Missouri
Related: About this forumFlorissant officer fired after video shows him hitting unarmed man with vehicle
FLORISSANT, Mo. (KMOV.com) Florissant Police Chief Timothy Fagan on Wednesday announced the termination of an officer involved in a now-viral violent arrest that was caught on camera.
Detective Joshua Smith's firing comes more than a week after doorbell video showed the officer in an unmarked police vehicle strike an unarmed man and then taking him to the ground.
The incident took place on Tuesday, June 2, but Fagan said he found out about it days later, on Saturday. Fagan said three men were chased because the car they were in matched the description of a vehicle wanted for a shots fired call coming out of Ferguson.
The man hit by the patrol car suffered an ankle injury and was arrested by Florissant Police Department and is facing charges of resisting arrest
https://www.kmov.com/news/florissant-officer-fired-after-video-shows-him-hitting-unarmed-man-with-vehicle/article_afb0cfb6-ab54-11ea-95aa-1b5fc1d234f6.html
Turbineguy
(38,376 posts)that if I am stuck by a police car, that writhing in pain on the ground constitutes resisting arrest.
I think those of us who are not professional criminals need some sort of classroom course on how to thrive in a police state.
lostnfound
(16,635 posts)The family lost the case...but Id put the odds at better than 80%. What would they have to gain? Likely they had alarm bells going off that something wasnt right.
The family lost the case...but Id put the odds at better than 80%. What would they have to gain? Likely they had alarm bells going off that something wasnt right.
The following is an article about that old case:
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in St. Louis on Tuesday, does not mention a self-inflicted wound. It says that Afolabi was seated in the drivers seat of his vehicle and officers Joshua Smith and Andrew Gerwitz opened fire. It notes that the officers are white and Afolabi is black, and that the officers used excessive and unreasonable force. The suit says Afolabi was not resisting arrest nor did he pose a threat to the officers.
The suit against Florissant, the county and the individual officers seeks compensatory and punitive damages for two of Afolabis minor daughters through their mother, his ex-wife Tamonique Grady.
Gradys attorney, James W. Schottel Jr., says the police report has several red flags, and it is unclear whether police recovered the bullet that went through Afolabis head. They were the same caliber as the officers bullets but the bullets werent tested to see which guns they came from, he said. He also said investigators did not test Afolabis hands for gunshot residue. A gun was found on the floorboard, the police report says, and the medical examiners office ruled the death a suicide. dismissed.