NYPD Pigs are @ it again.. A Pig/Officer Fatally Shoots Unarmed Brooklyn Man...

  • Thread starter Thread starter New Editor
  • Start date Start date
Accidental discharge....

In the working world certain mistakes Get u on the seat at times fired....

Not for police tho, cops Accidentally kills, niggas in here playing devils advocate ...

Cops kills a nigga He's a Hero
 
nytimes.com/2014/11/22/nyregion/new-york-police-officer-fatally-shoots-brooklyn-man.html?_r=2

Officer’s Errant Shot Kills Unarmed Brooklyn Man

Two police officers prepared to enter the pitch-black eighth-floor stairwell of a building in a Brooklyn housing project, one of them with his sidearm drawn. At the same time, a man and his girlfriend, frustrated by a long wait for an elevator, entered the seventh-floor stairwell, 14 steps below. In the darkness, a shot rang out from the officer’s gun, and the 28-year-old man below was struck in the chest and, soon after, fell dead.

The shooting, at 11:15 p.m. on Thursday, invited immediate comparison to the fatal shooting of an unarmed man in Ferguson, Mo. But 12 hours later, just after noon on Friday, the New York police commissioner, William J. Bratton, announced that the shooting was accidental and that the victim, Akai Gurley, had done nothing to provoke a confrontation with the officers.

Indeed, as the investigation continued into Friday night, a leading theory described an instance of simple, yet tragic, clumsiness on the part of the officer. Mr. Gurley was not armed, the police said.

The episode promised to bring scrutiny to a longtime police practice of officers drawing their weapons when patrolling stairwells in housing projects.

The shooting occurred in the Louis H. Pink Houses in the East New York neighborhood. The housing project had been the scene of a recent spate of crimes — there have been two robberies and four assaults in the development in the past month, two homicides in the past year, and a shooting in a nearby lobby last Saturday, Mr. Bratton said.

Additional officers, many new to the Police Department, were assigned to patrol the buildings, including the two officers in the stairwell on Thursday night, who were working an overtime tour.

Having just inspected the roof, the officers prepared to conduct what is known as a vertical patrol, an inspection of a building’s staircases, which tend to be a magnet for criminal activity or quality-of-life nuisances.

Both officers took out their flashlights, and one, Peter Liang, 27, a probationary officer with less than 18 months on the job, drew his sidearm, a 9-millimeter semiautomatic.

Officer Liang is left-handed, and he tried to turn the knob of the door that opens to the stairwell with that hand while also holding the gun, according to a high-ranking police official who was familiar with the investigation and who emphasized that the account could change.

It appears that in turning the knob and pushing the door open, Officer Liang rotated the barrel of the gun down and accidentally fired, the official said. He and the other officer both jumped back into the hallway, and Officer Liang shouted something to the effect that he had accidentally fired his weapon, the official said.


Mr. Gurley had spent the past hours getting his hair braided at a friend’s apartment. Neighbors said he had posted photos of himself on an online site for models, featuring his tattoos, his clothing and his muscular frame.

He and his girlfriend, Melissa Butler, waited for an elevator on the seventh floor, but it never came, so they opened the door to the dark stairwell instead. An instant later, the shot was fired. Mr. Gurley and Ms. Butler were probably unaware that the shot came from a police officer’s gun.

“The cop didn’t present himself, he just shot him in the chest,” Janice Butler, Ms. Butler’s sister, said. “They didn’t see their face or nothing.”

Mr. Gurley made it two flights down, to the fifth floor, where he collapsed. Melissa Butler called 911 from a lower floor, the official said.

Officer Liang and his partner came upon Mr. Gurley and called in the injury on the police radio, saying it was the result of an accidental discharge, the official said.

Mr. Gurley was taken to Brookdale Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Following protocol, Officer Liang was relieved of his gun and his badge pending an investigation.

Commissioner Bratton called Mr. Gurley “a total innocent” and said the shooting was “an unfortunate accident.” The victim was not engaged in any activity other than trying to walk down the stairs, Mr. Bratton said.

Mayor Bill de Blasio was also quick to offer his condolences to Mr. Gurley’s family. “This is a tragedy,” he said.

About 6:45 p.m. on Friday, the mayor, accompanied by his wife, Chirlane McCray, and Mr. Bratton, arrived at the Red Hook East Houses to visit the home of Mr. Gurley’s domestic partner, Kimberly Michelle Ballinger, 25.

