If you're a criminal in the Los Angeles area don't expect
to be treated with any respect if you decide to give up
after being pursued by local authorities. Check out the
story below.
Prosecutors have decided not to charge two El Monte Police Department officers who kicked a car chase suspect in the head and hit his arm with a flashlight as he was lying on the ground at the end of a televised high-speed pursuit, saying they used "reasonable" force.
The Los Angeles County district attorney's office noted in its decision that officers George Fierro, 41, and James Singleterry, 40, were confronting a "highly dangerous and unpredictable" gang member who had evaded parole supervision and demonstrated no regard for human life during the 34-minute pursuit May 13.
Prosecutors said Fierro had reason to fear that the suspect, Richard Rodriguez, was positioning himself to attack or attempt to escape when he turned his head to face the officer while lying on the ground with his arms outstretched. Under such circumstances, they said, El Monte officers are trained to deliver a "distraction blow" -- in this case, a kick to the head -- to give them time to apply physical restraint.
Prosecutors said Singleterry struck Rodriguez's right arm four times with the flashlight because the suspect had moved his hand under his body and was resisting being handcuffed.
Use-of-force experts have criticized the officers' actions as unprovoked and unnecessary.
Samuel Walker, a criminology professor at the University of Nebraska, called Fierro's reasoning for kicking Rodriguez in the head "a ridiculous rationalization." He said the decision not to prosecute was "wrong in and of itself, and it also just confirms the belief among many in the community that officers are not going to be disciplined for excessive use of force."
The American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California issued a statement Wednesday condemning the district attorney's decision.
Story continues here!
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Andre Birotte Jr Tapped For Top Cop In Los Angeles

The appointment of Andre Birotte Jr. by President Obama as top prosecutor in L A is quite significant for the overall plan that the Prez has for his people. Obama has come under criticism and been accused of not doing enough for black folks. In the political arena one must first get all their ducks in a row. Healthcare is the biggest problem facing the country and it's a win-win situation for most of us that struggle to make ends meet if and when the system is ever fixed. So just what is it that black folks are expecting? Well if you ask most blacks the answer would be financial enrichment. But before that is to happen we must first have people like Birotte in place to watch our backs. The only way they've been able to keep us in place lately is to circumnavigate the law. Think about it!
Andre Birotte Jr., who for the last six years has served as the Los Angeles Police Department's inspector general, has been tapped by President Obama to become the top federal prosecutor in Los Angeles, the White House announced Thursday.
If confirmed by the Senate, Birotte, 43, would become the first black man to serve as U.S. attorney in Los Angeles.
The Times reported in October that he was the likely nominee.
"I am honored and humbled by this nomination," said Birotte, who learned of the news early Thursday while visiting family on the East Coast for the holidays.
As U.S. attorney, he would oversee the nation's second-largest office with about 275 lawyers and a seven-county jurisdiction that spans most of Southern California.
It would mark his second stint in the office, where he worked as an assistant U.S. attorney from 1995 to 1999.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who recommended Birotte, praised him for having the support of both the police officers he is charged with investigating as inspector general and the various community groups who turn to his office with complaints regarding alleged police abuses.
"This ability to command respect from all sides bodes well for his nomination," Feinstein said in a press release.
Paul W. Weber, president of the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union that represents most of the department's nearly 10,000 officers, echoed that sentiment.
Weber called Birotte a man of "fairness and integrity" who sought out the league's views on various situations that arose while he was the LAPD's watchdog.
"He treated us as equals. He wanted our input," Weber said. "Then he made whatever decision he needed to make."
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck, who has dealt with Birotte on issues including the federal consent decree enacted in the wake of the Rampart scandal and officer-involved shootings, said: "He didn't always see things as I saw them. But I never felt him to be someone who was swayed by politics or the media or the vocal minority. He is swayed by doing the right thing."
The U.S. attorney position has been vacant since the September resignation of Thomas P. O'Brien, a career prosecutor who oversaw a massive increase in criminal filings and a wave of new hiring in the office.
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