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Tag: police officers

  • Missing exchange student found cold and scared after what police call a ‘cyber-kidnapping’

    Missing exchange student found cold and scared after what police call a ‘cyber-kidnapping’

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    Utah police say they found a teenage Chinese exchange student alone and cold in a tent after he was a victim of what they’re calling a “cyber-kidnapping.”

    The Riverdale Police Department said Kai Zhuang, 17, was reported missing Thursday by his high school. His parents in China had contacted the school after they received a ransom photo of their son – and had sent $80,000 to bank accounts in China “due to continuous threats from the kidnappers,” according to a press release issued Sunday.

    Police found him Sunday “alive but very cold and scared” at a makeshift campsite in the mountains near Brigham City, using Zhuang’s bank and phone records, the release said. Police said he was there on directions from his cyber-kidnappers to isolate himself.

    Zhuang was relieved to see police, according to the release, and “had no heat source inside the tent, only a heat blanket, a sleeping bag, limited food and water and several phones that were presumed to be used to carry out the cyber kidnapping.”

    The Brigham City Fire Department checked Zhuang for cold-related issues. He was cleared of major medical concerns and given a cheeseburger, which he requested.

    Zhuang also asked to speak with his family to make sure they were safe, which police helped him do, according to the release.

    More than a week before he was reported missing, police officers in Provo had picked up Zhuang on December 20 while he was reportedly trying to camp, according to the release. They were concerned for his safety, arranged for him to be taken back to Riverdale and contacted his host family.

    Riverdale Police said Sunday that Zhuang was already being “manipulated and controlled by the cyber kidnappers” then but had not told anyone.

    On Thursday, police went to his host home, and his host family said they were unaware Zhuang was missing, the release said. They told police he was at home the night before and that they heard him early that morning. Police said there was no evidence that he had been forcefully taken from the home.

    Riverdale police worked with the FBI, the US embassy in China and Chinese officials to find Zhuang.

    Police said the FBI told them other foreign exchange students, particularly Chinese, have been targeted in similar “cyber-kidnapping” scams in the US. Perpetrators threaten students, order them to isolate, monitor them through video calls and demand ransom from their families.

    The FBI referred questions back to Riverdale police.

    CNN’s Kaylene Chassie contributed to this report.

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  • Retired officers honored for stopping arson attack on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birth home

    Retired officers honored for stopping arson attack on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birth home

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    Retired officers honored for stopping arson attack on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birth home – CBS News


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    Two retired New York City Police Department officers, and brothers, were honored Saturday for their role in helping halt an arson attack on the Atlanta birth home of civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.

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  • Former Memphis officer pleads guilty in Tyre Nichols federal case

    Former Memphis officer pleads guilty in Tyre Nichols federal case

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    Former Memphis officer pleads guilty in Tyre Nichols federal case – CBS News


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    Former Memphis police officer Desmond Mills Jr. pleaded guilty Thursday to federal charges in the death of Tyre Nichols, who died three days after being violently beaten by officers during a traffic stop. Mills and four other officers are also facing separate state murder charges in Nichols’ death. Elise Preston has more.

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  • New bodycam video shows police response to Maui wildfire

    New bodycam video shows police response to Maui wildfire

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    New bodycam video shows police response to Maui wildfire – CBS News


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    Newly-released police bodycam footage captured the chaos and devastation which confronted officers as they responded to the wildfire in Lahaina, Maui, in August, as flames tore through the historic town. The island’s warning sirens did not sound, and with no fire trucks in sight, officers cut fences to try and create an escape path. Jonathon Vigliotti has more.

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  • Feds open investigation into claims Baton Rouge police tortured detainees in

    Feds open investigation into claims Baton Rouge police tortured detainees in

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    The Justice Department has opened a civil rights investigation into claims that the police department for Baton Rouge, Louisiana, abused and tortured suspects, the FBI announced Friday. 

    Numerous lawsuits allege that the Street Crimes Unit of the Baton Rouge Police Department abused drug suspects at a recently shuttered narcotics processing center — an unmarked warehouse nicknamed the “Brave Cave.”

    The FBI said experienced prosecutors and agents are “reviewing allegations that members of the department may have abused their authority.” 

