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WSWS : News
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America
Riverside California police cleared of wrongdoing in murder
of teenage black girl
By Jerry White and John Andrews
8 May 1999
Four Riverside, California police officers who killed a 19-year-old
black girl while she was lying unresponsive in the front seat
of her car were cleared of criminal wrongdoing Thursday by a county
district attorney. Tyisha Miller died last December 28 after police
fired 24 gunshots at her, striking the young woman 12 times, including
four times in the head. A family member and friend had summoned
the police because they were concerned that Ms. Miller was having
a seizure.
"We thought we were going to get justice," said the
Reverend Bernell Butler, Ms. Miller's cousin and a spokesman for
the family, "but we got the same old thing. Police officers
are able to murder and get away with it." Butler said that
all he and the family wanted was that the officers be made to
answer to a judge and jury "like anyone else who shot a defenseless
girl 12 times while she sat unconscious in her car."
Ms. Miller had pulled into a gas station parking lot with a
flat tire shortly after 1 a.m. last December. The friend she was
with left to get help while Ms. Miller stayed behind, locking
the doors and rolling up the windows. She turned up the heat and
the radio, and apparently put a pistol in her lap for protection.
When Ms. Miller's 18-year-old cousin, Anthonete Joiner, and
a girlfriend arrived at the gas station they were unable to get
the young woman to respond or to open the doors. Seeing foam around
Ms. Miller's mouth, and fearing that she was in physical distress,
they called 911 to get help from the police. When the police arrived
Ms. Joiner ran over to them and said something was wrong with
her cousin, that she would not wake up and that there was a gun
on her lap.
Ms. Joiner said the policeman told her to get back, while he
and three other officers began screaming at Ms. Miller to open
the door and get out of the car. One officer pounded on the glass
with a flashlight, she said, while the others took positions around
the car, with their guns drawn. "A couple of minutes later,"
Ms. Joiner said, "they were shooting at her! She was just
lying there the whole time!"
Initially, the police said the officers fired only after Ms.
Miller had shot at them. After tests showed that Miller's gun
had not been fired, the police changed their story to say they
saw Miller arise and reach for her gun after one of the officers
broke a window. Consequently, they said, they fired to protect
themselves.
Daniel Hotard, one of the officers, told investigators that
he broke the glass and was reaching for Ms. Miller's gun, when
he heard loud, single crack of gunfire and felt its concussion
near his head. Thinking he had been shot, Hotard said, he fell
backward onto the pavement.
Grover Trask, the Riverside County district attorney, said
that shot had come from a fellow officer. As Hotard fell to the
ground, the DA said, his three partners, Officers Paul Bugar,
Wayne Stewart and Michael Alagna, continued firing. Hotard, still
on the ground, fired several rounds into the driver's side door.
The policemen told investigators, that after firing the first
volley of bullets, they paused for several seconds, and opened
fire again after the young woman moved for the weapon.
Trask said he would not file charges against the policemen,
not even involuntary manslaughter, because while they may have
acted hastily and made mistakes in judgment they had not acted
criminally. The DA said the fact that the young woman was shot
in the back was evidence that she had indeed sat up when she was
shot. Trask exonerated the cops without every questioning the
officers, and instead relied on transcripts of their interviews
with police investigators.
Trask's decision was immediately supported by State Attorney
General Bill Lockyer who said the police actions were "unwise
and ill-conceived" but not sufficient for criminal charges.
The police murder of Tyisha Miller provoked widespread anger
last December and charges that the four policemen--three of them
white and the other Hispanic--were guilty of racism and police
brutality. A protest will be held Monday, from the Riverside City
Hall to the district attorney's office. Miller's relatives have
also filed a civil lawsuit against the shooting.
In an effort to dissipate the growing tension, Trask said he
has asked the US Justice Department and the state attorney general's
office to investigate possible civil rights violations because
of racial comments made by other Riverside police officers in
the wake of the shooting. The FBI is also involved.
Riverside, a predominantly working and middle class community
of 250,000 people, located about 50 miles east of Los Angeles,
has been the scene of several police murders over the last five
years. The victims have been both minorities and whites.
In November 1994, police suffocated Derek Hayward, a 30-year-old
father of three, while taking him into custody "for his own
protection" after he allegedly became delirious on drugs.
In April 1996 Richard Trejo was shot and killed by police as he
was fleeing a convenience store after attempting to rob it with
a knife. Although the policeman said Trejo was attacking him with
a knife, the bullet wounds were in the back.
In December 1996 Adam Williamson, a white 25-year-old homeless
schizophrenic, was suffocated by police. In February 1997, the
Riverside Police Department suffocated Hector Islas, a young Latino
man, after he fled from officers who were doing a "field
identification check."
In December 1998 police shot to death David Bruner, a 35-year-old
white man, while he was fleeing from a traffic stop. There were
more than 20 rounds fired into the back of the vehicle. The autopsy
demonstrated that he was shot after he raised his hands in surrender.
The Los Angeles Times reported Thursday that the Riverside
Police Department activated its emergency operations center in
anticipation that the DA's decision might provoke civil unrest.
The Los Angeles Police Department also went on modified tactical
alert at the time of the announcement.
See Also:
Jury hears tale of torture, brutality
by New York City police
[6 May 1999]
Police brutality
in America
Part 2 in a series of articles on Amnesty International's report
of human rights abuses in the US
[27 October 1998]
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