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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

If it had happened earlier, they could have gotten a job on Hillary's security team

in

Officers Face Departmental Charges in Bell Killing
By AL BAKER

Seven New York City police officers involved in the fatal shooting of Sean Bell, including three detectives who were acquitted in a criminal trial, were formally accused on Tuesday of breaking Police Department rules in the case.

The department said that the officers violated the internal policy manual in a variety of ways, including improperly firing their guns and failing to process the crime scene after Mr. Bell was killed and his two friends injured in a storm of 50 bullets.

The three detectives who stood trial in the case — Detectives Gescard F. Isnora, Michael Oliver and Marc Cooper — were charged with “discharging their firearms outside of department guidelines,” said Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman. Detective Isnora was also charged with taking enforcement action while working as an undercover officer instead of letting officers who were present, and not working undercover, take control.

Lt. Gary Napoli, the ranking officer at the scene, faces internal charges of failing to supervise the operation, Mr. Browne said. Sergeant Hugh McNeil and Detective Robert Knapp, of the Crime Scene Unit, were also charged: the detective with failing to thoroughly process the crime scene and the sergeant with failing to ensure a thorough processing was done.

Police Officer Michael Carey, was charged with discharging his firearm outside of department guidelines. Another officer involved in the shooting, Detective Paul Headley, was not charged because a review of the evidence currently available did not support charges, officials said.

If the charges, known as administrative charges, are upheld, the officers could face discipline ranging from loss of pay to retraining to firing. But the internal investigation has been suspended as federal prosecutors weigh civil rights charges in the case.

The department filed the internal charges Tuesday to beat a Sunday deadline. Under personnel rules, it had 18 months from the date of the shooting, Nov. 25, 2006, to charge the officers.

the evidence suggested the

the evidence suggested the shooting began only after Mr. Bell had twice rammed his car into an unmarked police van

Amazing how allegations become evidence in news articles.

I haven't read a news story

I haven't read a news story yet that explores the possibility that Sean Bell and his friends might have been simply frightened by the appearance of armed men and fearing for their lives were simply trying to get away from these men as fast as they could. 

Daily coverage, NYT

ptc, after P6 started linking to articles about the case, I checked the NY Times' daily coverage of the trial. The reporter there did a fair job of including that possibility. But wherever you see articles that try to summarize the case, I'm with you--haven't seen it.

It is not too late for these

It is not too late for these guys to get gigs with Hillary's campaign. If they were hired and some of us raised objections we would be told that we did not care about her safety. Anybody who thinks that it is okay to obliterate Iran would have no reasonable objection to hiring people who would shoot first and ask questions later. Hillary and Bill Clinton are the Tom and Daisy Buchanan of American politics. Every dead body left in their wake is just collateral damage as far as they are concerned.

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