OT: 3 NYPD detectives cleared in 50-shot killing of groom

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And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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-->A scuffle breaks out after the announcement of the verdict in the Sean Bell case outside of the Queens County Criminal Courts Building today in the Queens borough of New York.
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Jason DeCrow: AP​

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April 25, 2008, 9:31AM
3 NYPD detectives cleared in 50-shot killing of groom

By TOM HAYS
Associated Press
<!-- rbox goes here --><!-- rbox ends here -->NEW YORK — Three detectives were acquitted of all charges today in the 50-shot killing of an unarmed groom-to-be on his wedding day, a case that put the NYPD at the center of another dispute involving allegations of excessive firepower.
Justice Arthur Cooperman delivered the verdict in a Queens courtroom packed with spectators, including victim Sean Bell's fiancee and parents, and at least 200 people gathered outside the building.
The verdict provoked an outpouring of emotions: Bell's fiancee immediately walked out of the room. His mother cried.
Outside the courthouse, which was surrounded by scores of police officers, many in the crowd began weeping as news of the verdict said. Others were enraged, swearing and screaming "Murderers! Murderers!" or "KKK!"
Bell, a 23-year-old black man, was killed in a hail of gunfire outside a seedy strip club in Queens on Nov. 25, 2006 — his wedding day — as he was leaving his bachelor party with two friends.
Officers Michael Oliver, 36, and Gescard Isnora, 29, stood trial for manslaughter while Officer Marc Cooper, 40, was charged only with reckless endangerment. Two other shooters weren't charged. Oliver squeezed off 31 shots; Isnora fired 11 rounds; and Cooper shot four times.
The officers, complaining that pretrial publicity had unfairly painted them as cold-blooded killers, opted to have the judge decide the case rather than a jury.
The judge indicated that the police officers' version of events was more credible than the victims' version. "The people have not proved beyond a reasonable doubt that each defendant was not justified" in firing, he said.
A conviction on manslaughter could have brought up to 25 years in prison; the penalty for reckless endangerment, a misdemeanor, is a year behind bars.
The case brought back painful memories of other NYPD shootings, such as the 1999 shooting of Amadou Diallo — an African immigrant who was gunned down in a hail of 41 bullets by police officers who mistook his wallet for a gun. The acquittal of the officers in that case created a storm of protest, with hundreds arrested after taking to the streets in demonstration.
The mood surrounding this case has been muted by comparison, although Bell's fiancee, parents and their supporters, including the Rev. Al Sharpton, have held rallies demanding that the officers — two of whom are black — be held accountable.
Still, a phalanx of police officers, some uniformed and some in the department's community affairs polo shirts, was stationed outside the courthouse Friday. The building was ringed by metal barricades. Some in the crowd wore buttons with Bell's picture or held signs saying "Justice for Sean Bell." After the verdict was read, some in the crowd approached officers but were held back; the jostling quickly died down.
After the verdict, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly acknowledged that some people were disappointed with the acquittals.
"We don't anticipate violence, but we are prepared for any contingency," he said.
The nearly two-month trial was marked by deeply divergent accounts of the night.
The defense painted the victims as drunken thugs who the officers believed were armed and dangerous. Prosecutors sought to convince the judge that the victims had been minding their own business, and that the officers were inept, trigger-happy aggressors.
None of the officers took the witness stand in his own defense. Instead, Cooperman heard transcripts of the officers testifying before a grand jury, saying they believed they had good reason to use deadly force. The judge also heard testimony from Bell's two injured companions, who insisted the maelstrom erupted without warning.
Both sides were consistent on one point: The utter chaos surrounding the last moments of Bell's life.
"It happened so quick," Isnora said in his grand jury testimony. "It was like the last thing I ever wanted to do."
Bell's companions — Trent Benefield and Joseph Guzman — also offered dramatic testimony about the episode. Benefield and Guzman were both wounded; Guzman still has four bullets lodged in his body.
Referring to Isnora, Guzman said, "This dude is shooting like he's crazy, like he's out of his mind."
The victims and shooters were set on a fateful collision course by a pair of innocuous decisions: Bell's to have a last-minute bachelor party at Kalua Cabaret, and the undercover detectives' to investigate reports of prostitution at the club.
As the club closed around 4 a.m., Sanchez and Isnora claimed they overheard Bell and his friends first flirt with women, then taunt a stranger who responded by putting his right hand in his pocket as if he had a gun. Guzman, they testified, said, "Yo, go get my gun" — something Bell's friends denied.
Isnora said he decided to arm himself, call for backup — "It's getting hot," he told his supervisor — and tail Bell, Guzman and Benefield as they went around the corner and got into Bell's car. He claimed that after warning the men to halt, Bell pulled away, bumped him and rammed an unmarked police van that converged on the scene with Oliver at the wheel.
The detective also alleged that Guzman made a sudden move as if he were reaching for a gun.
"I yelled 'Gun!' and fired," he said. "In my mind, I knew (Guzman) had a gun."
Benefield and Guzman testified that there were no orders. Instead, Guzman said, Isnora "appeared out of nowhere" with a gun drawn and shot him in the shoulder — the first of 16 shots to enter his body.
"That's all there was — gunfire," he said. "There wasn't nothing else."
With tires screeching, glass breaking and bullets flying, the officers claimed that they believed they were the ones under fire. Oliver responded by emptying his semiautomatic pistol, reloading, and emptying it again, as the supervisor sought cover.
The truth emerged when the smoke cleared: There was no weapon inside Bell's blood-splattered car.
 

