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Posts Tagged ‘NYC Police Brutality

When New York City Police Officers Michael Oliver, Gescard Isnora and Marc Cooper were acquitted after killing father and husband to be Sean Bell in a hail of 50 bullets, many, especially the people of color communities of NYC were outraged, but not surprised. We were told not to riot because justice system worked but for those of us in Queens, NYC who had seen the killers of 19 year old Manny Mayi get off (one becoming a police officer), for those of us who saw the police officers who killed cook Jose Librado Sanchez, because he had a knife (imagine that working in a kitchen with a knife), we knew that the Queens District Attorney’s Office had little energy or interest in mounting a strong prosecution.

And so hopes were placed in the Feds. After all the Federal Department of Justice successfully prosecuted once NYC Police officer Francis X. Livoti for violating the civil rights of Anthony Baez when he used an illegal and deadly choke hold against the Puerto Rican in 1995. Today those hopes were killed and in many ways the family and friends of Sean Bell have lost their beloved again as the the U.S. Justice Department says there’s not enough evidence to show the officers acted willfully in the death of Sean Bell.
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anthony_hilton
Bronx Civil Court is not the ideal venue for Margarita Rosario to seek justice for her son, Anthony Rosario, and nephew, Hilton Vega. Civil court won’t send the killers to jail and it certainly will not return her family to her. Pero when a grand jury declines to indict the and federal investigations reportedly reviewing the case seemingly lead nowhere, you take what you can to speak the truth.

14 years ago (January 12, 1995), the lives of the 18 and 21 year old Puerto Rican young men, were violently taken from them thanks to Detectives Patrick Brosnan and James Crowe of the 46th precinct.

The details of the case are gruesome and show the levels of depravity that racist police violence can reach. Brosnan and Crowe, who at one points in their careers were bodyguards to once NYC Mayor and presidential wannabe Rudolph Giuliani, shot Rosario and Vega execution style. Independent pathologists and an investigation by the NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) showed that all the bullets were fired from behind the victims; that both Rosario and Vega had bullets entry wounds under their arms, indicating that their hands were raised; and that they had sustained wounds to the backs of their heads, torso and back. Rosario was shot 14 times and Vega was shot 8 times.

The CCRB found that the detectives had used excessive force, but when its report was sent to the police commissioner, he ignored the CCRB’s substantiation of the charges. This undermined the CCRB by exposing its lack of power. Detective Brosnan was allowed to retire – without facing departmental charges – with benefits, including a disability pension after he claimed hearing damage suffered during the shooting of the young men.

The Rosario-Vega case happened under Giuliani time, which for many families of color in NYC meant mourning time as more and more of their young people were killed. Anibal Carasquillo, Yong Xin Huang, Anthony Baez, Frankie Arzuaga, Aswan Watson and on and on. Pero out of that mourning came organizing and community building led by the mothers of those who were killed.

Now Anthony Rosario’s mother needs support. She is reliving the pain of losing her son and nephew and hearing the lies put forth by the police.

Those interested in court support please contact justicecommittee@ gmail.com and/or call 212-614-5343

More information on the case is available at: Reality Films-Justifiable Homicide and the Justice Committee .

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Watching more than Floats and Flags at Rican Parade

12:17 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Justice|New York City · Comments Off

8 Jun 2007

cop.jpgThe New York City Police Department (NYPD) has had a nasty habit of following Puerto Rican Parade goers back to their hoods and harassing and revelers. Some activists have likened what happens to military type occupations and note that such things don’t occur after other ethnic parades. For example in communities such as Sunset Park in Brooklyn, aggressive confrontations of police officers included an 8 yr. old girl shoved onto a gate in June of 2004 and teenage girls maced, chocked and manhandled by officers from the 72nd precinct.

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seanbellsitin.jpgAll to often in the mainstream media, the issue of police brutality is painted as a black and white issue when in reality it is an issue impacting all people of color. The most recent highly publicized police killing of Sean Bell in Queens, NYC last November has long time police brutality activists and communities of color across the city organizing and calling out a pattern and practice of racially based police killings.

The recent indictments against three of the five officers who fired 50 shots at Bell on the eve of his wedding have left some in the Latino community justifiably unsatisfied. Some showed their dissatisfaction by committing and act of civil disobedience by blocking the entrance to the Queens Criminal Court in Kew Gardens.

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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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