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Tag: body-camera video

  • New body camera video released in case of man stuck under Orlando police truck

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    Newly released body camera video shows the moment first responders worked to free a man from an unmarked Orlando police truck. We know from an arrest report that Detective Moulton was trying to pull a suspect over for having an unreadable license plate on Feb. 12. The driver, Dornell Bargnare, failed to navigate a turn onto Indiana Street, according to police. Driving onto a sidewalk and hitting 56-year-old Gerald Neal. Body camera footage released earlier this year shows the officer getting out of his truck. Chasing after the suspect. Not seeming to realize Neal was under his truck. In body camera video released to WESH 2 Thursday, you see first responders working to free Neal from underneath the truck. Based on the time on Moulton’s body camera video in the previously released footage compared to the time on the footage released Thursday, Neal was underneath the truck for about 15 minutes. Based on body camera video released earlier this year, it appeared the detective didn’t know someone was under his truck. “There was a guy under your truck,” another officer can be heard telling the detective. “Under my truck?” he says back to them. When they reply, “Yeah,” the detective asks, “Hiding?” Before saying, “OK, yeah, I’ll go check right now,”In the video released Thursday, you can see first responders working to revive Neal and talking about getting him to Orlando Regional Medical Center. But he wouldn’t survive. In an arrest warrant for Bargnare filed five days after the crash, it says his car struck Neal, but makes no mention of Neal being stuck under an officer’s truck. Bargnare was later charged with Vehicular Homicide on top of other charges.The Florida Highway Patrol was handling the investigation into Neal’s death and had handed over their findings to the state attorney’s office. The state attorney’s office told WESH 2 this week to expect a decision soon on whether more charges could be coming. That could potentially include charges for the detective involved. He is currently on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation, according to the Orlando Police Department.

    Newly released body camera video shows the moment first responders worked to free a man from an unmarked Orlando police truck.

    We know from an arrest report that Detective Moulton was trying to pull a suspect over for having an unreadable license plate on Feb. 12.

    The driver, Dornell Bargnare, failed to navigate a turn onto Indiana Street, according to police. Driving onto a sidewalk and hitting 56-year-old Gerald Neal.

    Body camera footage released earlier this year shows the officer getting out of his truck. Chasing after the suspect. Not seeming to realize Neal was under his truck.

    In body camera video released to WESH 2 Thursday, you see first responders working to free Neal from underneath the truck.

    Based on the time on Moulton’s body camera video in the previously released footage compared to the time on the footage released Thursday, Neal was underneath the truck for about 15 minutes.

    Based on body camera video released earlier this year, it appeared the detective didn’t know someone was under his truck.

    “There was a guy under your truck,” another officer can be heard telling the detective.

    “Under my truck?” he says back to them.

    When they reply, “Yeah,” the detective asks,

    “Hiding?” Before saying, “OK, yeah, I’ll go check right now,”

    In the video released Thursday, you can see first responders working to revive Neal and talking about getting him to Orlando Regional Medical Center. But he wouldn’t survive.

    In an arrest warrant for Bargnare filed five days after the crash, it says his car struck Neal, but makes no mention of Neal being stuck under an officer’s truck.

    Bargnare was later charged with Vehicular Homicide on top of other charges.

    The Florida Highway Patrol was handling the investigation into Neal’s death and had handed over their findings to the state attorney’s office.

    The state attorney’s office told WESH 2 this week to expect a decision soon on whether more charges could be coming. That could potentially include charges for the detective involved. He is currently on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation, according to the Orlando Police Department.

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  • Aurora PD releases 911 call, bodycam video from police shooting that killed 17-year-old

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    AURORA, Colo. — Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain on Friday released the 911 call and officer body-camera video from a police shooting that killed a 17-year-old boy last week.

    The shooting happened on Sept. 18 at the Conoco gas station in the 200 block of South Havana Street near East Alameda Avenue.