    Baton Rouge police said in a statement that its chief, Murphy Paul “met with FBI officials and requested their assistance to ensure an independent review of these complaints.”   

    In late August, Baton Rouge Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome announced that the “Brave Cave” was being permanently closed, and that the Street Crimes Unit was also being disbanded. 

    This comes as a federal lawsuit filed earlier this week by Ternell Brown, a grandmother, alleges that police officers conducted an unlawful strip-search on her. 

    screen-shot-2023-09-22-at-7-20-01-pm.png
    Lawsuits allege that the Street Crimes Unit of the Baton Rouge Police Department in Louisiana abused drug suspects in the Narcotics Processing Facility, an unmarked warehouse nicknamed the “Brave Cave.”

    Brown civil lawsuit via U.S. District Court in Louisiana


    The lawsuit alleges that officers pulled over Brown while she was driving with her husband near her Baton Rouge neighborhood in a black Dodge Charger in June. Police officers ordered the couple out of the car and searched the vehicle, finding pills in a container, court documents said. Brown said the pills were prescription and she was in “lawful possession” of the medication. Police officers became suspicious when they found she was carrying two different types of prescription pills in one container, the complaint said. 

    Officers then, without Brown’s consent or a warrant, the complaint states, took her to the unit’s “Brave Cave.” The Street Crimes Unit used the warehouse as its “home base,” the lawsuit alleged, to conduct unlawful strip searches.

    Police held Brown for two hours, the lawsuit reads, during which she was told to strip, and after an invasive search, “she was released from the facility without being charged with a crime.”

    “What occurred to Mrs. Brown is unconscionable and should never happen in America,” her attorney, Ryan Keith Thompson, said in a statement to CBS News.

    Baton Rouge police said in its statement Friday that it was “committed to addressing these troubling accusations,” adding that it has “initiated administrative and criminal investigations.”   

    The Justice Department said its investigation is being conducted by the FBI, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Louisiana. 

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  • Alabama high school band director who was tased, arrested accuses police of

    Alabama high school band director who was tased, arrested accuses police of

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    Alabama high school band director who was tased, arrested accuses police of “excessive” force – CBS News


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    A high school band director in Birmingham, Alabama, who was tased and arrested following a football game last week after police allegedly asked him to stop his band’s performance spoke out Wednesday, saying he was the victim of “excessive” force by police in front of parents and students. Omar Villafranca has more.

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  • Suspect detained in killing of Los Angeles sheriff’s deputy

    Suspect detained in killing of Los Angeles sheriff’s deputy

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    Suspect detained in killing of Los Angeles sheriff’s deputy – CBS News


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    A suspect is in custody in connection to the ambush of a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy. The 29-year-old was arrested Monday morning following a standoff. Elise Preston reports.

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  • Family of man killed by police responding to wrong house in New Mexico files lawsuit

    Family of man killed by police responding to wrong house in New Mexico files lawsuit

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    The family of a man fatally shot in New Mexico by police officers responding to the wrong house sued the department for wrongful death and other claims in federal court, according to a complaint filed on Friday in the U.S. District Court of New Mexico.

    Robert Dotson, 52, was shot and killed in the doorway of his house in Farmington after local police officers opened fire after they said they saw he had a gun.

    Police knocked on Dotson’s door at 11:30 p.m. on April 5, according to the complaint filed in court. Dotson grabbed his gun from the top of the refrigerator and went to open the front door. The complaint says “police vehicles were parked down the street and did not have their lights on.” 

    Three officers standing outside the door immediately opened fire, according to the complaint. Dotson was hit by 12 bullets. His wife, Kimberly, wearing just her robe, came down the stairs to find out what happened, the complaint says, and the officers fired an additional 19 bullets at her but missed.

    Police handcuffed the wife and her two children and placed them in separate vehicles and took them to the police station, according to the complaint. “There was no attempt, or even apparently a thought, about preserving the dignity” of the new widow and her family, the complaint says.

    New Mexico State Police issued a statement saying that Farmington police were responding to a domestic violence call but went to the wrong address. 

    The statement said the officers identified themselves as police, but no one answered. Body camera footage shows that as the officers backed away from the house, the homeowner opened the screen door armed with a handgun.

