Video of Chicago Police Shooting of Cedrick Chatman A New 'Bomb About To Drop': Lawyer...

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stringer bell
stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited January 2016 in For The Grown & Sexy
https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20160104/south-shore/ipra-under-fire-three-years-of-cedrick-chatman-case
CHICAGO — After the release of a video showing the police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald sent the city into a frenzy, Mayor Rahm Emanuel offered a public apology for the city's slow response, promising in a Dec. 9 speech to the City Council "nothing less than complete and total reform of the system."

While Emanuel spoke, five blocks away at the Dirksen federal building, city attorneys were persuading a judge to keep videos of another police shooting under wraps.

Cedrick Chatman, 17, was shot dead by police while he ran, unarmed, in the opposite direction of officers, lawyers for the slain teen's family said — and they say videos prove it.

Nearly three years after the shooting, the officer who pulled the trigger hasn't been disciplined, and Chatman's family is battling the city with a wrongful death lawsuit.

The tense, back-and-forth legal saga surrounding Chatman's death reached a new chapter Dec. 23, when city-appointed attorneys representing the officer filed yet another motion to delay the video's release. After admitting that the video is bound to be released eventually, city officials sought to keep it away from the public for now "to avoid any prejudice of the jury pool," according to the motion.

At the Dec. 9 hearing, presiding Judge Robert Gettlemen suggested he'd likely call for the video's release in January, saying "there really is no reason to wait," according to the Chicago Tribune.

An investigation into the shooting by the Independent Police Review Authority, meanwhile, concluded in September that Officer Kevin Fry was justified in killing Chatman. But since then, the case — and others like it — have kicked up a swarm of controversy over IPRA's integrity.

It took more than two years for many details surrounding the shooting to trickle out; it was months before most outlets even managed to spell Chatman's name right, after getting mixed information from authorities.

The case traces back to Jan. 7, 2013, when two plain-clothes officers made a traffic stop after spotting a stolen car in South Shore.


The Shooting

It started, prosecutors said, with a cellphone deal gone wrong.

Around 1:30 p.m. Jan. 7, Chatman and two other men — Akeem Clarke, 22, and Martel Odom, 23 — climbed into a man's silver Dodge Charger with the intention of buying cellphone service from him, prosecutors related days later.

An argument broke out and Clarke pulled the dealer into the back seat and the three prospective buyers began to beat him, according to court documents. After robbing him of $400 in cash, Chatman made off with the car while Clarke and Odum stayed behind.

About 15 minutes later, Fry and his partner, Officer Lou Toth, noticed the stolen car near the intersection of 75th Street and Jeffrey Avenue, next to South Shore High School, according to prosecutors. They pulled their unmarked police cruiser in front of the Charger, got out and walked up to it with their guns drawn.

What happened during the next few seconds has been the source of legal debate for nearly three years.

According to a police statement released a day later, Chatman grabbed something from the car before jumping out and running off. The officers chased Chatman, who turned toward them and pointed a "black object" he was holding, according to Fraternal Order of Police spokesman Pat Camden.

Fry raised his gun and shot Chatman four times. Hours later, the teen was dead.

"Believing the dark object to be a firearm and being in fear for [his] life, the officer fired at the offender, wounding him," Camden said.

Camden has since been criticized for inaccurate comments he's made following police-involved shootings, including after McDonald's death. He has not made public comments in any cases since the video went public.

Brian Coffman, the attorney representing Chatman's family, said three surveillance videos tells a story much different than Camden's.

"You see him running away from the officers as fast as he possibly could — he never even begins to turn," Coffman said. "Fry never says anything. He just gets out of the car, watches him run with his gun trained on him, and fires."

'A Giant Scam'

Satisfied with the police union's version of events, leaders within the department opted not to punish Fry.

Instead, Clarke and Odum — Chatman's accomplices in the carjacking — were each charged with first-degree murder. In the written charges, prosecutors alleged that the men "set in motion a chain of events that caused the death of Cedrick Chatman," despite being nowhere near the teen when he was killed.

The murder charges were eventually dropped, but the men were each sentenced to 10 years in prison for robbery and unlawful vehicular invasion, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Chatman's family, meanwhile, decided to pursue a lawsuit against the city.

