Ala. teen files suit claiming police brutality at high school graduation

An Alabama teenager has filed suit claiming he was roughed up by police after cheering for a friend during a graduation ceremony for Homewood High School.

Dane Palmgren contends he suffered permanent injuries and emotional distress after being restrained, hit, elbowed and choked by police at Homewood’s graduation ceremony in 2008.

An attorney for Palmgren, Wendy Brooks Crew, said Tuesday the 19-year-old Palmgren was invited to the ceremony by a friend. She says he cheered and waved from the balcony when his friend’s name was called.

Homewood’s school superintendent, Bill Cleveland, said the ceremony was interrupted by conduct that he called “rude, persistent and inexcusable.”

Palmgren’s suit names the city of Homewood and school officials. It seeks an unspecified amount of money.

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Taipei resident gains compensation from police brutality

TAIPEI, Taiwan — A victim of alleged police brutality said yesterday he will forgive the officer accused of beating and injuring him during a recent crackdown on traffic violations in Taipei County.

The victim, Chen Pin-chung, told reporters that he will forgive the officer, Chang Yi-shun, who was questioned by Taipei district prosecutors on charges of assault causing bodily harm.

But Wang Cho-chung, director general of the National Police Agency (NPA), said he will show “no leniency” in terms of administrative responsibility after the investigation is over.

Chang, who served at an outpost of Sanchung Police Station, in Taipei County, has already been reassigned after the incident, the NAP said.

Two of his superiors have also been penalized because of their alleged attempts to cover up the case, the NPA said.

While patrolling the streets of Sanchung on his motorbike at about 4 a.m. on Tuesday, Chang spotted a motorcyclist running a red light.

Chang chased the motorcyclist, who was Chen, into a dark dead-end alley. According to the Central News Agency, Chang thought the motorcyclist was trying to attack him, and therefore beat him with his baton.

Chen, who needed seven stitches for the wounds on his head, was also questioned by prosecutors yesterday.

Chen declined to comment on reports that he had received NT$300,000 from Chang as compensation.

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New Jersey Police beat innocent

A New Jersey police officer who punched a man and struck him with a baton during an incident captured by a security camera has been reassigned while the matter is investigated.

Passaic officer Joseph J. Rios III has not been charged in the May 29 incident, but has been assigned to desk duty.


“The video of this incident is extremely disconcerting, but I urge the community to withhold judgment until a complete investigation of the incident is concluded and reviewed by independent law enforcement officials,” Mayor Alex Blanco said in a statement issued late Saturday.

The video shows Rios and at least one other officer drive by Ronnie Holloway, who was on a street corner. The officers then talk with Holloway before Rios exits the cruiser and throws him against a car hood and to the pavement, then hits him repeatedly.

Holloway, who was not seriously injured, denied any wrongdoing. He was charged with resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and wandering with the intent to buy narcotics.

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Alleged police brutality spurs protest

Community activists and relatives of alleged police-brutality victims protested yesterday outside the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office, demanding that state troopers soften their approach on Camden’s streets.

The state police, who have had a presence in Camden since the 1990s, have periodically been criticized for using more force than city officers. Some have said that they do not understand the neighborhoods well enough to distinguish between law-abiding residents and criminals.

Those concerns came up again in April after a Pemberton Township man died in Camden shortly after being handcuffed and arrested on drug charges by state troopers.

The man, 32-year-old Jorge Rivera, stuffed a bag of suspected narcotics into his mouth and choked, police said. An autopsy confirmed that he died from choking on the bag, according to the Attorney General’s Office.

Family members, however, contend that officers beat and stomped Rivera to death.

“We are always concerned when residents raise issues regarding police conduct,” said Peter Aseltine, a spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office, which oversees the state police in Camden.

“Camden is one of the most violent cities in the country,” Aseltine said. “The greatest concern for Camden residents remains the number of innocent people victimized by gang- and drug-related violence. That is why the state police are needed.”

State police in Camden do targeted drug enforcement and other investigations, not routine street patrols. They have made about 300 arrests in Camden this year – 11 involving use of force, Aseltine said.

About 25 protestors, led by Angel Cordero, an activist and mayoral candidate, held signs bearing slogans such as “Troopers Shape Up or Ship Out.”

One protester, Annette Russell, said her son, Timothy Harvey, was beaten, stomped, and kicked by state troopers last weekend while being arrested on a suspected Camden drug corner. Before going to jail, he was taken to the hospital to get stitches in his face, she said.

“He’s no stranger to the system, and we’re not in denial about that, but no child deserves to be beaten like that,” Russell said.

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