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HANDS UP! DON'T SHOOT!
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Cleveland Police Cited for Abuse by Justice Department
WASHINGTON--In recent years, Cleveland police officers have punched
a 13-year-old boy who was in handcuffs for shoplifting and shot at an
unarmed kidnapping victim who was wearing only his underwear, according
to disturbing allegations released Thursday by the Justice Department.
The agency's investigation found that officers in Cleveland routinely
use unjustifiable force against not only criminals and suspects, but
also innocent victims of crimes.
The so-called "pattern or practice" report from the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division was released
Thursday afternoon as DOJ and the city announced plans to develop a
court-enforceable agreement that would impose an independent monitor on
the Cleveland Division of Police.
"Accountability and legitimacy
are essential for communities to trust their police departments, and for
there to be genuine collaboration between police and the citizens they
serve,” said Attorney General Eric Holder in a press conference on
Thursday.
Holder announced the measure during his trip to
Cleveland, where police officers fatally shot an unarmed black child
last month.
In Cleveland, Holder has attended a series of meetings about
rebuilding community trust between law enforcement and the public, even
as protests erupted nationwide over the non-indictment of police
officers who killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner
in New York City.
Following his visit to Cleveland, Holder intends to
visit Chicago and Philadelphia, as well as Memphis, Tennessee, and
Oakland, California, for additional roundtable meetings.
In his
remarks Thursday, Holder said that he and President Barack Obama believe
there is more to be done on the issue of use of lethal force by police
departments.
The Justice Department began investigating the use of force in Cleveland's police division in March 2013.
A few months prior, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson had requested that
the agency look into the issue.
Jackson's request came after a
high-profile police chase in November 2012 that resulted in Cleveland
police dispatching at least 62 vehicles, firing 137 bullets and killing two unarmed black suspects
, who each sustained more than 20 gunshot wounds.
There
have been numerous other occasions when Cleveland police are alleged to
have used excessive force.
Most recently, on Nov. 22, a Cleveland
police officer fatally shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who was playing with
a toy gun in a park.
Footage of the incident shows the officer firing his gun within two seconds of pulling up to the boy in his car.
The Guardian reported on Thursday that Timothy Loehmann, the officer who shot Tamir, was
judged unfit for police work in 2012 by his then-employer, the police
department of Independence, Ohio.
An Independence official described
Loehmann's "dismal" handgun performance in an internal memo.
According
to the DOJ report, Cleveland police officers "carelessly fire their
weapons, placing themselves, subjects, and bystanders at unwarranted
risk of serious injury or death."
For example, the agency pointed to an
incident in 2011 where officers "fired 24 rounds in a residential
neighborhoods," with six rounds striking houses and 14 hitting parked
cars.
In another case, "an officer’s decision to draw his gun while
trying to apprehend an unarmed hit-and-run suspect resulted in him
accidentally shooting the man in the neck."
The Justice
Department also claimed to have identified "several cases" where
"officers shot or shot at people who did not pose an immediate threat of
death or serious bodily injury to officers or others."
For example, in
2013, the report noted that police shot at a kidnapping victim after he
fled from his assailants wearing only his boxers.
The sergeant said he
believed the victim had a weapon because he raised his hand.
A Cleveland police sergeant shot
at a crime victim who was wearing only his underwear, claiming the man
may have had a weapon.
DOJ found the use of deadly force "unreasonable."
In another case detailed by the Justice Department, a 300-pound
officer punched a 13-year-old boy who was handcuffed inside a police car
and kicking the door.
The officer, whom the report describes as 8
inches taller than the boy, punched him "three to four times" until he
was "'stunned/dazed' and had a bloody nose."
The agency noted
that "supervisors’ analyses of use of force incidents is superficial at
best and, at its worst, appears to be designed to justify their
subordinates’ unreasonable use of force."
For example, in the case of
the teenage boy, the agency said the officer's supervisor "failed to
even consider that the punches might have been retaliatory (perhaps
because the officer was angry) and unnecessary to secure the boy."
The DOJ report stated that "each and every time we saw officers
write that they had tased a handcuffed suspect, the use of force was
approved up the chain of command."
In one case, an officer wrote that he
gave a man an electrical shock to prevent him from falling after he
fled in handcuffs--even though, as the report noted, "suspects
normally fall after being tased."
It went on to say that "justifying the
use of a Taser to stop a [fleeing], handcuffed person from falling is
simply not credible."
The report cited another case in which
officers shocked a handcuffed suspect, prompting him to "fall face-first
onto asphalt, shattering four front teeth and causing facial
contusions."
A Cleveland police officer also administered an electric shock to
a man who was deaf and suicidal, according to the DOJ report.
The man
had committed no crime and may not have understood instructions.
The report also said that the culture of the Cleveland police
force promotes an "us-against-them" mentality.
It cited the example of a
sign in one district station that identifies the station as a "forward
operating base"--which DOJ noted is a military term for a small
outpost in a war zone.
The report concluded that the police department’s "method of
policing contributes to the community's distrust of and lack of respect
for officers.”
The report found that officers
"escalate situations instead of diffusing them and using them as an
opportunity to build trust and rapport."
The report also noted that while it did not make a finding
regarding racial profiling, "many African-Americans reported that they
believe [Cleveland police] officers are verbally and physically
aggressive toward them because of their race."
Ironically, last week, a number of white and Hispanic officers who were disciplined for the Nov. 2012 shooting filed a lawsuit, alleging that they were punished especially harshly because the shooting victims were black and they, the officers, were not.
CORRECTION:
This article has been edited to make clear that an incident cited by
the report in which a handcuffed suspect broke four teeth after being
shocked is not the same incident in which police used a Taser to shock a
fleeing, handcuffed man.