    In a press conference Friday, Chamberlain said the incident began at 7:33 p.m. when the suspect — identified as 17-year-old Blaze Aleczander Balle-Mason — called 911 and told the operator he had a loaded 9mm pistol in his pocket and planned to “shoot up” the gas station and surrounding area. He also reportedly said he wanted to shoot responding officers.

    Three officers arrived at the scene at 7:43 p.m. with a “tactical plan” in which one officer was armed with a rifle, the second with a pistol and the third with a “40mm less-lethal launcher.”

    Chamberlain said his officers approached the suspect, identified themselves as police and ordered the teen to show his hands. The 17-year-old ignored those commands, according to the police chief, and advanced toward the officers with one hand concealed in his pocket.

    The officer with the “less-lethal launcher” fired “multiple rounds” at the 17-year-old, striking him, according to Chamberlain. The rounds, however, had “little to no impact or effect” on the suspect.

    Chamberlain said his officers retreated around the corner, and the suspect began to “chase” police. The teen’s hand remained in his pocket, according to the police chief.

    As the suspect neared the officers, one officer fired his weapon, striking the 17-year-old. Officers provided life-saving measures until medical personnel arrived.

    The teen was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    • Watch Chief Chamberlain’s full press conference in the video player below

    Aurora PD releases bodycam video from police shooting that killed 17-year-old: Full press conference

    According to Chamberlain, the time between when officers first made contact with the suspect and when shots were fired was 15 seconds.

    Investigators did not recover a handgun; however, Chamberlain cited the suspect’s 911 call, his failure to show his hands, the ineffectiveness of the “less-lethal” rounds, and his advancement toward officers as reasons for the lethal action.

    “This incident — and there is no getting around this — this incident is tragic for everyone involved, and I mean that sincerely, for everybody involved,” Chamberlain said. “I mean, it’s tragic for the suspect. It’s tragic for the people that were there, that witnessed [it]. It’s tragic for the city of Aurora. It’s also incredibly tragic for the officers that were involved in this.”

    Denver7 has been working to get answers about the police shooting, including why a mental health crisis team wasn’t dispatched, considering the teen threatened violence against officers in his 911 call.

    “They are not for calls that involved active violence or the threat of active violence, and that’s what this call was,” Chamberlain responded. “This call was not a mental health call…. [Officers] are trained also in crisis intervention. Every member of our organization goes through a suicide by cop training… they understand de-escalation. So all of that stuff is part of what they have in their toolkit, all of that was exploited, all of that was used.”

    Aurora

    Chief shares why mental health officers did not respond to Aurora PD shooting

    The Sept. 18 incident comes just weeks after Aurora police shot and killed Rajon Belt-Stubblefield, an unarmed Black man, after a confrontation following a traffic stop. Chamberlain said in both cases, his officers worked to prevent lethal force but were forced to use it.

    “In both of these cases, whether people like it or not, the suspects’ actions created these rapidly evolving, life-threatening situations,” Chamberlain said Friday. “Our officers exploited de-escalation; our officers exploited communication; our officers attempted to exploit other tools and alternatives other than lethal force. Unfortunately, on both of these incidents, the suspect and the suspects did not allow that to occur. That is not something that is unknown; that is factual data. That is factual information that we have seen through the collection of evidence at this point in both of these investigations.”

    Xavier Davis, president and lead mentor for ROYAL mentoring group, works with at-risk youth to stop violence in Aurora and Denver.

    “We got two people that lost their lives that were unarmed,” he said of the recent police shootings of the Aurora teen and Rajon Belt-Stubblefield. “The shootings, the killings, are just, they’re just totally unnecessary.”

    Davis said both adults and young people that he works with are feeling more on edge than ever because of economic uncertainty, which is something police should be aware of. He is also calling for changes to police training.

    “We would rather him be in a hospital with a bullet in his leg than dead,” Davis said of the shooting victims. “When you have shootings like this, it creates more of a distrust with the community.”