When Coffman was brought on to represent them, he said, he wasn't enthused about the case. An official account of the events had suggested not only that Chatman was armed, but that he pointed a gun at an officer before being brought down.

But when Coffman reached out to witnesses and filed Freedom of Information Act requests for the surveillance videos, he said, he became convinced that police hadn't been honest in their handling of the shooting's aftermath.

"The more I saw, the more I realized, 'Oh my ? , this is a giant scam,'" Coffman said. "It was unbelievable. They were fighting tooth and nail to cover this up from the very beginning."

Moreover, after Coffman looked into Fry's history, he found a litany of misconduct.

Coffman's wrongful death lawsuit, filed in June 2013 on the Chatman family's behalf, was the fifth civil rights lawsuit since 2006 in which Fry had been named as a defendant, according to court records. The other four suits, alleging violations including excessive force, false arrest and illegal searches, all ended in settlements.

According to the non-profit Invisible Institute, which tracks police misconduct, Fry has been the target of 30 complaints throughout his career (the Institute currently has data from 2001 to 2008 and 2011 to 2015, so there may be more complaints that have not been released to the public). All were marked as "unsubstantiated." He has faced no discipline, according to the site.




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  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    IPRA Steps In

    Coffman would spend the next two years wrestling with IPRA investigators to get their findings into public record so he could move forward with his wrongful death lawsuit.

    It was September 2015, two years and eight months after Chatman's death, when the investigators finally released their final report on the shooting. Fry's actions, they concluded, were legally justified.

    Two months before that, IPRA investigator Lorenzo Davis was fired for what he claimed was a refusal to change his findings in six investigations of police shootings. Chatmans' case was one of them.

    "Cedrick [Chatman] was just running as the shots were fired," Davis later told the Tribune. "You're taught that deadly force is a last resort and that you should do everything in your power to apprehend the person before you use deadly force. I did not see where deadly force was called for at that time."

    With Davis gone, IPRA went on to conclude that allegations of excessive force against Fry had been "unfounded."

    The final report included a review of the three videos showing the shooting. Unlike the official police account of events, which had Chatman turning to face the officers before he was shot, the IPRA report said that in at least one video, "It appears that one of [Chatman's] arms extends towards [Toth, Fry's partner] as he runs."

    'A Bomb That's About to Drop'

    As the lawsuit inches toward a trial, Coffman said he's confident he'll force the city's hand in releasing the videos of the shooting. As for the city's claim that releasing the video would prejudice a potential jury against the police, he said, "the cat's already pretty much out of the bag at this point," thanks to the continuing fallout from the McDonald video.

    Coffman has no qualms about using the city's current climate of outrage to draw attention to his case, he said.

    "The symmetry between our case and the McDonald case is pretty obvious," Coffman said. "In both you've got crooked cops protected by crooked investigators. This is a bomb that's about to drop in the city of Chicago, where everyone suddenly realizes the system is broken."

  • A Talented One
    A Talented One Members Posts: 4,202 ✭✭✭
    edited January 2016
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    https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20160104/south-shore/ipra-under-fire-three-years-of-cedrick-chatman-case



    Instead, Clarke and Odum — Chatman's accomplices in the carjacking — were each charged with first-degree murder. In the written charges, prosecutors alleged that the men "set in motion a chain of events that caused the death of Cedrick Chatman," despite being nowhere near the teen when he was killed.

    Wow, these pigs initially charged his friends for murder, though they had nothing to do with the cop shooting him.

    Just WOW.

    And then they fire the independent investigator after he wouldn't change his finding that the shooting was unjustified.

    This video is going to be a bomb indeed.
  • 2stepz_ahead
    2stepz_ahead Guests, Members, Writer, Content Producer Posts: 32,324 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    so should white people be charged with murder for the chain of event they set in action that lead to the guns and poverty that over take inner cities that end up spiking violence and killings.
  • Neophyte Wolfgang
    Neophyte Wolfgang Members Posts: 4,169 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Chicago about to pop, thank ? it winter right now
  • PapaDoc223
    PapaDoc223 Members Posts: 2,162 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    This ? is crazy. Crazy this worst then the cold blooded murder of LaQuan McDonald.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    The Police Shooting Video Chicago Doesn’t Want You to See

    CHICAGO, Illinois (CNN) — The city of Chicago has filed paperwork to keep another fatal police shooting video from being released to the public, saying the video could taint any potential juror pool.

