Training Failure

pegwinn

Top of the Food Chain
Apr 17, 2004
2,558
332
98
Texas
As if NOLA authorities needed any more bad press over the conduct of the cops and city government, here comes this tidbit. Obviously the NOLA cops need remediation.

Police suspended for alleged beating arrest
TV news producer beaten while recording

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AP) -- Two New Orleans police officers repeatedly punched a 64-year-old man accused of public intoxication, and another city officer assaulted an Associated Press Television News producer as a cameraman taped the confrontations.

There will be a criminal investigation, and the three officers were to be suspended, arrested and charged with simple battery Sunday, Capt. Marlon Defillo said.

"We have great concern with what we saw this morning," Defillo said after he and about a dozen other high-ranking police department officials watched the APTN footage Sunday. "It's a troubling tape, no doubt about it. ... This department will take immediate action."

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

The APTN tape shows an officer hitting the man at least four times in the head Saturday night as he stood outside a bar near Bourbon Street. The suspect, Robert Davis, appeared to resist, twisting and flailing as he was dragged to the ground by four officers. One of the four then kneed Davis and punched him twice. Davis was face-down on the sidewalk with blood streaming down his arm and into the gutter.

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

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

Police said Davis, 64, of New Orleans, was booked on public intoxication, resisting arrest, battery on a police officer and public intimidation. He was treated at a hospital and released into police custody.

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

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

Three of the five officers -- including Smith -- are New Orleans officers, and two others appeared to be federal officers. Numerous agencies have sent police to help with patrols in the aftermath of Katrina.

Under normal circumstances, it takes unusually offensive behavior to trigger an arrest on Bourbon Street. But New Orleans police have been working under stressful conditions since the hurricane.

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

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

Many officers deserted their posts in the days after Katrina, and some were accused of joining in the looting that broke out. At least two committed suicide.

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

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

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

SOURCE
 
pegwinn said:
As if NOLA authorities needed any more bad press over the conduct of the cops and city government, here comes this tidbit. Obviously the NOLA cops need remediation.

Police suspended for alleged beating arrest
TV news producer beaten while recording

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AP) -- Two New Orleans police officers repeatedly punched a 64-year-old man accused of public intoxication, and another city officer assaulted an Associated Press Television News producer as a cameraman taped the confrontations.

There will be a criminal investigation, and the three officers were to be suspended, arrested and charged with simple battery Sunday, Capt. Marlon Defillo said.

"We have great concern with what we saw this morning," Defillo said after he and about a dozen other high-ranking police department officials watched the APTN footage Sunday. "It's a troubling tape, no doubt about it. ... This department will take immediate action."

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

The APTN tape shows an officer hitting the man at least four times in the head Saturday night as he stood outside a bar near Bourbon Street. The suspect, Robert Davis, appeared to resist, twisting and flailing as he was dragged to the ground by four officers. One of the four then kneed Davis and punched him twice. Davis was face-down on the sidewalk with blood streaming down his arm and into the gutter.

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

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

Police said Davis, 64, of New Orleans, was booked on public intoxication, resisting arrest, battery on a police officer and public intimidation. He was treated at a hospital and released into police custody.

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

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

Three of the five officers -- including Smith -- are New Orleans officers, and two others appeared to be federal officers. Numerous agencies have sent police to help with patrols in the aftermath of Katrina.

Under normal circumstances, it takes unusually offensive behavior to trigger an arrest on Bourbon Street. But New Orleans police have been working under stressful conditions since the hurricane.

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

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

Many officers deserted their posts in the days after Katrina, and some were accused of joining in the looting that broke out. At least two committed suicide.

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

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

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

SOURCE

Abusing people ... deserting their posts ....... damned unprofessional IMO. Yet police wonder why they have lost the respect they once had.
 
Mr. P said:
Blow the whole damn place up and let the Mississippi do what it always did.

Either that or let the Trumps of the world turn it into another "official" sin city with PRIVATE money. They know how to drag in tourists with lots of money to spend, re-create a sort of Hollywood version of the old New Orleans (Mardi Gras and all) and keep out all the riff raff. Illegals are more than happy to supply the labor if the unions will let them.
 
GunnyL said:
Abusing people ... deserting their posts ....... damned unprofessional IMO. Yet police wonder why they have lost the respect they once had.