Legal Scams All Around You
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50 shots huh?

this is the police state most voted for........
 

New member
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did you read the report? c'mon seriously.. did you??
One cop unloaded two clips with a police issued gun so maybe 15 rounds, he was undercover, so wouldn't that make you think he feared for his life? Or was he exposed to too many violent movies and video games as a kid?
 

Oh boy!
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It doesn't matter if any of the people in the car had a gun or not. It's been determined time and time again that if a police officer is rammed by a vehicle that officer is justified in shooting. The courts have ruled in the past that even passengers are fair game to get shot in cases such as these.
 

Legal Scams All Around You
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we have no rights.....all you people that voted for bush

voted for the police state and war...hope you enjoy paying $5.00 a gallon for gas this summer!

do it with a smile on your face too...and when a american body comes back from iraq...dont cry...you voted for it
 

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we have no rights.....all you people that voted for bush

voted for the police state and war...hope you enjoy paying $5.00 a gallon for gas this summer!

do it with a smile on your face too...and when a american body comes back from iraq...dont cry...you voted for it

And so did a majority of F'NG Democrats...they made it all possible.
 

The Great Govenor of California
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divorce rate for pigs is like 80%, 40% of them alcholics, 30% are wife beaters Also very cheap people.
 

I GRIN WHEN I WIN
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EVERYBODY HATES THE COPS UNTIL YOU NEED ONE.I PLAY GOLF WITH 3 BOSTON COPS THEY HAVE A VERY STRESSFULL JOB BUT IN BOSTON THEY ARE WELL COMPENSATED WHERE ELSE CAN YOU GET OUT OF HIGH SCHOOL AND MAKE 150,000 DOLLARS A YEAR.BOSTON IS THE ONLY STATE WHERE THE POLICE HAVE DETAILS A BOSTON COPS BASE PAY IS 52,000 AND HE CAN MAKE 75-100 THOUSAND ON PAID DETAILS WATCHING TRAFFIC.ANY ROAD WORK DONE IN THE CITY OF BOSTON HAS TO HAVE A PAID DETAIL FOR TRAFFIC YOU TALK ABOUT A RACKET.I CANT SAY ANYTHING BAD ABOUT THE POLICE I JUST DROP A COUPLE OF NAMES WHEN I AM STOPPED AND I NEVER GET TICKETS.

THEY HAD NO CHOICE IN NEW YORK I READ THE DAILY NEWS AND THE COPS ARE ALWAYS GETTING SHOT IN NEW YORK SO IF YOU HAVE 4 NIGERIANS IN A CAR AND THEY ARE ACTING OUT OF CONTROL WHAT CHOICE DO THE POLICE HAVE.

:nono5:
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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May 1, 2008
Sharpton promises action after Sean Bell acquittals


<DL class=byline>BY ANDREW STRICKLER | andrew.strickler@newsday.com <DD>10:44 PM EDT, April 29, 2008 </DD></DL>Responding to the acquittals of three police officers who fatally shot Sean Bell, the Rev. Al Sharpton promised Tuesday that New Yorkers would "see some mobilization they have never seen."

After a nearly two-hour meeting held at the midtown headquarters of influential hospital workers union Local 1199, Sharpton said civic, church and community leaders had put together a strategy that includes civil disobedience, a boycott, and a march targeting the judicial system.

Sharpton said specific plans for the actions would come in the next few days, but he pledged a coordinated effort for "a change of laws on a more permanent basis."

City Council member James Sanders Jr., of Queens, who attended the meeting, described the tone as "somber but fiery."
"We're not going to suddenly wake up and not be mad, like some people might be hoping for," he said.

Union president George Gresham, Bell's parents, and his fiancee, Nicole Paultre Bell, all attended the meeting, as did Trent Benefield and Joseph Guzman, friends of Bell's who were also wounded on the night of the fatal shooting.

The union has 300,000 members, most of them in the downstate area. Sharpton has been a close ally of the group in recent years.

The verdict has also prompted Norman Siegel of the New York Civil Liberties Union to call for the creation of a permanent federal prosecutor to investigate fatal shootings by police and allegations of police corruption. Several black leaders said Sunday that they hoped to meet with Attorney General Michael Mukasey to press for the new post.

The Justice Department said it would review the shooting for possible federal civil rights violations, and the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee met Monday with the Bell family, Benefield and Guzman.

After a trial that opened wounds of previous police shootings but failed to spark the outcry following the death of Amadou Diallo and others, Queens State Supreme Court Justice Arthur Cooperman cleared Michael Oliver, Gescard Isnora and Marc Cooper of all charges related to the barrage that killed Bell.

Defense attorneys successfully argued that the officers believed that one of the men in Bell's car had a weapon. Cooperman said prosecution witnesses gave unsatisfying accounts of the shooting and the preceding events in the Kalua Cabaret in Jamaica on Nov. 25, 2006, where the undercover officers were investigating prostitution and drug activity.

The judge's decision was met with stunned silence, then shouts outside the Kew Gardens courthouse of "murderers" from some of Bell's supporters. Hundreds marched peacefully from the courthouse to Kalua Cabaret, around the corner from where Bell was shot.

The police department is still considering internal charges, and Bell's fiancee and two friends have filed a $50-million civil lawsuit against the city.
 

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