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Grand jury exonerates New York cop who shot 19-year-old youth
By Peter Daniels
25 February 2004
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A grand jury impaneled by the Brooklyn district attorney decided
on February 17 against the indictment of police officer Richard
Neri, who shot 19-year-old Timothy Stansbury Jr. to death last
month on the roof of his building.
The circumstances of Stansburys killing had aroused particular
outrage. Along with two friends, he was attempting to use the
roof as a shortcut on his way to a party in an adjoining building.
When Stansfield pushed the door to the roof just as Neri pulled
it open, the cop, who was on a regular patrol, pulled the trigger
without any word of identification or warning.
The dead youths family was bitter over the grand jury
decision, and neighborhood residents expressed surprise at the
failure to indict the officer for criminally negligent homicide
or manslaughter, especially since New York City police commissioner
Raymond Kelly had held a news conference within hours of the shooting
to express his sympathy with the family and to declare that there
appears to be no justification for the shooting.
I didnt expect this, said Stansburys
uncle, Wayne Clayburne. I expected something to happen.
Not just let my nephew lay dead like that. Were back to
where we started from. And it hurts so bad.
Timothys sister, Timetress Stansbury, said, What
angers me most is this officer may get off scot-free. Ill
do whatever it takes, even if it means committing the rest of
my life to get justice.
In fact, the failure to bring charges against the police is
true to the pattern that can be seen in nearly every other case
of unprovoked police killings. There also were no indictments
in some of the well-known incidents in recent years in New York,
such as the killing of Patrick Dorismond by an undercover narcotics
officer. The four officers who killed West African immigrant Amadou
Diallo five years ago were tried, but acquitted, after the proceedings
were moved to Albany, 150 miles north of where the killing took
place.
Grand juries typically take their cues almost automatically
from the local prosecutors who present the evidence to them. This
is the source of the well-known adage that a grand jury would
indict a ham sandwich if so demanded by the prosecutor.
The reverse is also true. In this case, Brooklyn district attorney
Charles J. Hynes, who works closely with the Police Department,
presented witnesses, including a police training officer and officer
Neri himself. The jury was instructed that negligence was not
sufficient cause to bring charges. As Stephen Gillers, a law professor
at the New York University School of Law, explained, Were
not just talking about negligence, were talking about something
so unreasonable as to be a gross deviation. A mistake, or a simple
act of negligence, is not enough to be criminal.
Of course if Timothy Stansbury had, in fear or panic, been
the one to pull the trigger, there is no doubt that charges would
have been brought. The grand jury decision reflects the fact that
the police are given license to kill, and leeway for mistakes,
as long as the victim is a worker or working class youth.
The grand jury decision underscores just how little meaning
can be attached to the expressions of sympathy from New York City
mayor Michael Bloomberg and his police commissioner after the
latest killing. In fact, Bloomberg and Kelly no doubt understood
that an indictment would probably not be forthcoming, and their
words were aimed essentially at appeasing the anger over the killing,
not doing anything about it.
The Stansbury family has several other recourses. They can
seek federal civil rights charges against the police officer.
While the US attorney for the Eastern District in New York issued
a statement saying that her office had begun a review of the evidence,
this is highly unlikely to lead to any action. The officer may
also face departmental charges, and the family can in addition
file a wrongful death civil lawsuit against the city. A civil
lawsuit in the case of Amadou Diallo was recently settled for
several million dollars.
Even if the city winds up paying as the result of a suit or
settlement, however, such an outcome does nothing about the continuing
police violence and the real dangers that minority workers and
youth in particular face in their own neighborhoods, dangers that
stem not only from open racism but from the standard methods of
police work in defending the status quo of poverty and inequality.
As far as the political and financial establishment is concerned,
financial settlements become nothing but the cost of doing business.
The law-and-order campaign, regularly stoked by the media and
the big business politicians, means that the police function as
a virtual occupation force in poorer neighborhoods. When they
claim innocent victims, their superiors express regret, in terms
not that different from those of the US military authorities in
the current occupation of Iraq.
See Also:
19-year-old mourned in Brooklyn: Another
fatal police shooting in New York
[6 February 2004]
New York cops cleared
in killing of Patrick Dorismond
[2 August 2000]
Acquittal of New York
City police: court sanctions murder of Amadou Diallo: How the
trial was rigged
[28 February 2000]
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