    The court filing came two days before Christmas and two weeks after Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s pledge of transparency on police shootings.

    The case revolves around a wrongful death suit against two police officers in the January 7, 2013, shooting death of 17-year-old Cedrick Chatman.

    In the police account of the shooting, Chatman ditched a stolen car and ran from two officers. As the officers pursued on foot, police say, the 5-foot-7, 133-pound Chatman turned toward them. Officer Kevin Fry told investigators he feared for his partner’s life and fired four shots.

    Fry said he believed Chatman was armed. It turned out the teen was carrying a black iPhone box, according to police reports.

    The original independent police investigator wanted to rule the shooting unjustified, saying the teen fled from the officers without posing a threat or turning toward them. That investigator, Lorenzo Davis, said he was fired when he refused to change his findings to a justified shooting.

    A new investigator was assigned and ruled the shooting justified. The officers were not charged and remain on their beats.


    Brian Coffman, the lead attorney for Chatman’s mother, Linda Chatman, told CNN that three years have passed and it’s time for the city to correct the record on this case. He says the video shows the teen “wasn’t the aggressor at all.”

    “Mr. Chatman is running away from the police. He’s unarmed. No knife, no gun,” Coffman said. “Nothing but an iPhone box was recovered at the scene.”

    Coffman said the case represents everything Chicago has endured in recent months: a black teen gunned down by police, a city refusing to release the video, and the possibility police made false statements to justify the shooting.

    “You have everything going on in Chicago right now rolled into one case,” Coffman said. “The importance of releasing the video is it helps promote the change in transparency that everybody wants and the mayor has pledged.”

    The mayor has said the city should reconsider its previous policy of not releasing videos during investigations. That statement was made after the release of the police shooting video that shows Laquan McDonald getting shot 16 times.

    At a hearing in early December, U.S. District Court Judge Robert Gettleman said he would rule this Thursday on whether to release the Chatman video.

    “I know there’s a lot of public interest in this, and for good reason,” he told the court. “It’s definitely relevant.”

    Gettleman had said the video must be made public at some point, so he pondered why not now.

    The city filed a motion on December 23 objecting to the video’s release. “Restricting public access to the video until the close of the proceedings strikes the proper balance between the need for public access to information with the need for a fair trial,” wrote Jill Russell, an assistant corporation counsel for the city.

    “Defendants are not arguing that this video may never be made public; rather, they merely seek to avoid the release of the video prior to the conclusion of the proceedings to avoid any prejudice of the jury pool.”

    The city’s court filing does not say what the video shows in regard to Chatman as a possible threat to the officers.

    Steve Patton, the city’s chief attorney, has not responded to CNN’s question about whether the teen turned toward police while he fled, as the officers have stated, or if Chatman was running away from them.

    Five cameras captured all or part of the shooting of Chatman: one at a school across the street, two at a food market and two placed atop light poles by police.

    The attorneys for Chatman’s mother filed a separate motion, saying the videos “speak for themselves, and a reasonable jury may indisputably conclude” that the teen didn’t turn toward the officers.

    Releasing the video would not change that fact, wrote Mark Smolens, a co-counsel for Chatman’s mother.

    Smolens said Davis, the fired investigator with the city’s Independent Police Review Authority, or IPRA, was prepared to testify that he “had an opportunity to review the videotapes of the incident at issue. It is further believed that Mr. Davis will testify that based in part upon his review of those videos, that he found and prepared findings that the shooting death of Cedrick Chatman was unjustified.”

    The attorney ended his filing by taking the mayor’s office to task: “It is indeed the height of irony that while the counsel for the parties were before this court last December 9 when the plaintiff’s motion was initially presented, the lawyers for the defendants were emphatically arguing against public disclosure of this evidence — all while the chief executive of the city was holding a press conference a few blocks north of the courthouse loudly exclaiming a new era of transparency and accountability.”

    Scott Ando, the head of IPRA, which investigates all police-involved shootings, was sacked amid the fallout from the Laquan McDonald case.

    Sharon Fairley, the acting chief of IPRA, said last week she has reached out to Davis and would like to meet with him. “I’d like to hear his story,” she told reporters at a news conference.

    Beyond the Chatman case, Davis has said he was ordered to change the outcomes of three or four other cases. He has filed a wrongful termination suit against the city.

