LAPD back @ it again: This time they shoot & kill unarmed black homeless man after an "altercation"

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stringer bell;8021076 said:
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Here is the coon that killed that man...
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2015/05/20/police-id-lapd-officer-involved-in-venice-shooting/

Police Release Identity Of LAPD Officer Involved in Venice Shooting

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA.com) — Authorities have identified the LAPD officer involved in the deadly shooting of a homeless man in Venice as Officer Clifford Proctor.

Proctor’s identity had been withheld by police because of safety concerns over the shooting of 29-year-old Brendon Glenn during a reported altercation on May 5 near 80 Windward Avenue in LAPD’s Pacific Area.

Proctor was responding to a 911 call that a man who turned out to be Glenn was harassing passersby on a block of restaurants and bars, the Associated Press reported.

After a struggle, the officer shot Glenn, who later died at a local hospital.

Earlier this month, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said he has viewed surveillance video of the incident, and it “shows a series of events” that aligns with the officers’ report of what happened, including the “physical altercation” that set off the shooting.
 
http://www.latimes.com/local/crime/la-me-venice-shooting-20150520-story.html

LAPD officer in fatal Venice shooting was subject of criminal probe

A Los Angeles police officer who fatally shot an unarmed homeless man in Venice two weeks ago is a seven-year department veteran who was the subject of a criminal investigation for omitting witness statements in a police report, according to a district attorney's office memo.

Prosecutors declined to pursue charges of perjury or filing a false police report against Officer Clifford Proctor last year but faulted him for not including statements from two witnesses that he "should reasonably have known … were material to the investigation and should have been included in the report," the memo said.

LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith, a department spokesman, declined to comment on whether Proctor, 50, was disciplined, saying police personnel records were confidential under state law.

Proctor's attorney, Larry Hanna, said investigations found "there was no misconduct." He said "some of the facts were misconstrued by a supervisor," but Hanna declined to elaborate.

As for the shooting in Venice, Hanna asked the public to "let the process work itself out."

"These officers were out there trying to do their job," he said. "It's going to turn out hopefully that they followed all of the procedures when he used deadly force."

The department this week publicly identified Proctor as the officer who shot and killed Brendon Glenn on May 5. Proctor and his partner, who was not identified by the LAPD because he did not fire his weapon, have not returned to work since the deadly encounter.

The fatal shooting was captured by a security camera on a nearby building and resulted in heated criticism of the department. Chief Charlie Beck said that after reviewing the recording he was "very concerned" about the incident. The recording has not been made public.

The LAPD, the district attorney's office and the Los Angeles police commission's inspector general are investigating the killing, as is routine in police shootings that result in someone's death.

The earlier investigation into how Proctor handled the police report stemmed from a Nov. 17, 2012, arrest.

Proctor and another officer from the LAPD's Pacific Division responded to a report that someone had committed vandalism and violated a restraining order at a home in Westchester, according to the district attorney's memo. At the home, officers spoke with Richard Smith, who said he had seen another man, Salvatori Avini, pull the wooden gate to Smith's driveway with his hands, breaking it off its hinges.

Proctor verified that Smith had a restraining order against Avini, and arrested Avini on suspicion of violating that order and vandalism, the memo said.

When a detective reviewed Proctor's report, the memo said, she noticed the arrest cover sheet included the names of two witnesses but no statements from them. She followed up with Proctor, who told her the witnesses were tow truck drivers who said they had damaged the gate to Smith's property.

When the detective asked why Proctor didn't include those statements, the officer replied it was because they conflicted with what the victim had reported, the memo said. Proctor initially claimed a sergeant had directed him to leave the statements out of the report but later retracted that statement, according to the memo. The detective pointed out that he still could have arrested Avini for allegedly violating a restraining order. The D.A. memo said Proctor responded: "That's a misdemeanor. I wanted him for a felony."

Proctor submitted another report quoting the tow truck drivers as saying they had been hired by Avini to retrieve several cars and had broken the gate while attempting to get access to the driveway. Prosecutors charged Avini with violating a restraining order, according to the memo.

A month after the arrest, Avini made a complaint to the LAPD against Proctor, alleging that the officer falsely arrested him and impounded his vehicle with "evil intent," the district attorney memo said.

The district attorney's office determined that Proctor hadn't filed a false police report.

"Proctor did not make statements in his report that he knew to be false," wrote Deputy Dist. Atty. Rosa Alarcon, in declining the case. "Although an argument can be made that omitting a material statement is tantamount to making a false statement, there is no authority to support such an argument."

Proctor's shooting of Glenn came amid a heated national conversation about police officers and their use of force, particularly against black men. Glenn, 29, was black, as is Proctor, the LAPD said.