    In a video statement, Farmington Police Chief Steve Hebbe acknowledged the mistake and said he was “heartbroken by the circumstances.”

    Reporting was contributed by Stephen Smith.

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  • Pennsylvania police expand search area for escaped murderer

    Pennsylvania police expand search area for escaped murderer

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    Pennsylvania police expand search area for escaped murderer – CBS News


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    Police are expanding the search area for Danelo Cavalcante, the convicted murderer who escaped from a Pennsylvania prison more than a week ago. He’s been spotted several times since his escape, but police believe he slipped through their search perimeter over the weekend. CBS Philadelphia’s Nikki DeMentri reports.

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  • U.K. terror suspect Daniel Khalife still on the run as police narrow search

    U.K. terror suspect Daniel Khalife still on the run as police narrow search

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    The dramatic escape from a British prison by Daniel Khalife has been called “pre-planned” by London’s police chief as a wide-scale manhunt to find the terror suspect enters its third day. 

    Mark Rowley, the commissioner for London’s Metropolitan police, told U.K. radio station LBC on Friday that police authorities were not ruling out the possibility that Khalife had assistance from others, including those working in the prison. 

    Prisoner Daniel Abed Khalife (pictured) was reported missing at 7:50 a.m. local time on Wednesday, U.K. police officials said.

    London Metropolitan Police


    “To work out a prison escape, and how you are going to do the logistics of it, get the right equipment and how you are going to do it, it’s unlikely that you would do that in the spur of the moment,” Rowley said. 

    The 21-year-old former British soldier, who had been awaiting trial at a south London prison on terrorism related charges accusing him of planting fake bombs at an army base, escaped a London prison Wednesday by clinging to the underside of a delivery truck.

    Khalife also faced charges of allegedly working for Iran and eliciting personal information from a U.K. Ministry of Defence database, according to CBS News partners at the BBC. 

    The search for Khalife narrowed on Friday as authorities honed their search in on Richmond park in southwest London — the largest urban park in Europe, spanning an area of 2,500 acres. 

    gettyimages-1421229445.jpg
    View of the London skyline seen from Richmond Park against a cloudy sky. Richmond Park is the largest urban park in Europe, spanning an area of 2,500 acres. 

    Wirestock


    About 150 counter-terrorism officers are involved in the search effort, the Metropolitan police have said. 

    Police helicopters were seen circling the park overnight and vans were seen driving through the park on Friday morning. 

    There have been no publicly confirmed sightings of Khalife, and police have warned that the terror suspect may be more skilled at avoiding being caught due to his military background. 

    Investigators say that Khalife was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, red and white checkered trousers and brown steel- toe cap boots, and they believe he is still wearing a prison chef’s uniform as he had worked in the prison kitchen while incarcerated. 

    Questions have been raised over whether Khalife should have been held in a more secure facility, considering the nature of the charges against him. London’s Wandsworth prison where Khalife was held is a “Category B” prison, which holds high security prisoners but is not considered as secure as a “Category A” prison, the highest security ranking for prisons in the U.K. 

    Dominic Murphy, counter-terrorism commander for London’s Met police, had confirmed that the vehicle Khalife used to escape had been stopped in southwest London less than an hour after he was declared missing, but Khalife had not been found at that time. 

    Murphy said on Thursday that despite over 50 calls from the public offering “valuable lines of inquiry,” it was “a little unusual and perhaps a testament to [Mr Khalife’s] ingenuity” that he has yet to be found. 

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  • Philadelphia officer to be fired in fatal police shooting of Eddie Irizarry

    Philadelphia officer to be fired in fatal police shooting of Eddie Irizarry

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    Philadelphia officer to be fired in fatal police shooting of Eddie Irizarry – CBS News


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    A Philadelphia police officer who shot and killed a man during a traffic stop earlier this month will be fired, the city’s police chief announced Wednesday. Body camera footage of the fatal shooting of Eddie Irizarry appeared to contradict the police department’s initial account of the events leading up to his killing. Jeff Pegues has detail.