    Police said this incident is being investigated internally and by the district attorney’s office.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


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    Sydney Isenberg

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  • Bodycam video released in police shooting of 25-year-old woman in Fort Lee

    Bodycam video released in police shooting of 25-year-old woman in Fort Lee

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    FORT LEE, New Jersey (WABC) — The Attorney General’s Office released body camera footage and audio recordings of two 911 calls relating to the fatal shooting of a 25-year-old woman during an encounter with Fort Lee police officers last month.

    Fort Lee Police Officer Tony Pickens, Jr. shot and killed Victoria G. Lee who was having a mental episode inside her family’s apartment at The Pinnacle complex on Main Street on July 28.

    The fatal police encounter remains under investigation by the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office.

    Investigators previously met with representatives of Lee’s family to review the recordings.

    According to the investigation, on July 28 at approximately 1:25 a.m., police officers from the Fort Lee Police Department responded to The Pinnacle apartment complex, after a man called 911 reporting that his sister was having a mental health crisis and requested she be taken to Valley Hospital in Paramus.

    During the first call, the dispatcher informed the caller that an ambulance and police officer would be sent.

    After the man indicated that “just the ambulance” would be fine, the dispatcher informed the caller that officers had to be sent for mental health calls for the safety of ambulance personnel.

    In a second call to 911, the man initially requested to cancel the call.

    The dispatcher stated that mental health calls could not be canceled and that officers would arrive momentarily.

    The dispatcher asked the caller why he wanted to cancel the call; the man responded that his sister had a knife.

    The dispatcher confirmed that the sister was still in a bedroom in the apartment, informed again that the officers would be there momentarily, and inquired whether his sister was trying to cut anyone with the knife or was just holding it.

    The caller said, “She’s just holding it,” going on to describe that it was a “foldable” knife.

    Her family says her brother had called for an ambulance, because Lee was having a manic episode, and had picked up a small pocketknife. Lee had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

    However, the family says she was not being violent and had dropped the knife before officers broke down the apartment door.

    Her family and community members said Lee was not a threat to anyone and are demanding accountability.

    Upon arrival to the apartment, Officer Tony Pickens, Jr. spoke to the caller in the building’s hallway.

    Officer Pickens then opened the apartment door and observed two females: the caller’s sister, identified as “Ms. Lee,” and Ms. Lee’s mother, who was holding a dog.

    They told the officer not to come in and shut the door.

    Officer Pickens stood outside knocking on the door, asking the women to open the door as additional officers arrived.

    After the occupants did not comply, police-worn body camera video captures Officer Pickens speaking through the door, advising that he would have to break the door down.

    Lee is heard on camera saying, “Go ahead, I’ll stab you in the (expletive) neck.”

    After a discussion of which officers would be assigned “lethal” and “less lethal” duties, video shows the officers breaching the door.

    After officers break down the door, footage shows Lee approach the officers in the hallway. Officers shout, “Drop the knife,” and that’s when Officer Pickens fires a single shot, striking Lee in the chest.

    Officers provided immediate medical aid.

    Lee was taken to Englewood Hospital, where she was pronounced dead just before 2 a.m.

    A knife was recovered at the scene.

    Bob Boyce, former NYPD chief of detectives and an ABC News contributor, spoke to Eyewitness News about the incident.

    He says officers had to enter the apartment because someone else was inside with her and could be harmed.

    “Normally barricade we wait, but there’s someone in there. We need to go. Yeah,” Boyce said.

    The Attorney General’s office is investigating whether lethal force was justified.

    In the meantime, advocates say the incident has broken the community’s trust with police.

    “I think everyone is deeply concerned about seeking out help now and I don’t know what will happen in future health emergencies,” Reed said.

    The family had been asking for weeks to see the body camera video. After reviewing the video on Friday, their attorney released a statement on their behalf.

    “Bodycam was released this morning, and they are currently preparing a statement, which will be issued on Monday. The video is devastating, and everything aligns with the family’s statement from last week,” the statement said.

    Lee’s family claims she was not armed and was holding a plastic water jug when she was shot.

    While the family is not ready to speak, community activists say police made no effort to assess or de-escalate the situation after opening the door.