    Davis, a longtime Chicago police officer, told CNN that he hopes to soon meet with the new acting chief of IPRA. “I hope that she does look at the cases herself.”

    Davis has previously said the video “shows a shooting that should not have occurred.”

    “In my view, if you do not have to ? a person, then why would you?” he said.

    Newly released documents from the city show that the case raised the concern of the mayor’s office months ago.

    Shortly after the mayor won re-election, Adam Collins, a top aide to the mayor, sent an email to Martin Maloney, who was a police spokesman at the time.

    “As I mentioned the other day, we need to gather up our planning stuff for the next few months — both proactively and reactively,” Collins wrote on April 8, two days after Emanuel was re-elected. “What else should we be monitoring in terms of outstanding reactive stories?”

    Among the items listed under the heading “CPD — Reactive” is simply “Kevin Fry,” the officer who shot Chatman.

    Collins has not responded to a CNN request for comment.

    Fry has had 30 complaints lodged against him over the years, including 10 allegations of excessive use of force. The police department found every complaint against Fry to be unwarranted
  • 2stepz_ahead
    2stepz_ahead Guests, Members, Writer, Content Producer Posts: 32,324 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    its crazy howpeople are still saying well what about the black on black crime orthey should just listen to the polices orders and not even acknowledging the cover up by the police.

    if they was in the right , then release the tapes.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 2016
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    http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/7/71/1249956/city-drops-opposition-release-video-police-shooting-teen
    City drops opposition to release of police-shooting video

    In an about-face, City of Chicago attorneys on Wednesday dropped their opposition to the release of a video showing Chicago police shooting 17-year-old Cedrick Chatman.

    The dispute arises from a lawsuit filed against the city by Chatman’s family over the January 2013 shooting death of the teen.

    The filing by Corporation Counsel Stephen Patton comes one day before a federal judge was to issue his ruling on whether to overrule an earlier decision by a magistrate judge, who decided to keep the video under wraps to avoid tainting a jury in a civil trial.


    “The city’s request for a protective order was consistent with its longstanding policy not to publicly release videos and other evidence relating to alleged police misconduct that is the subject of pending criminal and/or disciplinary investigations or other judicial proceedings until such investigations and proceedings are concluded so as not to jeopardize them,” the city’s motion reads.

    The motion by the city goes on to note that the city is “working to strike the right balance between being as transparent as possible and protecting the judicial process. In this case, the city has determined that it will no longer object to the release of the videos.”

    The city has come under intense criticism for its initial efforts to stop the release of the police-shooting video of Laquan McDonald. A judge eventually ordered the city to do so, and the officer involved in the shooting, Jason Van ? , was charged with murder.

    The video of the police shooting of Chatman received renewed public interest in light of the controversy over the McDonald shooting video.

    The Independent Police Review Authority found Chatman’s shooting was justified, records show. Sally Daly, a spokeswoman for Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez, has said prosecutors reviewed the IPRA investigation and chose not to file charges.

    The shooting happened after Chatman allegedly stole a car on the afternoon of Jan. 7, 2013. Chicago Police officers Lou Toth and Kevin Fry found Chatman in a gray Dodge Charger at East 75th and Jeffery. The cops pulled over and jumped out with weapons drawn, records show. Toth came around the front of the Charger, while Fry ran around the rear.

    Chatman bolted out of the car and ran south, away from the officers. Toth ran directly behind Chatman, while Fry followed diagonally, according to the Chatman family’s lawsuit.

    Officers claimed Chatman made a “slight” turn of his upper torso to the right, prompting Fry to fire his weapon four times, according to the lawsuit. Toth claimed he did not fire, even though the family’s attorney has said five bullets were recovered at the scene. Chatman was shot twice.

    Daly pointed out that Chatman reached to the floor of the Charger before fleeing, and he had a black object in his hand that turned out to be an iPhone box. She said the officers believed the object was a handgun “and a civilian witness corroborated the officers’ account of events.”

    The incident was caught on a “blue-light” camera on the northwest corner of 75th and Jeffery, two security cameras on South Shore High School on the southwest corner of the intersection, and on surveillance cameras from a business on the southeast corner.

    Prosecutors charged Chatman’s accomplices in the alleged carjacking, Akeem Clarke and Martel Odum, with Chatman’s murder for their role in the events that triggered his fatal shooting. They later pleaded guilty to lesser crimes.

