Video: Philly Pigs charged with brutality after video shows man being struck, beaten...

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stringer bell
stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1y8rd379Qw

latimes.com/nation/la-na-philadelphia-police-charged-20150205-story.html
After video surfaces, grand jury charges 2 Philadelphia policemen in beating

Two Philadelphia police officers were charged Thursday with beating a man on a scooter nearly two years ago and lying about it, resulting in wrongful charges against him.

A Philadelphia grand jury decided to charge Officers Sean McKnight and Kevin Robinson after the district attorney presented evidence. The use of prosecutor-led grand juries met deep scrutiny across the country last year after several high-profile investigations resulted in no charges for officers involved in the deaths of suspects in Ferguson, Mo., and New York City.

In Philadelphia, charges came after the surprise emergence of a surveillance video that shows two officers pummeling a scooter rider. The scene appeared to contradict the officers' original account of the incident, in which they had portrayed the suspect, Najee Rivera, as a violent and vicious attacker.


“The video undermined every aspect of the officers’ account of the incident," Philadelphia Dist. Atty. Seth Williams said at a televised news conference Thursday, appearing alongside Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey. "As a grand jury found, none of it was true -- except for the blows inflicted on Najee Rivera."

On May 29, 2013, McKnight and Kevin tried to pull over Rivera, who was riding a scooter. Rivera told the grand jury that he became frightened and sped away after the officers got out of their car with their batons extended and said, "Come here!" according to grand jury charging documents.

In the officers' original account of the incident, they said Rivera then fell off his scooter and attacked one of them.

"While running towards my partner I saw the Hispanic male grab my partner with both his hands by his chest upper vest area and slammed him into a brick wall of the building. The Hispanic male held my partner up against the wall and began throwing elbows towards my partner’s face and head area," McKnight said in a signed statement, echoing the account given by Robinson, according to the charging documents. Both officers are white.

The officers said they they had to beat Rivera to subdue him. Rivera faced charges including assault and resisting arrest based on their statements.

But officials said those charges were dropped after Rivera's girlfriend canvassed the neighborhood after the incident and found surveillance video from a local store that "directly refuted" the officers' "false and inaccurate" statements, according to the documents.

Williams, the district attorney, gave a blistering account of what the footage showed.

"In reality, Rivera didn’t just fall off his scooter as officers approached in their patrol car. Instead, one of them actually reached out of the window and clubbed Rivera in the head; the car bumped the scooter and Rivera fell to the ground," Williams said at the news conference.

"Both officers then got out and immediately placed Rivera in their control. He never resisted, he never struck them, he never fought back, they just started hitting him," Williams continued. "First, one held him against the wall, while the other beat him with a baton. Then they held him on the ground and beat him some more, with both fist and baton.

"There’s no doubt that the blows were connecting, because the video also had audio, and you can hear Mr. Rivera from the time he fell off his scooter, writhing in pain, screaming for help."

The beating fractured Rivera's right orbital bone of his face, swelled one of his eyes shut, and left him with cuts requiring stitches and staples, according to the charging documents.

The grand jury recommended eight charges for each officer: criminal conspiracy, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, tampering with public records, false reports to law enforcement, obstruction, and official oppression.


The officers were arraigned Thursday, Williams said. A representative for the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police, the local police union, could not confirm whether the officers had union attorneys yet.

Williams' office has recently pressed charges in two different cases alleging police misconduct. On Monday, Sgt. Brandon Ruff was accused of providing false identification to law enforcement for giving a false name while dropping off guns belonging to other people, according to a news release.

On Jan. 22, a homicide detective, Ronald Dove, was charged with several counts related to obstructing a murder investigation after officials said they discovered Dove had been hiding the prime suspect.

The charges against Dove also came after a grand jury investigation, and Williams said Thursday that prosecutors had a responsibility to use grand juries to hold police accountable for abuses.


"We don't need to create other agencies, other entities," such as civilian review boards to investigate police abuse, Williams told the Los Angeles Times in a phone interview Thursday. "It's my responsibility as [district attorney] to investigate crimes. If the citizens believe I can't do that, or won't do that, the recourse is to get rid of me."

Williams, who is black, said at the news conference that two weeks ago he convened a meeting of black district attorneys to talk about how to handle grand juries in the wake of widespread protests after grand juries rejected indictments in the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in New York. Both Brown and Garner were black; the officers involved in their deaths were white.

"The consensus was that it is our responsibility not only to work with police day in and day out, but also to hold them accountable on those particular occasions when an officer does wrong," Williams told reporters.


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Comments

  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 2015
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    philly.com/philly/news/20150206_Two_more_Philly_cops_face_charges.html

    The day after Najee Rivera was arrested a year and a half ago, his girlfriend went to North Philadelphia's 25th Police District and saw his bloodied and broken face - his orbital bone fractured, an eye swollen shut, his face sewn up with stitches and staples.

