NAACP Seeks Another Federal Investigation into Austin Police; ACLU files lawsuit against Puerto Rico police
From [HERE] Saying that Austin officers continue to use excessive force disproportionately against minority residents, two community groups have filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice, asking federal authorities to reopen their investigation into the Police Department. The Austin chapter of the NAACP and the Texas Civil Rights Project announced Wednesday that they will again ask federal officials to examine whether police are systematically violating residents' civil rights.
The groups say that since the Justice Department closed its investigation last year — an inquiry they called for in 2004 and received in 2007 — stops and searches of minority suspects have risen and two more fatal police shootings of minority suspects have occurred. In late May 2011, saying they could not find evidence that the Austin Police Department was violating the law or the U.S. Constitution, federal officials closed their four-year investigation into the department.
"We're human beings. Even if we're not respectful, we have rights under the law," said Austin NAACP President Nelson Linder. "Those rights should be protected in every situation. APD must understand that."
Wednesday, Linder joined the Texas Civil Rights Project in saying that police brutality and discrimination in Austin is still very real. "We see still excessive force. We see unexplained killings. We see that the preservation of life policy doesn't mean anything different than it did before," said project attorney Jim Harrington.[MORE]
ACLU Files Suit Against Puerto Rico Police
From [HERE] Puerto Rico’s police department was hit with a federal lawsuit on Wednesday as the American Civil Liberties Union accused officers of using excessive force and violating civil rights during demonstrations organized by university students and public employees. The lawsuit alleges that Superintendent Hector Pesquera has encouraged a pattern of violence against demonstrators. It seeks an injunction to force the department to create a policy on how to handle demonstrations and use of force, and to establish a system that makes it easier to file complaints and for authorities to document alleged excessive use of force.
The police department has pledged to make reforms and adopt measures recommended in a scathing report issued by federal prosecutors last year that accused police of corruption, illegal killings and civil rights violations. The new suit aims to make certain reforms mandatory.
“We are not willing to simply accept expressions of goodwill,” said Marjorie Lindblom, an attorney with New York-based law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP, which filed the suit with the ACLU.
Pesquera took over in April, long after the incidents that prompted the suit. Lindblom said he was named because he would be responsible for overseeing the changes the plaintiffs demand.
He said in a telephone interview that the department already has developed a use-of-force policy approved by federal justice officials. He said 15,000 of the department’s 17,000 officers, which is the second-largest U.S. police force, have already been trained under the new policy.
Pesquera, who previously served as director of the FBI office based in Puerto Rico, said he also has appointed a 33-member committee to analyze and implement the federal Justice Department’s recommendations.
“I’ve been here for two months and we have taken extremely aggressive steps to reform the police,” he said. “We have made a commitment ... We are not going to violate anyone’s civil rights.”
The lawsuit is on behalf of the Central Federation of Workers and the student council of the University of Puerto Rico’s Rio Piedras campus. It states that the alleged abuses began in 2009 during protests over government layoffs and university cutbacks.
“There was a purpose behind the police abuse, behind the beatings,” said Ramon Vargas, president of the university student council. “If you are going to protest, you are going to be beaten, you are going to be persecuted, you are going to be arrested.”