|
Press
Releases
New
Orleans officers charged in beating caught on tape
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
-- Three New Orleans police officers pleaded not guilty Oct.
10 to battery charges based on a videotape showing two patrolmen
repeatedly punching a 64-year-old man accused of public intoxication
and a third officer grabbing and shoving an Associated Press
Television News producer who helped capture the confrontation
on tape.
After a brief hearing,
at which trial was set for Jan. 11, the officers were released
on bond. They quickly left in cars without commenting.
They were suspended
without pay Oct. 9, police spokesman Marlon Defillo said.
The department promised a criminal investigation.
"It's a troubling
tape, no doubt about it," Defillo said.
The confrontations
come as the department -- long plagued by allegations of brutality
and corruption -- struggles with the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina and the resignation last month of Police Superintendent
Eddie Compass.
The APTN tape shows
an officer hitting the suspect, Robert Davis, at least four
times in the head the night of Oct. 8 outside a French Quarter
bar. Davis appeared to resist, twisting and flailing as he
was dragged to the ground by four officers.
Another of the officers
then kneed Davis and punched him twice. Davis was face-down
on the sidewalk with blood streaming down his arm and into
the gutter.
Then a fifth officer
ordered APTN producer Rich Matthews and the cameraman to stop
recording. When Matthews held up his credentials, the officer
grabbed the producer, leaned him backward over a car, jabbed
him in the stomach and unleashed a profanity-laced tirade.
"I've been here for
six weeks trying to keep ... alive. ... Go home!" shouted
the officer, who identified himself as S.M. Smith.
In addition to Smith,
the other officers charged were identified as Lance Schilling
and Robert Evangelist. Smith is an eight-year veteran of the
force, while Evangelist and Schilling have served three years
each.
"The incidents taped
by our cameraman are extremely troubling," said Mike Silverman,
AP's managing editor. "We are heartened that the police department
is taking them seriously and promising a thorough investigation."
Police said Davis,
of New Orleans, was booked on public intoxication, resisting
arrest, battery on a police officer and public intimidation.
He was treated at a hospital and released into police custody.
A mug shot of Davis,
provided by a jailer, showed him with his right eye swollen
shut, an apparent abrasion on the left side of his neck and
a cut on his right temple.
Davis, who is black,
was subdued at the intersection of Conti and Bourbon streets.
Three of the officers appeared to be white, and the other
is light skinned. The officer who hit Matthews is white. Defillo
said race was not an issue.
Two of the officers
in the video appeared to be federal officers. Numerous agencies
have sent police to help with patrols in the aftermath of
Katrina, and Defillo said it would be up to their commanders
to decide if they would face charges.
Under normal circumstances,
it takes unusually offensive behavior to trigger an arrest
on Bourbon Street. But New Orleans police have been working
under stressful conditions since the hurricane. About 300
officers apparently either died, abandoned their posts or
disappeared for some other reason.
Those who stayed slept in their cars
and worked 24-hour shifts after the storm. Three-quarters
lost their homes and their families are scattered across the
country.
"Our police officers
are working under some very trying times," Defillo said. "So
it's a difficult time, but it doesn't excuse what our jobs
are supposed to be."
Conditions have improved
-- officers now have beds on a cruise ship -- but they don't
have private rooms and are still working five, 12-hour days.
Compass, the police
superintendent, resigned Sept. 27. Despite more than 10 years
of reform efforts dating to before he took office, police
were dogged by allegations of brutality and corruption.
On Oct. 7, state authorities
said they were investigating allegations that New Orleans
police broke into a dealership and made off with nearly 200
cars -- including 41 new Cadillacs -- as the storm closed
in.
|