    However, the lawyer for Lorenzo Davis, a former top investigator for the Independent Police Review Authority who said he was fired for resisting orders to justify police shootings, has said the Chatman case led to Davis’ ouster. Davis himself told the Sun-Times that Chatman’s death was a murder.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-chicago-cop-shooting-cedrick-chatman-met-20160113-story.html
    City drops opposition to release of fatal police shooting video

    In an apparent attempt to get ahead of the controversy, city attorneys on Wednesday abruptly dropped their opposition to releasing surveillance footage showing a Chicago police officer fatally shooting a 17-year-old carjacking suspect nearly three years ago.

    Lawyers for Cedrick Chatman's family have said the videos of his January 2013 shooting contradict statements from police that Chatman had turned and pointed a dark object at police as he ran, prompting Officer Kevin Fry to fire in fear of his life.

    City attorneys for months have argued that releasing the footage — which they described as low-quality and incomplete — could inflame the public and jeopardize a fair trial.

    But in a court filing Wednesday, city lawyers dropped their opposition, citing the ongoing work of Mayor Rahm Emanuel's Task Force on Police Accountability, which is expected to issue recommendations on the city's policy of keeping police shooting videos from the public.

    The motion comes on the eve of an expected ruling by U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman on whether to release the video.

    Brian Coffman, the lawyer representing Chatman's family in a wrongful-death lawsuit, called the timing of the move "an obvious attempt by Rahm Emanuel to take the air out of the balloon."

    "The mayor's only play at this point is to concede," said Coffman, citing mounting pressure this week from activists and community leaders, some of whom threatened to boycott Emanuel's Martin Luther King brunch on Monday if he refused to change his mind on releasing the video.

    Coffman noted Emanuel's attorneys had argued strenuously against the video's release in a court filing just a few weeks ago.

    "What has changed since then?" Coffman said.


    In a statement, Corporation Counsel Steve Patton said the city is "working to find the right balance between the public's interest in disclosure and the importance of protecting the integrity of investigations and the judicial process."

    "In this case, the city sought a protective order consistent with its decades-long policy," Patton said. "We recognize the policy needs to be updated, and while we await guidance from the (task force), we are working to be as transparent as possible."

    The controversy over the release of the Chatman shooting videos erupted just days after police dash-cam video of 17-year-old McDonald being shot 16 times by Officer Jason Van ? went viral, sparking protests and leading to the forced resignations of both police Superintendent Garry McCarthy and Scott Ando, who headed the Independent Police Review Authority, which investigates police shootings.

    Chatman was shot on the afternoon of Jan. 7, 2013, near 75th Street and Jeffery Boulevard. As many as five cameras outside a nearby convenience store and South Shore High School recorded different portions of what happened, court records show.

    Officers responding to a report of a carjacking at 1:46 p.m. stopped the car Chatman was driving. Police said that as the two plainclothes officers approached, Chatman ran south on Jeffery with one of the officers trailing close behind. The second officer -- identified as Fry in the lawsuit -- ran diagonally to try to cut off Chatman's path, police said.

    At some point, Chatman "pointed a dark object back toward the officers as he continued to run," according to IPRA. Fry, fearing for his life, fired four shots, striking Chatman once each in the right side of his body and right forearm, IPRA said in its report.

    The dark object police recovered at the scene was a black iPhone box that authorities believe he obtained from the carjacking, according to IPRA, which ruled the officers' actions justified.

    Last year, Lorenzo Davis, the IPRA supervisor who headed up the Chatman probe, filed a federal lawsuit alleging he was fired by Ando for concluding that officers in several shootings -- including Chatman's -- were not justified in using lethal force.

    Davis, who viewed the surveillance video as part of the IPRA inquiry, told the Tribune in November he did not see Chatman aim at or turn toward the officers.

    "Cedrick was just running as the shots were fired," Davis said. "You're taught that deadly force is a last resort and that you should do everything in your power to apprehend the person before you use deadly force. I did not see where deadly force was called for at that time."