    “I’m absolutely gutted. I see family doing everything they can to protect their loved one that’s well aware of the risks of police violence,” said Amber Reed of AAPI New Jersey.

    “The distance between the police officer who fired and Vitoria, they never seemed close enough even for her to be any kind of threat to him,” Reed said.

    They are now pressing the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office to be thorough with its investigation.

    AAPI New Jersey, Korean American Association of NJ, Korean Community Center, & MinKwon Center for Community Action also released a joint statement following the release of the body camera footage:

    “Victoria Lee should be alive today. The footage and recordings released by the NJ Attorney General’s Office confirm what the Lee family has already shared with the world: that in a matter of minutes, the Fort Lee Police shot and killed Victoria, who was in no way a threat to anyone, as her mother watched helplessly. Words cannot describe our grief or anger. Victoria was killed on July 28th, and yet as of this morning, the Fort Lee community had received no assurance that the officer who killed her is not still patrolling their streets.

    We continue to call on the NJ Attorney General’s Office to fully investigate this incident and follow all evidence. The perpetrator in this incident and all involved must be held accountable.

    Further, we urge a thorough review of the Fort Lee Police Department’s patterns and practices. There are grave concerns raised by this horrific incident that touch the lives of all New Jerseyans. We continue to call for a comprehensive review of all the protocols and practices of the systems that led to this tragic outcome, from the 911 response to the officers’ training in crisis intervention, and beyond in Fort Lee and throughout the state.

    While the investigation is ongoing, our Governor and Legislature must waste no time in doing everything in their power to ensure anyone in need of mental health services can safely access care, including fully implementing the Seabrooks-Washington Act, which would enable community responses to these crises. Communities need more support, not more law enforcement.

    Finally, to our community: we are here to support you and we invite you to be part of the broader efforts to secure justice for all. Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in New Jersey in need of support can contact us to access free short-term care with an AAPI mental health professional in English or Korean. Please reach out to advocacy@aapinewjersey.org for assistance or to get involved.”

    The investigation is ongoing and no further information has been released at this time.

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  • Chicago police officers fired about 96 times over 41 seconds, killing Dexter Reed: VIDEO

    Chicago police officers fired about 96 times over 41 seconds, killing Dexter Reed: VIDEO

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — The Chicago Civilian Office of Police Accountability released bodycam video Tuesday of a deadly police shooting last month in Garfield Park.

    Dexter Reed, 26, was killed by Chicago police on March 21 during a traffic stop that ended with dozens of bullets fired.

    COPA said video footage and initial reports confirm that Reed fired first, hitting an officer. COPA said four other officers then returned fire. COPA said the officers fired approximately 96 times over 41 seconds.

    A 23-year-old rookie officer fired at least 50 of those shots.

    Reed was pulled over by five Chicago police officers along the 3800-block of West Ferdinand Street shortly after 6 p.m. on March 21.

    Reed was stopped for a seatbelt violation, COPA said. The traffic stop ended with Reed’s SUV filled with at least a dozen bullet holes.

    During the incident, Reed got out of his vehicle from the passenger side, and the police firing continued, as Reed was still allegedly armed. Video shows, at some point, Reed stops moving, and three shots appear to be fired by police after that.

    The police deadly force policy is to continue firing until the lethal threat is stopped.

    A second view of the shooting from a police bodycam shows the officer who was wounded in the wrist. He was on the passenger side of Reed’s vehicle.

    SEE ALSO | COPA memo calls into question ‘validity of the traffic stop’ that led to fatal CPD shooting

    Reed was critically wounded, and died at Mt. Sinai Hospital.

    It is not known how many shots were fired initially by Reed. Although, sound on the video appears to indicate he fired multiple shots.

    Chicago police said the injured officer was in good condition, and a gun was found at the scene.

    At the time of the shooting, Reed was facing charges for allegedly carrying a gun in his pocket, while walking into a street festival.

    He was in court on that gun charge less than two weeks before his fatal encounter with police.