    Sitting next to him Thursday night, Dina Scannapieco of South Philadelphia said she had asked the dazed, 23-year-old Rivera where he had been arrested.

    "As soon as I picked him up, we went right over there," Scannapieco said. He was in a hospital gown covered in blood.

    Eventually the couple made it to the 2700 block of North Sixth Street, where he had been arrested the night before - and where two officers were saying Rivera had thrown one of them into a brick wall.

    The two, she said, saw where he was arrested.

    "You seen all his blood all over the pavement," she said.

    It was an aftermath of an arrest on May 29, 2013, that was allegedly so violent that District Attorney Seth Williams on Thursday charged two Philadelphia police officers with aggravated assault, conspiracy and related crimes.

    After seeing the blood, Scannapieco began asking questions.

    She eventually found surveillance video, at a barber shop-auto detailing business on the block, that would exonerate Rivera and lead to the arrest of the officers who prosecutors say beat him without provocation and then falsely arrested him.

    Damn.. His girl had to do the police work for those corrupt pigs.. Smh.. Side note.. That Riveria ? better wife that broad.. she handle that ? down w/ tall hat detective work she did for the ? ...
  • R0mp
    R0mp Members Posts: 4,250 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Strong everything.
    "While running towards my partner I saw the Hispanic male grab my partner with both his hands by his chest upper vest area and slammed him into a brick wall of the building. The Hispanic male held my partner up against the wall and began throwing elbows towards my partner’s face and head area," McKnight said in a signed statement, echoing the account given by Robinson, according to the charging documents.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1y8rd379Qw
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey suspended the officers with intent to dismiss. Before the video of their arrest of Rivera surfaced, the officers' account of what happened had been accepted as fact, Ramsey said.

    In hindsight, Ramsey said, the department should have canvassed the area - a step typically taken only when an Internal Affairs complaint has been filed. The department may now review whether it should further investigate arrests that result in injuries, he said.

    Ramsey said he pulled Robinson and McKnight from the street after the video was brought to his attention.

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    Ramsey said McKnight and Robinson "do not represent the majority" of the 6,500 officers on the force.

    "But I cannot stand here and say I've got 6,500 police officers that always operate within the framework of the law, within the framework of department policy," he said. "We've got to root them out."

    Additional charges against the officers include recklessly endangering another person, tampering with public records or information, false reports to law enforcement authorities, obstructing administration of law, and official oppression.

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    Ramsey told reporters Thursday that the incident was "a bad case - no doubt about it," but he said the officers' conduct did not mean "every case is tainted."

    The charges against Robinson and McKnight come one day after two former police officers were sentenced to prison for corruption, one of them for 17 years.

    "It has not been easy for our department this week," Ramsey said.


    Still, he said, "every one of these people who get removed from our department brings us a step closer to having the kind of police department that people in this city deserves."

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  • D. Morgan
    D. Morgan Members Posts: 11,662 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    The dude girl deserves a got damn fairy tale wedding for the ? she did for him.

    Don't know her but she seems(key word) like a keeper.
  • p-tavern
    p-tavern Members Posts: 2,626 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I actually know one of them from playing sports growing up

    Just checked on facebook and of course theres a bunch of whites supporting him smmfh
  • not_osirus_jenkins
    not_osirus_jenkins Members, Banned Users Posts: 3,670 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    p-tavern wrote: »
    I actually know one of them from playing sports growing up

    Just checked on facebook and of course theres a bunch of whites supporting him smmfh

    How though? what the ? could possibly justify this. Post those up..

    Also id sue for 1 billion dollars.
  • Shizlansky
    Shizlansky Members Posts: 35,095 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    They should have more charges brought up on them
  • nex gin
    nex gin Members Posts: 10,698 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • p-tavern
    p-tavern Members Posts: 2,626 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited February 2015
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    p-tavern wrote: »
    I actually know one of them from playing sports growing up

    Just checked on facebook and of course theres a bunch of whites supporting him smmfh

    How though? what the ? could possibly justify this. Post those up..

    Also id sue for 1 billion dollars.

    One guy made a post saying he supports the cop, last I checked it had 103 likes and a bunch of people echoing the sentiment. Two separate people called it "a disgrace." Not what the cops did or that people were behind them, but rather the fact that they were actually being charged for beating the ? out of an innocent person. Its almost satire.
    Basically all the whites up here think that the police can literally do no wrong. Anything that happens to a brown skinned person at the hands of the cops "must have done something to deserve it."

    Read in the paper that dude already sued and got 200k. This all happened it July '13 apparently but they didn't get indicted til this week so the general public didnt know
  • Shizlansky
    Shizlansky Members Posts: 35,095 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    200k

    Not bad

    I want half a million.