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  • Suspect fatally shot in Pittsburgh police standoff

    Suspect fatally shot in Pittsburgh police standoff

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    Suspect fatally shot in Pittsburgh police standoff – CBS News


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    Authorities said a man was fatally shot by police in a residential Pittsburgh neighborhood Wednesday after he opened fire on deputies who had responded to his home to serve an eviction notice, prompting a six-hour standoff.

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  • This Minnesotan town’s entire police force resigned over low pay

    This Minnesotan town’s entire police force resigned over low pay

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    Los Angeles city workers walk off job, seek better benefits and wages


    Los Angeles city workers walk off job, seek better benefits and wages

    01:58

    A small Minnesotan town may soon be without any local law enforcement after its entire police force handed in their resignation in protest of low wages. 

    Goodhue Police Chief Josh Smith submitted his resignation last week at a city council meeting in Goodhue, Minnesota, citing the city’s $22 an hour pay for officers. The department’s remaining team members, one full-time police officer and five part-time officers, quit their jobs shortly afterwards. The resignations are the latest in a wave of departures at police departments across the U.S., as officers push for higher pay and less overtime. 

    “We can look at [pay increases] to make ourselves more marketable,” Goodhue Mayor Ellen Anderson Buck, told community members at an emergency council meeting Monday following the police chief’s resignation. “This is heartbreaking to us,” Buck said after the meeting.  

    Goodhue PD will serve the small town of just over 1,000 people until August 24, Buck said. The Goodhue County Sheriff’s Office will take up the departing officers’ cases while the town’s officials work on rebuilding the department.


    Latest jobs report indicates labor shortage as employers struggle to find workers

    01:54

    Goodhue Police Chief Smith warned of the department’s difficulties attracting young officers at a City Council meeting last month.

    “This has been three weeks now that we’ve got zero applicants and I have zero prospects,” Chief Smith said at that meeting. “Right now … trying to hire at $22 an hour, you’re never going to see another person again walk through those doors.”  

    Smaller departments pay at least $30 an hour, Smith told the council. Goodhue also hasn’t matched other cities’ incentives such as sign-on bonuses, which also affect recruiting, Smith said. 

    Bigger than a small-town problem 

    Goodhue isn’t the only community losing officers over issues like low pay and long hours. 

    The national number of resignations and retirements at police departments has soared, according to a recent survey from the Police Executive Research Forum. Departments across the U.S. saw 47% more resignations in 2022 compared with 2019.

    The New York City Police Department is also feeling the pain of exodus. In the first two months of this year alone, 239 officers left the NYPD, according to data obtained by the New York Post in March. That’s 36% more than the number who quit during the same period in 2022. 

    Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch attributed the rise in resignations of New York police officers to the job’s poor pay and “grueling” conditions. 

    “We are continuing to lose too many members to other policing jobs where they face less grueling working conditions, less second-guessing and have significantly better pay and benefits,” Lynch told CBS2 News last month. 


    Hollywood shuts down down as actors, writers go on strike over higher pay, A.I. concerns

    03:23

    Everyone wants better pay

    But, it’s not just police officers that are searching for greener salary pastures. Workers in other professions are also leaving their jobs to look for better compensation packages and greater professional development opportunities elsewhere. 

    According to a 2021 Pew Research study, inadequate pay was the top reason workers quit their jobs, with 63% of workers bidding adieu to their employers over money issues. 

    The Associated Press contributed reporting. 

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  • Three San Antonio police officers charged with murder in shooting

    Three San Antonio police officers charged with murder in shooting

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    Three San Antonio police officers charged with murder in shooting – CBS News


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    Three San Antonio police officers have been charged with murder in the shooting death of a woman who appeared to be having a mental health crisis. Omar Villafranca reports.

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  • $45 million misconduct settlement for man paralyzed in police van “largest” in nation’s history, lawyers say

    $45 million misconduct settlement for man paralyzed in police van “largest” in nation’s history, lawyers say

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    Five CT officers on leave after man paralyzed


    Five CT police officers on leave after New Haven man paralyzed in transport van ride

    03:57

    A $45 million dollar settlement has been reached for the treatment of a man who became paralyzed in a police van after a 2022 arrest in New Haven, Connecticut, lawyers for the defendant confirmed to CBS News Friday.

