was laid to rest on December 1, 2006 in service marked with both with great sadness and anger. It was followed by days of protest throughout the city.

Afterward, Sharpton, speaking on his radio show, promised large-scale displays of civil disobedience of the type that followed the acquittals of four police officers charged in the February 1999 shooting death of Amadou Diallo, the unarmed immigrant gunned down in the doorstep of his Bronx home when officers mistook the wallet he was pulling from his back pocket for a gun.

“Even people with criminal backgrounds have civil rights,” he said.

comments: 47

Seven Jail Guards Busted, 14 Pull a Sickout, One Sneaky Smuggler at Rikers

Posted by Graham Rayman at 2:00 PM, April 25, 2008

Whoa...It’s been an interesting couple of weeks in Rikers.

The fun began on April 14, when 14 of 17 correction captains staged a one-day sickout to protest a department crackdown following the arrest of an officer for using inmates as enforcers.

Then, on Thursday, authorities announced the arrest of seven correction officers for taking bribes to smuggle contraband into the jail system, suggesting the practice is widespread in the system. Officials are weighing whether to tighten the rules on searching employees who come to work.

The case followed the arrest of a drug treatment counselor for possession of 100 packets of “Black Gold” heroin. The Voice exclusively reported that incident.

And finally, authorities finally caught up with a guy who had somehow smuggled a huge store bought knife, a cellphone and several hundred dollars in cash into jail and managed to hide his stash for a couple of months. It’s unclear whether it came in with him or was given to him while he was incarcerated.

His secret?

He hid the stuff inside his prosthetic leg. Ouch!

That discovery has sparked an internal investigation into the jail’s security system, sources said. The big question: how did the knife slip unnoticed through the metal detectors?

The sickout at the Robert Davoren Center followed the arrest of Lloyd Nicholson, a guard there, for ordering six inmates to beat up two other inmates for failing to follow rules he described as “the program.”

Correction sources say the captains were upset at a boss for ordering them to closely supervise correction officers on their tours—a practice that is considered routine. The department is investigating the incident for labor rules violations.

The seven officers arrested, meanwhile, worked at four different jails—the Anna M. Kross Center, North Infirmary Command, the George Vierno Center, and RNDC. They allegedly took bribes from undercover investigators to pass marijuana and cocaine to inmates.

So that’s how all that stuff was getting into the system.

A Correction Department spokesman did not respond to requests for comment.

comments: 1

UPDATE: Sean Bell Cops Not Guilty on All Counts As City Reacts

Posted at 11:18 AM, April 25, 2008

UPDATE: 11:18 am

By Sean Gardiner and Michael Clancy

The three detectives charged in the shooting death of Sean Bell, gunned down outside Club Kalua in a hail of 50 NYPD bullets on the eve of his wedding, walked out of court free men this morning as Justice Arthur J. Cooperman returned a verdict of not guilty on all counts.

Noting the unreliability of prosecution witnesses, through their renunciations and inconsistent statements, past criminal convictions and motivation to lie on on the stand, Cooperman acquitted the cops, saying "These factors played a significant part in the people's ability to prosecute their case and had the effect of eviscerating the credibility of the people's witnesses....at times the testimony just didn't make sense. "

Referring to the departmental and even federal charges the officers may face, Cooperman continued "questions of carelessness and incompetence must be left to other forums." As the judge finished his verdict, Nicole Paultre Bell, Bell's fiancee and widow, stood up immediately and walked out of the courtroom as Bell's father buried his head in hands sitting in silence as a friend comforted him.

About one hundred people—and three times as many cops—gathered outside State Supreme Court in Kew Gardens as police and news choppers buzzed overhead. PBA president Pat Lynch was the first to react to reporters, saying this "was a case where there is no winner and no losers, we still had a death that occurred... we still had officers who had to deal with that death."

As an angry crowd nearly drowned him out with screams of "Murderers," Lynch added that the verdict sent a message to New York City police officers that says "you will get fairness" which was important to officers out on patrol because "there is never a script... we have to deal with circumstances as they come."

Bell's family and friends—including shooting the Rev. Al Sharpton, attorney Sanford Rubenstein and shooting victim Joseph Guzman who wore a soft cast on his right leg and a white T-shirt emblazoned with a sparkly silver "Sean Bell's Boys" logo—walked past the assembled media without comment.

Carrying banners that said "50 Shots" and "Justice for Sean Bell," many Bell supporters chanted "Racist Cops You Can't Hide, We Charge You with Genocide” as one small scuffle broke out when a Bell supporter took exception to a reporter's question.

Calling for possible federal civil rights charges for the involved officers, Leroy Gadsden, of the Jamaica chapter of the NAACP, told WNBC Channel 4. "This is court is bankrupt when it comes to people of color."

