Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
International

All Lives Matter: Prosecution At Cop's Retrial For Assaulting Indian Grandfather

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Nov, 2015 01:21 PM
    "It's not only police lives that matter. All lives matter," a new jury was told as it weighed afresh evidence against an Alabama police officer charged with using excessive force on an Indian grandfather.
     
    "The defence says the community must respect police, but the police must earn the respect of the community," Assistant US Attorney Robert Posey told the jury in a Huntsville, Alabama court Friday in his final arguments.
     
    The first trial of former Madison Officer Eric Parker for Feb 6 slamming of Sureshbhai Patel, who had arrived days earlier from India to take care of his grandson, ended last month with a 10-2 in favour of acquittal.
     
    If convicted, Parker faces 10 years in federal prison.
     
    Posey told the jury that in deciding whether the force was excessive they need to look at the severity of the crime in progress, according to local Al.com.
     
    The call from a neighbour about a suspicious person in the neighbourhood, said Posey, alleged only: "Walking, standing, looking. None of these are crimes."
     
     
    He also urged the jury to consider immediacy of the threat to the officer. "This officer is saying he had to do this because of his safety," said Posey, arguing that walking away from officers is not evidence a suspect is armed.
     
    Patel was not armed. "Just doesn't make sense," said Posey. Parker, he suggested changed his story after he realised he could not "stand him up and brush him off."
     
    He said then Parker began to develop a reason for the stop, asking a dispatcher for help identifying crimes in the area for probable cause. Posey said that suggests Parker knew what he did was wrong.
     
    Defence attorney Robert Tuten put the blame on Patel saying "All Mr. Patel had to do was stop."
     
    He said if Patel had shown officers some identification, they would have written a report and sent him on his way. He said police are obligated to investigate calls from neighbours concerned about someone suspicious in the area.
     
    Patel didn't speak English and didn't understand the officers' questions. But, Tuten said there was no way Parker could know this was a "harmless Indian grandfather walking down Hardiman Place Lane."
     
    "We all feel sorry for Mr. Patel. We wouldn't be human if we didn't," he said, but he suggested the video shows Patel did not comply with police orders. "The event, this incident, was escalated by what Mr. Patel did. All he had to do was stand there."
     
    Posey offered final rebuttal to the jury saying it's true to say there are lives on the line during police encounters, but he added: "It's not only police lives that matter. All lives matter."
     
     
    The new jury deliberated in private for over an over hour late Friday after hearing three days of testimony. It would resume its deliberations Monday after once again watching the video of Parker taking Patel to the ground.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed
    Police are working on locating two suspects in the killing of an Indian-origin store clerk in the US state of Connecticut.

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is preparing to ask that new sensors be installed in the Canadian Arctic that would be able to track different types of incoming missiles.

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds
    The body of an Indian student who died here last week after being pulled out from the sea, has got stuck in New Zealand with his family unable to raise the money needed to transport the body home.

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers
    TORONTO — When research teams planning clinical trials of Ebola vaccines were divvying up West Africa last fall, no one wanted Guinea.

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers

    'Women Love Me': 'Hot Yoga' Guru Bikram Choudhury Denies Allegations Of Sexual Assault

    'Women Love Me': 'Hot Yoga' Guru Bikram Choudhury Denies Allegations Of Sexual Assault
    Bikram Choudhury, the Indian-American founder of the signature "hot yoga" bearing his name with celebrity followers around the world, has denied accusations of rape or sexual assault by six of his former students.

    'Women Love Me': 'Hot Yoga' Guru Bikram Choudhury Denies Allegations Of Sexual Assault

    Top Physics Honour For Indian-Origin Student In Britain

    Top Physics Honour For Indian-Origin Student In Britain
    An Indian-origin teenaged student in Britain has won a top prize and 500 pounds for his research on Albert Einstein's special relativity theory.

    Top Physics Honour For Indian-Origin Student In Britain