    Richard “Randy” Cox injured his neck on June 19, 2022, when the police van transporting Cox to prison braked hard to avoid a collision with another vehicle that had pulled out from a side street, according to police.

    As there were no seat belts, and Cox couldn’t brace himself because his hands were cuffed, he flew head-first into the metal divider between the driver’s section and the prisoners’ area.

    Video footage showed Cox begging for help and the officers accusing him of being drunk and not believing that he was injured. Police put him in a wheelchair and brought him to a cell. There, they waited for an ambulance.

    Two police officers, Jocelyn Lavandier and Luis Rivera, were fired for violating officer conduct rules on upholding the law, integrity, trustworthiness, courtesy and respect. The two officers and three others also face criminal charges.

    New Haven’s Mayor Justin Elicker said in a statement, “The New Haven Police Department has instituted a comprehensive set of reforms, updated its policies and procedures on the transfer of people in custody, and required department-wide training on duty to intervene. The officers involved are being held accountable by the police department and in court.”

    Thirty million of the total settlement will be covered by New Haven’s insurance, and the remainder will be paid by the city, the news release said.

    “As the largest settlement in a police misconduct case in our nation’s history, this settlement sends a message to the country that we know we must be better than this,” Cox’s attorneys Ben Crump, Louis Rubano and R.J. Weber said in a statement.

    The Associated Press contributed reporting

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  • Family of 11-year-old Mississippi boy shot by police officer calls for release of bodycam footage

    Family of 11-year-old Mississippi boy shot by police officer calls for release of bodycam footage

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    The family of an 11-year-old Mississippi boy who was shot and wounded by a police officer who was responding to a 911 call to their home last weekend has demanded the release of police bodycam footage.

    “The family deserves answers and they deserve it sooner than later because you had an 11-year-old boy within an inch of losing his life,” the family’s attorney Carlos Moore told CBS News.

    Moore said that the family has asked the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI) for the bodycam footage of Aderrien Murry being allegedly shot in the chest early Saturday morning by an Indianola police officer. The bureau, Moore said, won’t release the footage while the investigation is ongoing. 

    Body camera footage can provide crucial evidence about what happened in an incident, but laws don’t compel release of the footage to the public, according to the National Conference of State Legislature.

    “That’s unacceptable,” Moore said, and he believes investigators won’t release the footage “because it shows things that are damaging to the city of Indianola.” Known as the “Crown of the Delta”, Indianola is located in the Mississippi Delta and has 10,683 full-time residents.

    An Indianola Police Department officer came to the family’s home after the child called the police for a domestic incident, his mother Nakala Murry said. 

    Her daughter’s father knocked on the door around 4 a.m. on May 20 and “stated he was irate,” said Murry, while her children and nephew were sleeping in bed. She told CBS News she gave her cell phone to her son and asked him to call her mother and the police. 

    Her son called the police first, and then called his grandmother, and was “trying to help protect his mom,” Moore said, adding that Aderrien told 911 dispatch that the man did not have a gun.

    Police arrived at the house, and at first they knocked on the door, but then kicked the door open, the family recounted. 

    An officer yelled, “Anyone that’s in the house come out with your hands up!” Murry recalled. 

    Aderrien heard the order and went out of his room towards the living room, the family said. As he got into the living room he was shot by the same officer who told him to come out, Moore said. 

    Murry said her son fell to the ground, and then she held him and tried to compress his bullet wound. 

    “He started singing gospel. He started praying,” Murry said. 

    Aderrien was airlifted to the University of Mississippi Medical Centre in Jackson where he was diagnosed with having a collapsed lung, lacerated liver and fractured rib, and put on a ventilator, the family said. He was released on Wednesday from the hospital, his family said.   

    Indianola police confirmed that Officer Greg Capers was involved in the shooting and is employed by the department, but referred any other questions to MBI. 

    MBI told CBS News it is currently assessing the incident and gathering evidence. Due to this being an open and active investigation, no further comment will be made, the agency said.  

    Request for comment from Indianola Mayor Ken Featherstone about the incident was not immediately returned.   

    Indianola is located about 90 miles north of Jackson. 