    Coffman, who has viewed the videos, said the incident unfolded in less than five seconds and that Chatman never pointed anything at the officers.
  • Neophyte Wolfgang
    Neophyte Wolfgang Members Posts: 4,169 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 2016
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    Chicago is on pace right now too surpass last year. We on pace for 1000 murders this year ? sad 24 people dead over 100 shot and its only 2 weeks in
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-chicago-cop-shooting-cedrick-chatman-met-0115-20160114-story.html
    Judge orders release of videos of fatal Chicago police shooting

    A federal judge on Thursday ordered the release of videos of another fatal shooting by Chicago police but not before blasting the city for abruptly reversing its opposition to making the surveillance footage public.

    "I went to a lot of trouble to decide this issue, and then I get this motion last night saying that this is the age of enlightenment with the city and we're going to be transparent," said U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman. "I think it's irresponsible."

    Attorneys for Cedrick Chatman's family have said the videos of his January 2013 shooting contradict statements from police that Chatman had turned and pointed a dark object at police as he ran, prompting Officer Kevin Fry to fire in fear of his life. The object turned out to be a black iPhone box.

    With Gettleman signing off on the release, city lawyers are likely to release the surveillance footage this afternoon. The videos were obtained from a police surveillance camera as well as cameras outside a convenience store and by South Shore High School.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    MSNBC is showing the video right now...
  • Chi Snow
    Chi Snow Guests, Members, Writer, Content Producer Posts: 28,111 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    They released it???
  • Trillfate
    Trillfate Members Posts: 24,008 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    They went in the bag for the imaginary gun excuse this time
  • R0mp
    R0mp Members Posts: 4,250 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 2016
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    Expect the "he shouldn't have fleds", just like w/ Walter Scott. Or the "he shouldn't have had anything in his hand", just like w/ Laquan McDonald.
  • jono
    jono Members Posts: 30,280 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 2016
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    You can't see ? from that video. Was the kid being chased? I thought i saw shadows moving swiftly before the cop pulled his pistol.
  • LPast
    LPast Members Posts: 4,546 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    R0mp wrote: »
    Expect the "he shouldn't have fleds", just like w/ Walter Scott. Or the "he shouldn't have had anything in his hand", just like w/ Laquan McDonald.

    He shouldn't of fled. More than likely, he would of been alive today.
  • LPast
    LPast Members Posts: 4,546 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    RIP the the kid. Shot in the back... We need to push for a law to release these videos immediately...
  • DNB1
    DNB1 Members Posts: 19,704 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Making A Murderer - "When we ? a ? and blame it on a couple of other ? " Edition.
  • A Talented One
    A Talented One Members Posts: 4,202 ✭✭✭
    edited January 2016
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    He was running away, and was shot in the back. This is an open and shut case of an unjustified shooting.

    That is not just my judgment, but the judgment of the CPD's own independent investigator. The fact that he was fired for not changing his report is a scandal by itself.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2016/01/14/ex-investigator-says-cedric-chatman-video-supports-his-ruling-the-shooting-was-not-justified/
    Ex-Investigator Says Cedric Chatman Video Supports His Take: ‘The Shooting Was Not Justified’

    (CBS) – Surveillance video of a Chicago police officer fatally shooting suspect Cedrick Chatman prompted one misconduct investigator to determine it wasn’t justified.

    It’s a decision that cost Lorenzo Davis his job, he says.

    CBS 2’s Dorothy Tucker gets Davis’ take on the tape on the day it was released publicly, three years later.

    “The shooting was not justified,” says Davis, a former investigator with the Independent Police Review Authority.

    He says he reached that conclusion after he and his team viewed three tapes of 17-year-old Chatman running from police after allegedly stealing a car in January 2013. Davis says much of video is not clear, but he and his team watched all of them numerous times.

    Chicago Police Officer Kevin Fry shot Chatman, but Davis says the cop could have chased him instead of shooting. Davis also considered Fry interview, where he says the officer changed his story, or “hedged,” on whether the suspect turn toward him during the pursuit.

    Despite a determination that the shooting was not justified, Davis says his superiors wanted him to change his ruling. When he refused, he says he was fired. Another investigator concluded the shooting was justified — a ruling that still stands one that Davis doesn’t like.

    Fry and another officer involved in the incident, Lou Toth, are being represented by attorney Andy Hale. Hale says the videos support officers’ belief that Chatman was armed as he was running from the officers.
  • A Talented One
    A Talented One Members Posts: 4,202 ✭✭✭
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    So, there are three different videos? Where are the other two?