In a prepared statement, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said "“There are no winners in a trial like this. An innocent man lost his life, a bride lost her groom, two daughters lost their father, and a mother and a father lost their son. No verdict could ever end the grief that those who knew and loved Sean Bell suffer. Judge Cooperman’s responsibility, however, was to decide the case based on the evidence presented in the courtroom. America is a nation of laws, and though not everyone will agree with the verdicts and opinions issued by the courts, we accept their authority. Today’s decision is no different. There will be opportunities for peaceful dissent and potentially for further legal recourse – those are the rights we enjoy in a democratic nation. We don’t expect violence or law-breaking, nor is there any place for it. We have come too far as society – and as a City – to be dragged back to those days.

“When I spoke with Nicole Paultre Bell on the steps of City Hall this week, I told her that while we can’t bring back the man that she was in love with, we can and will build and make things better. She replied ‘Yes, and make sure it doesn’t happen again,’ and I agreed, ‘Yes, that’s exactly what we have to do.’ All of us have a responsibility to improve our neighborhoods and our City, and we can only do that by working together, respecting each other, and doing everything possible to prevent future tragedies and injustices.”

A week into the trial, in "The Sean Bell Curveball For Cops on Trial," Sean Gardiner reported that many legal observers were puzzled by some of the strategies employed by prosecutors working for Queens DA Richard Brown.

"A week into the trial of three cops in the Sean Bell case, the prosecutors' theory that two of the cops were "acting in concert" when the bridegroom was gunned down in a hail of police bullets is striking a sour note with some observers.

For Judge Arthur Cooperman, who's hearing the case without a jury, to convict on the top counts of first- and second-degree manslaughter, he'd have to believe "that they planned it and they all had the same mind-set," says veteran defense attorney Marvyn Kornberg. "And that's ludicrous."

If anything, the prosecutors undercut their own theory during the first week of the trial by stressing the lack of planning by the accused officers' unit on the night of the shooting and the chaos that followed."

Bell was laid to rest on December 1, 2006 in service marked with both with great sadness and anger.

In "Guns Gone Wild," an examination of the frequency with which cops fire their weapons, and NYPD tactics in the wake of the Bell slaying, some observers questioned the efficacy of deploying details of detectives to stake out a two-bit strip club in Jamaica, Queens.

"Eugene O'Donnell, a former NYPD cop and prosecutor who is now a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, calls such initiatives "overpolicing." "What are these cops doing in a strip bar in Jamaica at four in the morning listening to trash talk?" O'Donnell says. "You've got alcohol and drugs being used and then you have cops bringing firearms and deadly force into the picture. So you have trouble. . . . We've got to stop overpolicing everything."

comments: 121

Ex-Cons Tell Real-Life Tales Crime and Punishment at 'The Castle'

Posted by Tom Robbins at 9:39 AM, April 15, 2008

Here’s a different kind of Sunday matinee scene:

“The Castle,” a one-act play in which four ex-cons who served lengthy prison terms tell their own disturbing real-life tales of crime, punishment, and redemption opened at New World Stages this weekend. Redemption, the ex-inmates said, was made possible by The Fortune Society and the hulking old granite building on West 140th Street, known as “The Castle,” where it provides housing and services to 60 homeless former prisoners.

After the play, the cast asked if anyone had any questions. Producer Eric Krebs said he would be particularly interested to hear what a white-haired man sitting in the back row had to say, since his day job is commissioner of the state’s Department of Corrections. Brian Fischer stood up.

“We released 25,000 inmates last year,” said Fischer. “I could use 2,000 ‘Castles’.”

On stage, Casimiro Torres, 35, who had told of his 67 separate arrests and life as a drug-addled thief, squinted at Fischer and pointed. “You the warden at Sing Sing in 2003?” he asked.

The commissioner nodded.

“I never forget a face,” said Torres.

comments: 0

Nixzmary Brown's Stepfather Guilty of Manslaughter

Posted by Michael Clancy at 12:11 PM, March 18, 2008

A Brooklyn jury found Nixzmary Brown's stepdad guilty of second-degree manslaughter this morning but exonerated Cesar Rodriguez of second-degree murder charges in a horrific case of child abuse that ended the 7-year-old's life, shocked the city, and raised serious concerns about the city's child welfare agency.

From the Associated Press:

Evidence in the nearly three-month-long trial in state Supreme Court included grim crime scene photos from the room where Nixzmary Brown was bound to a chair, starved and forced to urinate in a litter box. More than once, court officers passed out tissues so weeping jurors could dry their eyes.

In closing arguments, prosecutor Ama Dwimoh displayed a large photo of the victim's body — bruised, topless and splayed on a wooden floor in the family's ramshackle apartment — as she stood in front of the defense table and berated Rodriguez.

"You battered a little girl who weighed 36 pounds," she said last week. "When she was on the floor in that room you imprisoned her in, you turned your back."

Gazing up at the photo, she argued: "There is nothing that 7-year-old Nixzmary Brown could ever do to deserve that."

Despite the emotion surrounding the case, defense attorney Jeffrey Schwartz stuck to a bold strategy of casting Nixzmary's mother as the real killer, labeling her "Mommy Dearest."

He also portrayed the victim as a violent and uncontrollable "little Houdini" — a reference to her supposed knack at slipping out of the makeshift restraints devised by her parents to keep her from attacking her younger siblings.