26 April 2008

Surprise, surprise, surprise

Seems a judge acquitted the three officers who shot the crap out of Sean Bell on 25 November 2006, according to the New York Times. Even Rico thought they'd get convicted of this one; they only shot the poor bastard fifty times. Predictably, Rev. Al Sharpton, a spokesman for the Bell family, called for street protests and said people should get themselves arrested, “whether it is on Wall Street, the judge’s house, or at 1 Police Plaza.”
Also "legal hurdles remain for the officers: federal authorities said they would now investigate the case, and the Police Department is mulling internal charges. A $50 million lawsuit against the city, filed last year by Mr. Bell’s fiancée, who had two children with him, along with the two men wounded in the shooting, may now begin moving forward." "Further, trial testimony showed that Mr. Bell may have played some role, however unwitting, in the shooting, as he was drunk by legal standards when he pressed down on the accelerator of his fiancée’s Nissan Altima and struck Detective Isnora in the leg in an attempt to flee." "Rather than call the shooting justified, the judge said that the prosecution failed to prove it was unjustified, as was its burden. Indeed, his ruling was far from approving of the detectives’ conduct during the undercover vice operation that night. 'Questions of carelessness and incompetence must be left to other forums', he said. He never mentioned the high number of shots fired, or the fact that Detective Oliver had fired 31 of them." "The verdict came 17 months to the day after five officers pointed their pistols at the car Mr. Bell was driving and opened fire. The shooting followed a confrontation between Mr. Bell and a stranger outside the Club Kalua, where Mr. Bell had attended his bachelor party. During the confrontation, Detective Isnora said, he heard the threat about getting the gun. In the events that followed, Mr. Bell’s car struck the detective’s leg and, twice, a police van. Detective Isnora said he saw Mr. Guzman reach for his waistband, shouted “Gun” and fired. The three detectives who were brought to trial fired 46 of the 50 rounds, killing Mr. Bell and wounding Mr. Guzman and Trent Benefield, another friend of Mr. Bell’s." "The United States Department of Justice issued a statement announcing its own investigation. “The Civil Rights Division and the United States attorney’s office have been monitoring the state’s prosecution of this case and, following the review of all the evidence, will take appropriate action if the evidence indicates a prosecutable violation of federal criminal civil rights statutes,” the statement said."

Rico says he's glad he wasn't there that night, having to make instantaneous life-and-death decisions, but he's still surprised the officers didn't get nailed. The Feds will probably take them to task for violating Bell's civil rights, though...

No comments:

 

Casino Deposit Bonus