    Protest ensues after bodycam footage of Dexter Reed’s shooting death released

    A group of demonstrators stunted Chicago traffic after bodycam video of the deadly police shooting was released Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, raw anger over Dexter Reed’s deadly traffic stop dissolved a peaceful protest into confrontational chaos.

    Dozens of demonstrators stepped off the sidewalk, rushing the intersection of west Harrison and Kedzie and stunting traffic.

    Police intervention triggered the crowd. Many of those officers work at the same station as the four who shot and killed Dexter Reed.

    “The 11th District, they should be accountable for everything they did, and I will not let them rest without suffering for what they did for my older brother,” said Porscha Banks, Dexter Reed’s sister.

    Dexter Reed’s family is visibly haunted by the body camera footage they viewed Monday of his last moments on March 21. Speaking Tuesday afternoon, his mother collapsed, remembering her son’s last words to her.

    The family of Dexter Reed spoke out Tuesday after he was fatally shot by Chicago police last month.

    “He said ‘Mom, I’m going for a ride,’ and they killed him. They killed him! They killed him,” Nicole Banks said.

    Outside COPA’s office on Tuesday, attorneys for Dexter Reed’s family gathered, calling for the tactical officers involved in the ill-fated traffic stop to be punished.

    “I talked to Mayor Johnson on Sunday and explained to him that those officers need to be held accountable,” said Dexter Reed Sr., the father of Dexter Reed.

    While never explicitly acknowledging, as both COPA determined, and the body cam video shows, that it was Reed who fired first, there was an attempt to explain what may have led to that reaction.

    “If I was in that situation, I would be terrified. I wouldn’t know how to specifically react, other than to protect myself,” said Roosevelt Reed, Dexter Reed’s uncle.

    Chicago police and oversight investigators have said the situation started as a traffic stop for a seatbelt violation initiated by a squad of tactical team, plain clothed officers.

    “He made a conscious decision to fire first upon these officers, and if you look at video that shows the shooting from a distance, you can clearly see the officer leaning in and looking through the passenger side window of the vehicle when he is shot,” said Chicago Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara.

    But the community doesn’t buy it.

    “It’s ironic that not having a seatbelt was significantly less dangerous to Dexter’s life than five officers shooting at the brother,” one demonstrator said.

    “Ninety-six shots. Ninety-six shots. How many does it take?” another speaker said.

    The Chicago Fire Department said one woman was injured at the protest.

    The woman was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital in good condition, CFD said. It was not immediately clear how she was injured.

    And as multiple investigations around another deadly police shooting play out, Mayor Brandon Johnson has been trying to offer reassurance.

    At a press conference Tuesday morning, Johnson expressed his condolences for Dexter Reed, and said he is praying for the full recovery of the injured officer.

    Mayor Brandon Johnson speaks after COPA released video showing the fatal shooting of Dexter Reed by Chicago police officers.

    “All of us up here are making a firm commitment to collaboration to cooperation and to provide transparency for the people of Chicago,” Johnson said.

    Johnson said the shooting occurred just blocks from his own community.

    “It is not lost on me that both Dexter Reed and the officer could have been my students,” Johnson said.

    Johnson said he will work with COPA and the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office to provide transparency on the investigation.

    “Shooting a police officer can never be condoned,” Johnson said. “Never condoned, never excused. I will never stand for that and neither will the city of Chicago. And we also have to be clear that we hold our police to the highest of standards.”

    The conclusions and any recommendations regarding the shooting will come in a report from Chicago police that could take months to release.

    In a statement Tuesday, the Chicago Police Department said, “This shooting remains under investigation by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA) with the full cooperation of the Chicago Police Department. We cannot make a determination on this shooting until all the facts are known and this investigation has concluded.”