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  • Indianapolis officer pleads guilty to kicking handcuffed man in the face

    Indianapolis officer pleads guilty to kicking handcuffed man in the face

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    A former Indianapolis police sergeant pleaded guilty this week to violating the civil rights of a homeless man, whom he kicked in the face during an arrest in 2021, federal authorities said.

    The officer, Eric Huxley, is currently suspended from his role at the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, the Indianapolis Star reported. He entered a guilty plea in federal court on Monday of violating the civil rights of an arrestee by using excessive force, a felony charge that is punishable by up to 10 years in prison, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

    Huxley was indicted last October on one count of deprivation of rights under the color of law. The charge came just over a year after the illegal arrest, on Sept. 24, 2021, of a man identified in court documents by the initials J.V., the Justice Department said. 

    While on patrol in downtown Indianapolis, authorities allege that Huxley received a call from another officer requesting assistance to confront “a disorderly person” on Monument Circle. Huxley responded to that request, and the officers placed the man under arrest for disorderly conduct before searching his property. 

    When officers tried to remove his belt, the man “became confrontational with the officers,” leading one to use “a department-approved takedown maneuver to bring J.V., who had already been handcuffed, to the ground,” the Justice Department said. As the arresting officer held the man down with one hand, another restrained his legs. 

    Although these tactics meant the man could not move, Huxley then used his foot to stomp on the man’s head while he was handcuffed. The incident was recorded by police body cameras and can be seen in the footage.

    “Despite knowing that J.V. had been effectively restrained and posed no further danger to officers or the public, Huxley then intentionally raised his right foot and drove it down onto J.V.’s head and face,” the Justice Department said in a news release announcing Huxley’s guilty plea.

    In a statement included in the release, Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke, of the Justice Department’s civil rights division, emphasized the brutal nature of Huxley’s crime. 

    “This police officer violently and callously assaulted a homeless man who posed no threat,” said Clarke. “The Justice Department will continue to investigate and prosecute law enforcement officers for violating federal civil rights laws.”

    U.S. Attorney Zachary Myers, of Indiana’s southern district, added that, in addition to traumatizing victims, “police officers who break the law and use excessive force damage the community’s trust in the law enforcement profession” and called for those who commit crimes to be “identified and prosecuted.”

    A sentencing hearing for Huxley has not yet been scheduled. He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years imprisonment followed by supervised release, according to the Justice Department. Prosecutors will ask for a reduced sentence in exchange for Huxley’s guilty plea, but a federal judge will determine the final sentence using federal guidelines and other statutory factors.

    Huxley also faces official misconduct and battery charges in Marion County, Indiana, CBS 4 reported.

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  • California to pay $24 million settlement to family of man who died after violent arrest

    California to pay $24 million settlement to family of man who died after violent arrest

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    California to pay $24 million settlement to family of Burbank man who died in police custody


    California to pay $24 million settlement to family of Burbank man who died in police custody

    00:37

    California will pay a $24 million civil rights settlement to the family of a man who died in police custody in March of 2020 after screaming “I can’t breathe” as multiple officers restrained him while trying to take a blood sample, lawyers said Tuesday.

    Seven California Highway Patrol officers and a nurse were charged with involuntary manslaughter earlier this year in connection with the death of 38-year-old Edward Bronstein.

    Annee Della Donna and Eric Dubin, attorneys for Bronstein’s young children, said it’s the largest civil rights settlement of its kind by the state of California, and the second largest nationally since the city of Minneapolis paid $27 million in the George Floyd case. The attorneys scheduled a news conference in Los Angeles for Wednesday to provide details.

    The settlement comes amid renewed scrutiny of potentially fatal restraints following last week’s death of a New York City subway rider, Jordan Neely, who was placed in a chokehold by a U.S. Marine veteran. Bronstein’s death also echoes that of Eric Garner, a New Yorker put in a chokehold by police in 2014 and whose dying words “I can’t breathe” became a chant in protests against racial injustice. Both Garner and Neely were Black.

    California Police Custody Death
    In this image taken from a nearly 18-minute video taken by a California Highway Patrol sergeant, Edward Bronstein, 38, is taken into custody by CHP officers on March 31, 2020, following a traffic stop in Los Angeles. 