The shooting occurred after officers were called to Windward Avenue just off Venice's famed boardwalk about 11:20 p.m. A caller had reported a homeless man — later identified as Glenn — who was "harassing customers" outside a building, LAPD officials said. The two officers talked to Glenn briefly, the LAPD said.

When he walked toward the boardwalk, the officers returned to their patrol car. Soon after, police said, the officers saw Glenn "physically struggling" with a bouncer outside a bar. The officers approached the man and tried to detain him, police said, leading to a "physical altercation" that ended with Proctor opening fire.
 
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-lapd-venice-shooting-20160412-story.html

LAPD killing of unarmed homeless man in Venice was unjustified, Police Commission says

A video contradicts a Los Angeles police officer's claim that he fatally shot an unarmed homeless man in Venice last year because the man was grabbing his partner's gun holster, according to police records made public Tuesday.

The recording, taken from a bar security camera, does not show Brendon Glenn's hand "on or near any portion" of the partner's holster, according to a report from LAPD Chief Charlie Beck to the city's Police Commission. The officer's partner told investigators he never felt "any jerking movements" near his gun, the report added.

The commission unanimously sided with Beck on Tuesday, concluding that Officer Clifford Proctor violated department policy when he fatally shot Glenn in the back near the Venice boardwalk. The panel and Beck also faulted Proctor's decision to draw his weapon, along with the tactics he and his partner used leading up to the deadly encounter.

The decision caps an 11-month review of the May 5 shooting, one of several by LAPD officers last year that fueled criticism of police and how officers use force, particularly against African Americans. Glenn, 29, was black, as is Proctor.

The LAPD's investigation into Glenn's death took a rare public turn earlier this year, when Beck revealed that he had recommended that L.A. County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey criminally charge Proctor. It was the first time as chief that Beck had called for charges against one of his officers in a fatal on-duty shooting.

Prosecutors are still reviewing the case, a district attorney's spokeswoman said Tuesday. Such charges are rare in Los Angeles, where prosecutors haven't charged a law enforcement officer in an on-duty shooting since 2001.

LAPD investigators concluded that Glenn was on his stomach, attempting to push himself off the ground, when Proctor stepped back and opened fire, Beck previously said. Proctor's partner, the chief added earlier this year, told investigators that he did not know why the officer opened fire.

According to the report released Tuesday, Proctor told investigators that Glenn's left hand was on his partner's holster as they struggled on the ground.

"Everything was happening so fast," Proctor was quoted as saying. "And everybody's hands were flailing around."

Proctor fired a shot but said that he didn't see Glenn react. Proctor admitted that he then had "a little tunnel vision" and fired a second shot.

"I don't really know where his hands were but he is still holding on," Proctor told investigators, the report said. The officer said his partner "was still fighting with him. What was going through my mind when I fired the second shot was I honestly believed that this guy was on something strong, like some kind of drug. And the first round did absolutely nothing to affect him. He didn't move."

The names of the officers were redacted from a copy of the report that was made public, but the LAPD previously identified Proctor as the officer who opened fire.

Beck said in his report to the commission that the evidence examined in the case "does not independently support" Proctor's claim that Glenn was trying to take his partner's gun. Proctor's partner, the report added, never made "any statements or actions that would have suggested" Glenn was trying to take the weapon.

The video that captured the struggle and shooting was taken from the Townhouse bar. The video has not been made public.

The deadly encounter began shortly before midnight, when Proctor and his partner went to Windward Avenue near the famed Venice boardwalk after police received a complaint that a homeless man was harassing customers outside a building, the LAPD said.

The officers briefly talked to the man -- later identified as Glenn -- and returned to their patrol car after he walked toward the boardwalk, police said.

Soon after, the LAPD said, the officers saw Glenn struggling with a bouncer outside a nearby bar. The officers tried to detain Glenn, police said, leading to a "physical altercation" that ended when Proctor opened fire.

Almost immediately, the LAPD drew criticism over the deadly shooting. Activists and friends of Glenn packed a town hall meeting days after the shooting, angrily complaining about police officers' use of deadly force and how they interact with homeless Angelenos.

Glenn's family has filed two wrongful death lawsuits, saying his killing "was completely unjustified."
 
too bad we have aan attorney general too weak to do anything about this shit. Loretta Lynch is more of a bitch than Obama. I didn't think that was possible.
 
skpjr78;8917529 said:
too bad we have aan attorney general too weak to do anything about this shit. Loretta Lynch is more of a bitch than Obama. I didn't think that was possible.

You don't think that was by design?
 

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