That's the sad thing anywhere you go. It's a couple of jerks like this that give the entire police force a bad name.
 
GunnyL said:
Abusing people ... deserting their posts ....... damned unprofessional IMO. Yet police wonder why they have lost the respect they once had.

http://michellemalkin.com/archives/003694.htm

...(beginning is on the battery above), I don't think the NOPD should be held up as SOP for police forces anywhere else.

It wasn't just beatings and lootings, seems the one body left at superdome was shot by a police officer:

Remember: The NOPD doesn't call it "looting" when its own employees do it. It's
"appropriation of non-essential items during the height of Katrina, from businesses."

And there's this new report:

One of the 73 people listed as victims of Hurricane Katrina was actually shot by police.

Officer Ronald Mitchell shot and killed Danny Brumfield, 45, outside the convention center, the New Orleans Police Department confirmed Friday. Police said it happened about 2 a.m. Sept. 3, in the darkness before the National Guard arrived and began evacuating the convention center.

A police statement released after the Associated Press asked about the shooting said that moments after Mitchell and his partner heard what appeared to be a gunshot, a man jumped onto the hood of their patrol car swinging something shiny. It was attempted murder of a police officer, a four-paragraph news release said.

That wasn't what happened, say Brumfield's daughter, Shantan Brumfield, and his niece Africa Brumfield, both of whom were there and both of whom the Associated Press interviewed by phone.

They say the officer who shot Brumfield had hit him twice with a squad car before doing so — a nudge the first time, a heavier bump the second. That was when he leaped onto the hood and was shot, they said. Afterward, they said, the car ran over him, and other officers didn't come to investigate for several hours.

The police force is such a mess that thousands of National Guard troops may stay in New Orleans until March to regain control of the city.

No wonder former police superintendent Eddie Compass tucked tail and ran.

***

Previous:

Euphemism of the day
The New Orleans police meltdown
The New Orleans P.D. meltdown
 
Nothing new here folks...they have had a rep as being corrupt for many decades...worked with them on Narcotics interdiction in the early eightees..was very uncomfortable...they were on the Feds list for...'be careful when working with'...need I say more? :2guns:
 
Hagbard Celine said:
Please do. Police corruption is always of interest.

I am retired now..this is up to y'all youngn's to solve...no longer on the payroll! :2guns:
 
GunnyL said:
Abusing people ... deserting their posts ....... damned unprofessional IMO. Yet police wonder why they have lost the respect they once had.


When were the NOPD ever respected?

Not from here, are you? Only days before Katrina hit one of them was arrested for rape. In the decade before now, over 50 have been arrested for violent crimes ranging from assuault to rape to murder.

I read in our local paper today that two USF students who were there witnessing it were also harassed - by one of the two federal officers who were also there.
 
Jimmyeatworld said:
That's the sad thing anywhere you go. It's a couple of jerks like this that give the entire police force a bad name.


The entire police force got a bad name when the police union decided to inform everyone that the incidents that were recorded on video did not actually happen. They maintain Roberts was not even hit in the head - yet fail to explain the blood clearly seen pouring from his head after the incident. They also maintain the man from the press who was assaulted by the third officer had grabbed one of the officers and told him to stop doing what he was doing - yet he wasn't arrested for assaulting an officer?

The police union is supporting these thugs despite the fact that its clear they were in the wrong. Even if you believe that the police horse which blocked the video for a few seconds did it to obscure Robert's actions of resisting arrest - its hard to believe the guy from the press assaulted an officer and did not get arrested for it.
 
SpidermanTuba said:
The entire police force got a bad name when the police union decided to inform everyone that the incidents that were recorded on video did not actually happen. They maintain Roberts was not even hit in the head - yet fail to explain the blood clearly seen pouring from his head after the incident. They also maintain the man from the press who was assaulted by the third officer had grabbed one of the officers and told him to stop doing what he was doing - yet he wasn't arrested for assaulting an officer?

The police union is supporting these thugs despite the fact that its clear they were in the wrong. Even if you believe that the police horse which blocked the video for a few seconds did it to obscure Robert's actions of resisting arrest - its hard to believe the guy from the press assaulted an officer and did not get arrested for it.
Wish Atlanta the best, we have the NO X- Chief of police now.
 

Forum List

Back
Top