    California Highway Patrol via AP


    The Los Angeles County coroner said Bronstein’s death was caused by “acute methamphetamine intoxication during restraint by law enforcement.” The report lists Bronstein’s race as White.

    Bronstein was taken into custody following a traffic stop on suspicion of driving under the influence on March 31, 2020. He died at a highway patrol station in Altadena, north of downtown Los Angeles, less than two months before Floyd was killed by police in Minnesota as he, too, repeatedly told officers, “I can’t breathe.”

    When announcing the criminal charges in March, L.A. County District Attorney George Gascón said the highway patrol officers failed Bronstein, “and their failure was criminally negligent, causing his death.”

    A nearly 18-minute video showing the officers’ treatment of Bronstein was released last year following a judge’s order in the family’s federal lawsuit alleging excessive force and a violation of civil rights.

    Family members have said Bronstein was terrified of needles and they believe that’s why he was reluctant to comply with the CHP initially as they tried to take a blood sample.

    The video, filmed by the sergeant, shows several officers forcing a handcuffed Bronstein to a mat on the floor as he shouts, “I’ll do it willingly! I’ll do it willingly, I promise!”

    He continues screaming as six officers hold him face-down — the lawsuit alleged they put their knees on his back — and pleads for help.

    “It’s too late,” one officer replies. “Stop yelling!” another shouts.

    “I can’t breathe!” and “I can’t!” Bronstein cries, and an officer responds, “Just relax and stop resisting!”

    But Bronstein’s voice gets softer and he then falls silent. While he is unresponsive, the nurse continues to draw blood and the officers keep pinning him down.

    After they realize he may not have a pulse and does not appear to be breathing, they slap his face and say, “Edward, wake up.” More than 11 minutes after his last screams, they begin CPR.

    Bronstein never regained consciousness and was later pronounced dead.

    In a statement, CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee extended condolences to the family and said he would respect the judicial process. His office didn’t immediately respond Tuesday to request for comment on the settlement.

    The officers, who were put on administrative leave in March, face one count each of involuntary manslaughter and one felony count of assault under the color of authority. If convicted, they could get up to four years in prison. The registered nurse was also charged with involuntary manslaughter.

    Bronstein’s death prompted the CHP to change its policies to prevent officers “from using techniques or transport methods that involve a substantial risk of positional asphyxia,” the agency said. Additional training was also ordered for uniformed officers.

    In September 2021, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law barring police from using certain face-down holds that have led to multiple unintended deaths. The bill was aimed at expanding on the state’s ban on chokeholds in the wake of Floyd’s murder.

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  • Police sue rapper Afroman for

    Police sue rapper Afroman for

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    Ohio-based rap artist Joseph Edgar Foreman, known by the name Afroman, is being sued by seven officers with the Adams County Sheriff’s Office for using footage of their 2022 search on his home to make and promote new music. The officers accused Foreman’s use of their images and likeness as a “malicious” act that tarnished their reputation and humiliated them, according to a complaint. 

    The lawsuit stems from a search of Foreman’s home on Aug. 21, 2022, which was conducted with a “lawfully issued search warrant,” according to a March 13 complaint. A photo of the warrant shared by the local Fox affiliate but has not been independently verified by CBS News shows that the search was for evidence of marijuana and drug paraphernalia related to drug possession and trafficking, as well as kidnapping.

    Foreman, known for his song “Because I Got High,” was not at his home during the search, but his wife was present and recorded parts of the search on her phone. His house also had several security cameras that recorded the search. 

    Following the raid, the seven members of law enforcement involved – deputies Shawn Cooley, Justin Cooley, Shawn Grooms and Lisa Phillips, as well as sergeants Michael Estep and Randolph Walters Jr. and detective sergeant Brian Newland – say that Foreman used those video recordings to make music and music videos about the search. There were “dozens” of videos and images across numerous social media platforms, they said, that “clearly portray” their images and likeness. 

    They are suing him for the unauthorized use of individual’s persona, invasion of privacy by misappropriation and invasion of privacy by false light publicity, among other things. The officers have demanded a trial by jury. 

    Videos posted by Foreman show police breaking down his door as they entered the home wielding weapons. He since has posted several videos showing the officers’ movement through his home. 

