Saturday, September 24, 2011

COP BEATS AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH WITH DOWNS SYNDROME FOR WALKING DOWN THE STREET

MIAMI DADE POLICE OFFICER INVOLVED IN "THE INCIDENT"
I wasn't going to post anything today, then I got up and read the following story.  Sometimes, folks, I think I am just going to lose it all.


The first story below is from the local CBS Miami affiliate and the second is from National Broadside.  You ought to read them both.  However, if you are trying to have a pleasant Saturday, you might wait.



Family Hires Attorney After Police Scuffle With Special Needs Man

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Gilberto Powell, shown, and his family have hired attorney Philip Gold after they say Powell was excessively batterd by police. (Source: Philip Gold)
Gilberto Powell, shown, and his family have hired attorney Philip Gold after they say Powell was excessively batterd by police. (Source: Philip Gold)

RICHMOND HEIGHTS (CBS4) Family members of a man with Down Syndrome who was allegedly battered by a Miami-Dade police officer, have hired an attorney in what they say is a case of bullying and excessive force.
According to the police report, two Miami-Dade officers stopped Gilberto Powell, 22, in his Richmond Heights neighborhood while he was walking home at around 9 p.m. on Saturday.
During that time, the patrol officers stopped Powell because they saw a “bulge in (Powell’s) waist band,” the report said. That’s when police, “decided that a pat-down should be conducted.”
While attempting to pat him down, police said Powell “pushed off the vehicle and attempted to flee.”
After police gave “multiple commands to stop moving in attempt to handcuff him,” he “fell on the ground and struck his forehead,” officers wrote in the incident report.
Still ignoring their loud verbal commands “to stop resisting and obey,” police said Powell struck one of the officers in the chest and attempted to flee.
That officer then “struck the left side of (Powell’s) face with an open hand in an attempt to subdue him.”
Powell was by his house when he was handcuffed, according to the family’s attorney Philip Gold.
The officers finally determined the bulge in Powell’s pants was his medical colostomy bag, and Powell’s family says police pulled it from his body.
Powell’s father, Gilberto Hernandez told CBS4′s Natalia Zea he ran out of the house when he realized what was happening to his son.
“I ran out yelling ‘hey hey what are you doing to him? He’s Down Syndrome! Leave him alone! What are you doing?’ And when I got over there not one minute later his face was all busted up and he was in handcuffs.”
Hernandez couldn’t believe what he was seeing.
“I felt helpless, ’cause he was calling my name….He’s my baby, I go he goes, anywhere I go he goes with me.”
Gold said such a force by officer was not necessary.
“This is a case of excessive force and this may be a case of discrimination,” Gold said.
Gold said Richmond Heights is historically a black community and his “client was walking down the street from his own house when the police officers stopped him.”
He added that Powell, “Is hard to understand. They asked him what he had on him and he said a phone… he showed them a phone.”
In the police report, the officers reported that Powell was “not capable of understanding their commands,” and he was not arrested.
Powell was taken to Jackson Memorial South Hospital after the incident.
Gold said the family is shocked by the incident adding that Powell called his father earlier to say he was coming home and to open the door for him.
“They’re shocked that this would happen, or even could happen, and they are very emotional because they’ve spent Gilberto’s life caring for him and he’s someone who requires a lot of care and his parents have done that for him,” Gold said. “And when they witnessed it they came outside the house to see what had happened. They are an emotional wreck to see their baby boy harmed.”
Gold said that the next thing they saw when they stepped outside was Powell being body slammed and stripped. He said the family also told him that police ripped out Powell’s colostomy bag and punch him in the face.
“The father kept telling me, ‘Why would this happen to him?’ He wouldn’t hurt a fly,” Gold said.
Gold said Powell has Down Syndrome and is loved around the community. He said Powell told him that he “just wanted to go home and the cop is bad.”
“He’s never going to truly communicate how bad this was, but I can tell you that it’s inexcusable, unjustified form and it’s brutality,” Gold said.
Powell’s family is considering filing a lawsuit, and is meeting with Miami-Dade Police and they want something else.
“I’d like an apology for me and my family, and really I’m just doing this to make sure this doesn’t happen to any other little kid or anybody,” said Hernandez.
Gold said the department has six months to investigate the case before he makes the next move.
The police department released a statement saying, “The Miami-Dade Police Department continues to investigate the incident involving Mr. Gilberto Powell.  The integrity of the investigation and successful resolution of this case continues to remain our highest priority.  As a result, the investigation remains active and ongoing; therefore, we cannot provide additional information at this time.”   

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COP BEATS MAN WITH DOWNS SYNDROME

SEPTEMBER 24, 2011


This is another example of police attacking innocent people violently in violation of the law. Gilberto Powell was walking the half block from a friends house to his home. Gilberto, who has Downs Syndrome, is around 5 feet tall. He called his parents to tell them he was coming home but before he could walk the short distance he was attacked by Miami police officers.
The officers claim they wanted to investigate a “suspicious bulge” in his pants. Who do they think they are? The TSA?

Now, a bulge is not a crime. And it is only “suspicious” if you have that sort of mentality. But suspicion is not evidence and individuals walking home can’t be stopped and frisked for no reason other than a police officer’s fervid imagination. Gilberto insists he did what the police officers told him to do but that they started hitting him and then pulled the colostomy bag he wears out of his pants.

When Gilberto’s parents got outside their son was bruised and beaten and in handcuffs.

I have said it before and have to say it again: treat the police as you would a rabid dog. Do not go near them. Do not try to befriend them. Do not try to help them. If you see them avoid them. They can’t be trusted. Sure, some of them are tame, but you can’t immediately tell which is which. I have reported before that people who merely opened their door to cops who were looking for an address have suddenly witnessed these thugs pull their guns and murder their dog because it was barking inside the house.

I also urge parents to teach their children to avoid police whenever possible. The police are not their friends either. As I have shown on this blog multiple times, with video, police officers are not adverse to attacking and beating children either. And all it takes is saying the wrong thing to set these criminals off.

I wish this were not the case. I wish we were still in the America where a police officer would help you or try to peacefully resolve any conflict they find. They resort to violence quickly and with little rational forethought. And the results are that a lot of innocent people get hurt.


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