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The killing of Patrick Dorismond: New York police violence
escalates in wake of Diallo verdict
By Bill Vann
22 March 2000
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this version to print
Less than one month after the acquittal of four New York City
police officers in the fatal shooting of Amadou Diallo, new acts
of murderous violence by the city's police force have made it
clear that the fusillade that felled the West African immigrant
in the Bronx was no aberration.
Patrick Dorismond, a 26-year-old security guard, was shot to
death March 15 in a confrontation with plainclothes police involved
in a controversial anti-drug crackdown that has netted more than
18,000 arrests and cost the police department more than $24 million
in overtime over the last two months.
As in the case of Diallo, there is no clear evidence that Dorismond
ever knew that the man who pulled a gun on him and fired a single
bullet into his chest was a police officer.
If the acquittal of the four cops in the Diallo case signaled
that police in the city have a license to kill, New York's Mayor
Rudy Giuliani has sought to make the Dorismond shooting into an
argument that such police murders of unarmed and innocent people
represent a positive, and even heroic, act in defense of the city's
security.
Dorismond, a father of two young girls who had himself hoped
to become a cop, was confronted by an undercover officer outside
a bar where he had gone with a friend after a 3-11 p.m. shift
as a guard for a Business Improvement District (BID) that operates
in the westside Manhattan area of Pennsylvania Station and Madison
Square Garden. The two stopped at a bar for a beer before seeking
to hail a cab to go home.
Police claimed Dorismond became belligerent after the undercover
cop approached him asking to buy drugs. The cop called in backup,
also plainclothes, and Detective Anthony Vasquez intervened. While
the New York Police Department's version of the confrontation
had the security guard throwing a first punch, and Vasquez's attorney
claimed that his client's gun went off after Dorismond lunged
for it, civilian eyewitnesses gave very different accounts. Some
said that the shot went off as Vasquez was beating the off-duty
guard with his gun. Others said that a van pulled up with a screech
and men jumped out, with a shot going off almost immediately.
There are elements in the Dorismond shooting that are reminiscent
of the killing of Amadou Diallo in February 1999. Dorismond too
was an entirely innocent victim of an aggressive police operation.
Like Diallo, there is every reason to believe that Dorismond had
no idea that the men who confronted and then killed him were police
officers. His reaction, taking umbrage at someone assumingbecause
of his age and his racethat he was a drug dealer was entirely
understandable, particularly for someone who was himself seeking
to pursue a career as a cop.
In the wake of the Diallo shooting, the New York Police Department
(NYPD) went through the motions of "self reform," putting
the cops in the elite Street Crime Unit, whose members were responsible
for the killing, into uniform and ultimately disbanding the elite
unit by assigning its members to the city's various borough commands.
The Diallo shooting struck such a cord in the city's population
because so many young workers and youth, particularly in predominantly
minority neighborhoods, had been subjected to stop-and-frisks
by the plainclothes Street Crime cops, often suffering beatings
and humiliation in the bargain.
The ongoing anti-drug campaign, dubbed "Operation Condor,"
has reproduced the same methods used by the old Street Crime Unit.
It incorporates the military mentality of targeting entire areas
and assuming that anyone within them fitting a certain profile
in terms of economic status, race and age is a suspect.
Ironically, on the eve of the fatal shooting of Dorismond,
Police Commissioner Howard Safir was questioned at a City Council
hearing about the advisability of naming a NYPD initiative "Operation
Condor," given that the same title had been used for a CIA-backed
collaboration between Latin American military dictatorships in
the 1970s that resulted in the rounding up and execution of political
opponents throughout the region. Safir replied lamely that a condor
was just "a bird."
There are aspects of this latest strategy that are even more
insidious than the methods pursued by the now-defunct Street Crime
Unit. While the SCU focused its activities on seizing guns and
pursuing armed criminalsthe four cops who confronted and
killed Diallo in the vestibule of his own apartment building were
supposedly on the prowl for a rapistOperation Condor has
been aimed at cracking down on the bottom rung of the drug ladder,
producing the arrests of poor and working class people on charges
of sales or possession of small amounts of marijuana and cocaine.
The Condor cops have been sent into the street with the aim
of enticing randomly selected people, like Patrick Dorismond,
into committing a crime. The program is based almost entirely
on recruiting police to work overtime to supplement their income.
To get the overtime, the cops know they must produce results,
registering high numbers of arrests. The police who confronted
Dorismond had reportedly already bagged eight people for drug
offenses and decided to go for "an even ten" to get
their numbers up.
Before Patrick Dorismond's body was cold, the Giuliani administration
launched an obscene campaign to vilify the dead security guard
and all but portray him as someone who had a police bullet coming
to him. Having little to work with, Giuliani ordered Police Commissioner
Safir to unseal a juvenile record on the man, disclosing that
he had been arrested for robbery and assault in 1987, when he
was 13.
The charge, reportedly stemming from a childhood fist fight
over a quarter, was dropped and his record sealed because he was
a child. But Giuliani's legal advisers took the position that
once he was dead, Dorismond's right not to have police records
from his childhood publicized by the mayor died with him. It allowed
Giuliani to declare that Dorismond was no "altar boy"
and that his previous brush with the police "may justify,
more closely, what the police officer did."
As for the cop who shot the security guard, Giuliani praised
him for his "distinguished" career as an undercover
officer, declaring that in going out and shooting an innocent,
unarmed man to death in the street he "put his life on the
line in the middle of the night to protect the safety and security
of this city."
While inflating Dorismond's dismissed charges into the portrait
of a "common criminal," the mayor has remained silent
on Detective Vasquez's own record, which makes it clear that the
precipitous shooting of an unarmed man was hardly out of character.
The cop came to the attention of the NYPD in 1996, before he even
graduated from the Police Academy, for using his service revolver
to shoot his neighbor's dog after the animal had dug under the
fence that separated their two homes on Long Island.
The neighbor insists that the dog posed no threat and the shooting
was entirely unjustified. A year later, Vasquez was arrested in
a bar after drawing his service revolver in a fight that witnesses
say he himself had initiated. Later that same year, his wife accused
him of domestic violence, subsequently dropping formal charges.
The mayor, who is focusing his attention on a campaign for
election to the US Senate as the Republican candidate from New
York State, is speaking to a definite audience. To the financial
and corporate elite who make Manhattan their home, as well as
the more reactionary sections of the middle class who have grown
wealthy off of the stock market boom, he is declaring his resolve
to defend their interests. Police killings of innocent workers
and youth, he tells them, are an acceptable means of policing
the tense social divide between the city's fabulously wealthy
"haves" and the huge population of impoverished and
largely minority and immigrant "have-nots."
Significantly, Giuliani's Democratic opponent in the Senate
race, First Lady Hillary Clinton, has maintained a discreet silence
on the Dorismond shooting.
Two weeks before the killing of Patrick Dorismond, another
undercover officer shot an unarmed man to death at point-blank
range in the Bronx, just blocks from where Diallo was killed.
Malcolm Ferguson, 25, was killed with a bullet to his head after
cops chased him through a building in his Bronx neighborhood as
part of the anti-drug blitz.
He had been arrested just a week before for participating in
a protest over the acquittal of Diallo's police killers. He also
had filed a civil suit against the city and its Police Department
over an earlier arrest in which cops broke his hand and left him
without medical attention. Some neighbors and friends suggested
that he may have been executed for seeking legal redress to police
brutality.
See Also:
The Abner Louima case: three New York
cops guilty in cover-up of torture
[9 March 2000]
Five days after the Diallo verdict
New York plainclothes cop kills unarmed Bronx man
[3 March 2000]
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