They spent a little more than 10 minutes there and left without making any comment.


Earlier, Mr. Bratton said that whether an officer should draw his weapon while on patrol when there was no clear threat was a matter of discretion.

There’s not a specific prohibition against taking a firearm out,” he said, adding, “As in all cases, an officer would have to justify the circumstances that required him to or resulted in his unholstering his firearm.”

The president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, Patrick J. Lynch, declined to say anything about the officer, but commented on the conditions of stairwells in projects, including the setting of the shooting.

“The Pink Houses are among the most dangerous projects in the city, and their stairwells are the most dangerous places in the projects,” he said. “Dimly lit stairways and dilapidated conditions create fertile ground for violent crime, while the constant presence of illegal firearms creates a dangerous and highly volatile environment for police officers and residents alike.”

The Brooklyn district attorney, Kenneth P. Thompson, issued a statement that questioned the condition of the lighting in the stairwell.

“Many questions must be answered, including whether, as reported, the lights in the hallway were out for a number of days, and how this tragedy actually occurred,” Mr. Thompson said.

Neighbors said darkened stairwells were nothing new in the Pink Houses. “The staircases from eight down are dark,” said Mattie Dubose, a resident. “If you want to walk in them, you need an escort.”
 
Stairwell Shooting

The Police Department is still dealing with the fallout over the death of Eric Garner, a Staten Island man who died after a confrontation with the police in July. The department sought to defuse tension on Friday both by naming the officer in the shooting — an unusual step — and by noting repeatedly that the victim was blameless.

At City Hall, aides to the mayor were well aware of the imminent decision by a grand jury on the police shooting in Ferguson and the charged atmosphere that the death of an unarmed black man can create.

The mayor and Mr. Bratton conferred by telephone several times on Friday morning. Deputy Commissioner Benjamin B. Tucker spoke with the Rev. Al Sharpton about the shooting and the city’s response. The chief of the Police Department’s community affairs bureau, Joanne Jaffe, went to Mr. Gurley’s home in Red Hook, Brooklyn, and was with relatives when his young daughter was told of her father’s death.

Ms. Ballinger, the mother of Mr. Gurley’s young daughter, and his sister, Akisha Pringle, were scheduled to appear with Mr. Sharpton at an event on Saturday.

“She’s got to explain to her 2-year-old old why her father did not pick her up from school today and why he was not home to play with him as is their routine,” Kirsten Foy of the National Action Network, Mr. Sharpton’s organization, said after meeting with the family.

The officer’s future is unclear beyond an expected interview he will give to police superiors. It was not known whether he could face criminal prosecution.

“The cops have tremendous leeway with self-defense cases, but less leeway with a case like this,” said Eugene O’Donnell, a former prosecutor who teaches at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan. “A life was lost, and you are going to have to account for it.”


A similar shooting occurred in January 2004, when Officer Richard S. Neri Jr.killed Timothy Stansbury Jr., 19, on a roof at the Louis Armstrong Houses in Brooklyn. A grand jury declined to indict Officer Neri after he gave emotional testimony that he had unintentionally fired; he was startled, he said, when Mr. Stansbury pushed open a rooftop door in a place where drug dealing was rampant.

On Friday night in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn, a next-door neighbor of Officer Liang described him as cautious and helpful. “He wouldn’t mess around or do anything out of the ordinary,” said the neighbor, Ronald Chan, 24.

When Mr. Chan learned about the shooting, he said he was shocked and could not believe someone as cautious as his neighbor could have been involved.

“I think it was an honest mistake, because safety first,” he said. “Why would he do that? It sounds like an accident.”
 
Disgusted at the news coverage. From the photo they used and Smh at he had 24 arrest on his record but was innocent at the time...

Everytime bruh...every time
 
Ghostdenithegawd;7559750 said:
well from what y'all posted the cop admitted to his mistake can't sit here and call him racist this isnt like any of the other situations this man admitted to his fault

Nigga stop it. The fuck r u tryna say???

In 95% of jobs, a mistake will Get u on the Hot seat. At times fired.

They fired niggas on espn for comments.

This nigga took a life, and ya black ass wanna give him a pass...

So what he admitted to it, what else he could say, "it wasnt me???"