    COPA First Deputy Chief Administrator Ephraim Eaddy released a statement, saying, “As an agency established on the core principle of reform, we take investigations into the use of deadly force and surrounding circumstances very seriously. COPA has the responsibility, as is noted in the Federal Consent Decree and Municipal Ordinance, to review every police shooting involving CPD officers. Each use of deadly force must be evaluated by examining the totality of circumstances, including the officer’s actions prior to the use of force. Accordingly, we will carefully review the actions of the involved police officers and their supervisors to determine whether training, policy and directives were properly followed. Our immediate investigatory steps included responding to the scene, viewing available body worn camera footage, and observing the collection of evidence, including shell casings and other ballistics evidence. As the investigation continues, COPA staff have canvassed the area, observed the autopsy of Dexter Reed, Jr., continued to identify and interview all witnesses, obtained, and reviewed all available video footage, and engaged with the Illinois State Police Forensic Science Laboratory in the processing and testing of all forensic evidence. COPA investigators have also provided briefings to the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office (CCSAO), the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), Department of Justice (DOJ), and sent a formal request to Superintendent Larry Snelling recommending the Chicago Police Department relieve four officers of their police powers during the pendency of this investigation. We have also been in contact with the family and will continue to provide updates as the investigation is ongoing.”

    U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin released a statement Tuesday, saying: “The violence in this video is shocking. My heart goes out to Dexter’s family and friends, who are grieving the loss of his young life.”

    “Our law enforcement officers protect and serve their communities with honor and courage and face many risks, but any who fail to follow the high standards they have sworn to uphold must be held accountable. As we continue to gather the facts surrounding this horrific incident, I am hopeful that a thorough investigation will be conducted in a fair and timely manner.

    “These tragedies exacerbate and inflict trauma on the community, and we must continue to foster healing and support for neighbors, loved ones, and families exposed to this pain.”

    U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth issued a statement, saying, “The video released today and the violence captured in it is shocking and disheartening. My thoughts are with the friends, family and loved ones of Dexter Reed as they continue to mourn his tragic death. I’m also hoping for a full recovery of the Chicago Police officer who was shot during this incident, and I share the Mayor’s view that attempting to murder a law enforcement officer must never condoned or excused.

    “As the investigation into this horrible incident continues, we must allow it to play out fairly and responsibly. As that happens, we must also refocus our efforts to bolster investments in comprehensive crime prevention initiatives, enhance efforts to keep illegal firearms off the streets and strengthen accountability over the Chicago Police Department, which must continue the hard work of rebuilding trust through transparency.”

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    Chuck Goudie

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  • Ex-Palo Alto cop pleads guilty to 2018 assault during arrest. Colleagues called him ‘The Fuse’

    Ex-Palo Alto cop pleads guilty to 2018 assault during arrest. Colleagues called him ‘The Fuse’

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    A retired Palo Alto police officer pleaded guilty Tuesday to assaulting a gay man during a 2018 arrest, according to the Santa Clara County district attorney’s office.

    Wayne Benitez, 66, who prosecutors say was known among his former colleagues as “The Fuse,” had slammed the 42-year-old man’s face against a car windshield and then failed to disclose his actions in his police report. As part of a plea deal, Benitez will be sentenced to 750 hours of community service and required to complete anger management and LGBTQ+ sensitivity training.

    The assault occurred on Feb. 17, 2018, at Buena Vista Mobile Home Park.

    Benitez was one of several officers arresting the man, whose name was not released, on suspicion of having driven with a suspended license. Benitez slammed the man into the windshield of his own car.

    “See how quickly they behave once we put our foot down?” Benitez is heard saying on body-camera video of the arrest, according to prosecutors. “And that’s what we don’t do enough of.”

    After the victim complained that the assault made him bleed, Benitez said: “You’re going to be bleeding a whole lot more.”

    In his report, Benitez said he only used force when pulling the man from his trailer at the mobile home park, prosecutors said. But security video from the scene captured the assault, as did the body-camera video from the arrest.

    “When someone with a badge breaks the law, it cracks the confidence that people have in law enforcement,” Santa Clara County Dist. Atty. Jeff Rosen said in a statement. “That is not just unfortunate. It is unacceptable. No one is above the law.”

    The man’s charges were later dismissed by the district attorney’s office. The case was investigated by the Santa Clara County district attorney’s public and law enforcement integrity team.

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    Jeremy Childs

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