Black Women alleged excessive force in traffic stop
Three Sacramento County sheriff's officers were exonerated Monday in
federal court of allegations that they abused their authority during a
traffic stop that led to an altercation with three African American
women. "The officers feel real good about being vindicated, and they
feel real good about the department being vindicated," said Sacramento
County Sheriff Lou Blanas. Although in court the three women showed no
visible reaction to the jury's decision, afterward they said it was an
outrage. "Should we expect anything less from an all-white jury from
outside the county? I don't think so," said Andrea Torres, who filed
the suit with Precious Williams and Dianne Campbell. Jurors, who
were selected from 23 predominantly rural counties in northeast
California, couldn't be reached for comment afterward. In their
verdicts, which were returned Monday afternoon, jurors rejected claims
that Deputy Heather Sullivan, Sgt. Gregory Johnson and Deputy David
Leon used excessive force, were liable for malicious prosecution and
made false arrests. The county was sued in a separate allegation that
claimed the May 11, 2002, traffic stop was racially motivated, but that
claim was dropped before jurors began deliberations late Friday. Though
the allegation was dropped, Stewart Katz, who represented the women,
said race was the central theme in the case. [more]
Pictured above: Andrea Torres, center, aunt Dianne Campbell, left, and
cousin Precious Williams had alleged excessive force, false arrest and
malicious prosecution. They said they were outraged with the decision.