This isn't an isolated incident . There is a culture, of killing n Harassing black ppl in police Departments Nation wide.

We r not gonna let this shit slide...

If i were to kill somebody by accident, ld be charged With a homicide....

 
D0wn;7561685 said:
Ghostdenithegawd;7559750 said:
well from what y'all posted the cop admitted to his mistake can't sit here and call him racist this isnt like any of the other situations this man admitted to his fault

Nigga stop it. The fuck r u tryna say???

In 95% of jobs, a mistake will Get u on the Hot seat. At times fired.

They fired niggas on espn for comments.

This nigga took a life, and ya black ass wanna give him a pass...

So what he admitted to it, what else he could say, "it wasnt me???"

"Hot seat"? A lot of y'all muhfuckas In here talking about killing the guy, which is totally irrational behavior.

This isn't an isolated incident . There is a culture, of killing n Harassing black ppl in police Departments Nation wide.

We r not gonna let this shit slide...

There's no culture of accidental shootings. I can guarantee Mike Brown was no accident, Garner probably was (because he wasn't shot). This is an isolated incident. The cop isn't even white, hes Asian. Now unless you got a history of Asian cops treating blacks like shit then we down to "isolated incident".

If i were to kill somebody by accident, ld be charged With a homicide....

No, you would be charged with criminally negligent homicide or involuntary manslaughter. Not murder, there's no evidence of premeditation here. At least not right now.

 
nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/wanted-posters-nypd-brooklyn-project-article-1.2020615

'Wanted' posters for NYPD cop who shot unarmed man appear in housing project

NYPD Officer Peter Liang is a wanted man.

A day after the rookie cop gunned down an unarmed man inside the Pink Houses, “Wanted” posters appeared in the Brooklyn housing project.

“This is the face of a killer,” one of the flyers reads.

The poster shows an image of an Asian officer — but it’s not Liang.

A second homemade sign shows Liang’s name and the same photo — along with two other officers responsible for killing black men — under the words, “Wanted for Murder.”

“It is the whole police force who are guilty for this,” said Henry Cames, a volunteer for the ANSWER Coalition, which produced the flyer.
 
nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/akai-gurley-criminal-record-innocent-shot-article-1.2020342

Protesters call for arrest of rookie cop who shot Akai Gurley as victim’s sister says he didn’t deserve to die

A sea of angry demonstrators marched to the NYPD’s 75th precinct stationhouse Saturday night demanding the arrest of the rookie cop who shot to death an unarmed man in Brooklyn.

Roughly 200 protesters massed outside the stationhouse pelting officers with chants comparing the NYPD to the Ku Klux Klan.

“NYPD, KKK, how many kids you kill today?” the demonstrators chanted.

Rep. Charles Barron, hollering into a microphone, whipped the crowd into an emotional frenzy.

But there were no outbreaks of violence.

“Killer cops must go,” Barron shouted. “Shut this city down!

Some protesters showed solidarity with those demonstrating in the Missouri town of Ferguson, where a grand jury is weighing charges against the police officer who shot Michael Brown.

At one point, a group of demonstrators unfurled a banner that read — “IF THE KILLER COP WALKS AMERIKKKA HALTS!”

The march came hours after the sister of victim Akai Gurley, 28, said her slain brother didn’t deserve to die.

“All he is, is an innocent guy walking down the stairs who was killed for no apparent reason at all, going home to his baby mother and his kids,” Akisha Pringle, 18, said at the Harlem headquarters of the National Action Network.

Pringle described Gurley, who’s been arrested more than two dozen times, as “very giving, very kind.”

“Whatever he’s done in his past, that doesn’t justify what happened to him that night,” she said.


Probationary Officer Peter Liang was one of two cops conducting a vertical patrol inside a building at the Pink Houses in East New York, Brooklyn, at about 11:15 p.m.

A police source told the Daily News that Liang was holding his Glock 9-mm. pistol in one hand and a flashlight in the other. Liang, who joined the force in July 2013, had just entered the pitch-black stairwell on the eighth floor when his gun accidentally discharged, police said.

Gurley was 14 steps away from Liang when a bullet — possibly a ricochet — tore through his chest. Gurley, who was with gal pal Melissa Butler, 27, ran from the seventh floor down to the fifth floor, where he collapsed.