    One of those clips seemingly became the source of inspiration for his new song “Lemon Pound Cake” and was heavily used in the official music video. In the clip, officers are seen walking through his kitchen and one of the officers is seen looking several times at a pound cake being kept on a cake stand on the counter. That officer quickly became referenced as “Officer Poundcake” by Foreman on social media, a nickname that Foreman also started using on merchandise. 

    The other officers involved were also singled out in posts by Foreman. 

    “Defendants’ actions were willful, wanton, malicious, and done with conscious or reckless disregard for the rights of Plaintiffs,” the complaint says, adding that he was not authorized to use their personas for commercial purposes.

    The officers also claim that the posts led to them being “subjected to ridicule,” and that it’s “made it more difficult and even more dangerous” for them to do their jobs, saying that they have since received death threats. 

    “Plaintiffs have suffered damages, including all profits derived from and attributable to Defendants’ unauthorized use of Plaintiffs’ personas, and have suffered humiliation, ridicule, mental distress, embarrassment, and loss of reputation,” the complaint says. 

    Foreman has posted about the lawsuit on Instagram, saying that the search itself was based on a “false warrant” that “put the Adams county sheriff in a position to attempt to kill me.” He also accused the officers involved of stealing his money, saying that doing so took away their “right of privacy.” 

    “My video footage is my property. … I am a law-abiding taxpaying citizens who was violated by criminals camouflaged by law-enforcement,” he said, adding in a statement from his lawyer that reads, “We are waiting for public records requests from Adam’s county we still have not received. We are planning to counter sue for the unlawful raid, money being stolen, and for the undeniable damage this had on my clients family, career and property.”

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  • Memphis police lieutenant who was on scene of Tyre Nichols’ violent beating retired with benefits

    Memphis police lieutenant who was on scene of Tyre Nichols’ violent beating retired with benefits

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    The Memphis police supervisor on scene when Tyre Nichols was beaten to death by officers retired with his benefits the day before a hearing to fire him, according to documents filed to revoke his law enforcement certification.

    Lt. DeWayne Smith was identified Friday in records obtained by media outlets as the officer that officials said earlier this month had retired before his termination hearing.

    Some Memphis City Council members were upset an officer was allowed to retire before steps could be taken to fire them, including the council’s vice-chairman JB Smiley Jr., who said it didn’t seem fair that the then-unidentified officer could keep pension and other benefits.

    “I just don’t like the fact that his parents are paying this officer to go on and live and that’s troubling,” Smiley said.

    Memphis Police Force Investigation
    The image from video released by the city of Memphis shows police officers talking after a brutal attack on Tyre Nichols on Jan. 7, 2023, in Memphis, Tennessee. Nichols died on Jan. 10 from his injuries. 

    City of Memphis via AP


    The attorney for Nichols’ family said the department should not have let Smith “cowardly sidestep the consequences of his actions” and retire after 25 years.

    “We call for Memphis police and officials to do everything in their power to hold Lt. Smith and all of those involved fully accountable,” attorney Ben Crump said.

    Seven other Memphis officers were fired after Nichols died following a traffic stop on Jan. 7 and five of them are charged with second-degree murder. Smith is not charged in Nichols’ death.

    Nichols, 29, was pulled roughly from his car as an officer threatened to shock him with a Taser. He ran, but was chased down. Video showed five officers held him down and repeatedly struck him with their fists, boots and batons as he screamed for his mother.

    The decertification documents against Lt. Smith reveal additional details about his actions that night.

    Smith heard Nichols say “I can’t breathe” as he was propped up against a squad car, but failed to get him medical care or remove his handcuffs, according to the report.

    Smith also didn’t get reports from other officers about using force and told Nichols’ family he was driving under the influence even though there was no information to support a charge, the documents said. Investigators said Smith decided without evidence that Nichols was on drugs or drunk, and video captured him telling Nichols “you done took something” when he arrived at the scene.

    Additionally, Smith did not wear his body camera — violating police department policy. His actions were captured on the body cameras of other officers, documents said.

    The U.S. Department of Justice is currently reviewing the Memphis Police Department policies on the use of force, de-escalation strategies and specialized units in response to Nichols’ death. 

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