Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Thought Can Kill !

In all my years on the planet I have heard and read
a number of stories in which people have been killed
by law enforcement officers because they thought
rather than saw actual weapons on suspects. I
applaude the New York city Grand Jury for returning
indictments against officers involved in the shooting
death of a groom just hours before he was to be married.
Officers should rely on their training rather than the kill
or be killed mentality and this way the public won't fear
them as much as they do criminals


Two officers charged with killing an unarmed man in a flurry of bullets on his wedding day pleaded not guilty Monday in a case that led to widespread rallies against police brutality.The charges were announced after a grand jury last week voted to indict three of the five officers involved in the shooting of Sean Bell, 23.Detectives Michael Oliver, who fired 31 times, and Gescard Isnora, who fired 11 shots, are accused of first- and second-degree manslaughter. If convicted, they could serve up to 25 years in prison, Queens Dist. Atty. Richard Brown said at a news conference.

The two officers also are charged with assault and reckless endangerment in the wounding of Bell's friends, Trent Benefield, 23, and Joseph Guzman, 31. Oliver also faces a reckless endangerment charge for firing a shot through a residence.The third officer, Det. Marc Cooper, faces one year in prison if convicted of reckless endangerment, a misdemeanor. He is accused of endangering people by firing four shots on a street and through the window of a train station.

He too has pleaded not guilty.At their arraignment Monday, a judge set bail for Oliver and Isnora at $250,000 in the form of a bond or $100,000 in cash. Cooper was released without bail."This was a case that was, I'm sure, not easy for [the grand jury] to resolve. But they did so, in my judgment, in a conscientious fashion," Brown said. "And now we've got to try this case."Michael Palladino, president of the New York detectives union, called the charges excessive. "It sends a very chilling message to all of law enforcement," he said.

"If they can't get it done in three shots or less, [they're] in trouble." Two officers who fired three shots or less were not indicted. Police are instructed to fire three shots, pause and reassess.Appearing with Benefield, Guzman and Bell's fiancee, Nicole Paultre Bell, before the arraignment, the Rev. Al Sharpton said all five officers should have been charged. Bell, who was black, was killed around 4 a.m. Nov. 25 outside a strip club where he was attending his bachelor party. The officers have said they thought he and his friends were armed. Police later searched Bell's car and found no gun.




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