Liang’s partner, Officer Shaun Landau, didn’t fire.

“I’ll never be able to see him again, kiss or hug him again,” Gurley’s sister said. “That hurts me, and I know it hurts my mother.”

At one point, the Rev. Al Sharpton brought Gurley’s 2-year-old daughter to the microphone. Sharpton said little Akaila had something to say, but she didn’t part her lips.

“She told us she wanted to say she loved her daddy,” Sharpton said.


The fired-up reverend called for a complete investigation.

A police source said no decision has been made yet whether to fire Liang, who remains on modified duty — stripped of his badge and gun. Probationary officers can be canned without a departmental hearing.

“The Police Department must deal with its training, must deal with its procedures,” he said. “The (Brooklyn) district attorney must deal with a thorough investigation.”

2wqsy7n.jpg
 
Last edited:
newsday.com/news/new-york/sharpton-calls-for-da-to-investigate-fatal-shooting-of-akai-gurley-1.9644130

Sharpton calls for answers to fatal shooting of Akai Gurley

Activists Saturday sought to intensify pressure on City Hall and the NYPD for answers over a rookie cop's killing of an unarmed man, which police officials have labeled an accident, and whether crime-fighting tactics played a role in the Brooklyn tragedy.

Speaking Saturday at his storefront headquarters in Harlem, the Rev. Al Sharpton criticized the shooting of Akai Gurley, 28. Nearby was the man's grief-stricken family, including his 2-year-old daughter, and the mother of Eric Garner, who died after being put in an apparent chokehold during a July arrest in Staten Island.

"They're saying it was an accident. We're saying, 'How do we know until there is a thorough investigation?' " Sharpton said. "This baby will grow up without a daddy who did nothing wrong," Sharpton said. "This Thanksgiving these families will have to sit at a table with missing family members."

As Sharpton spoke, there were shouts of "murdered!" from the audience. Kimberly Michelle Ballinger, 25, the mother of Gurley's daughter, appeared stricken and looked down at the floor.

Gurley's sister, Akisha Pringle, who flew in from Florida, said, "All he is is an innocent guy walking down the stairs who was killed for no apparent reason at all going home to his baby mother and his kids."

Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson has said his office would conduct a criminal probe of the shooting.

NYPD Officer Peter Liang shot Gurley in the stairwell of the Louis H. Pink Houses of East New York on Thursday. Police Commissioner William Bratton said it was an "accidental discharge" in a dark stairwell.

Bratton said Liang will have to explain why his gun was unholstered. Gurley was a "total innocent," the commissioner said. Liang, on the job less than 18 months, is on modified duty and, per procedure, has been stripped of his badge and gun.

Several hundred demonstrators chanting "no justice, no peace" marched Saturday night from the Pink Houses to a housing police station. "They can't just do this to our people," said Kenneth Walluyn, 58, who lives across the street.

"People should be able to walk in and out of their house and not get shot," said Argenys Taveras, 29, of Harlem. Mike May of Staten Island said "we need a political structure that has accountability."
The march ended shortly after 9 p.m.

Sharpton's audience cheered Saturday as he lamented the darkened stairwells of housing projects as symptoms of municipal neglect. "They don't know if they're facing a cop or a robber when they're coming down the stairs," Sharpton said.

The shooting has focused scrutiny of the NYPD practice known as "vertical patrol," in which officers ascend and descend public housing project stairwells where many crimes occur. Critics are also questioning the commonplace use of rookies for such duty.

"The next step is an investigation and to deal with the vertical policing," Sharpton said. "Vertical policing in many ways is just up and down, up the stairs and down the stairs stop-and-frisk. We cannot have that."

City Councilman Jumaane Williams (D-Brooklyn) wanted to know why Liang had drawn his gun before encountering anyone.

"How is having your gun out with no provocation, your finger on the trigger, your safety off an accident? At minimum, that sounds like criminal negligence," Williams said.


Gurley's funeral will probably be after Thanksgiving, Sharpton said.
 
This sounds like some shit from training day, he's a rookie cop above suspicion, Akia sold dope to kids the worlds a better place without him. The nypd is on they Alonzo shit
 

Members online

No members online now.

Trending content

Thread statistics

Created
-,
Last reply from
-,
Replies
91
Views
0
Back
Top
Menu
Your profile
Post thread…