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NEWS > 29 December 2006 |
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Rio de Janeiro is a killing fi
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - To the residents of the Little Alligator slum in the heart of this city's violent northern neighborhoods, what happened to pizza delivery man Bruno Ribeiro de Macedo on a recent Friday afternoon could have befallen any of them.
After his 77-year-old father suffered a heart attack at home, the 19-year-old mounted his motorcycle in shorts and sandals and zoomed to the slum's entrance to find a taxi to take his father to a hospital.
Police officer Julio Cesar de Oliveira Lira, who was on patrol outside the slum, thought Ribeiro de Maced... Read more
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CNN - USA 29 December 2006
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Orleans Parish District Attorn
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New Orleans police indicted in
A deadly gunfight on a bridge in the anarchy-filled days following Hurricane Katrina became a symbol of the city's loss of control.
Now, more than a year later, seven police officers face charges in the shootings.
A grand jury indicted the officers on murder or attempted murder charges Thursday in the September 4, 2005, deaths of two men and wounding of four other people on the Danziger Bridge.
One of the victims was a mentally retarded man, Ronald Madison, who had been shot seven times -- five times in the back, according to the coroner.
"We cannot allow our police officers to shoot and kill our citizens without justification like rabid dogs," District Attorney Eddie Jordan said.
Police tell a different story, and defense attorneys say their clients are innocent. Police Superintendent Warren Riley called Jordan's comment was "highly prejudicial and highly undignified."
"They heard only one side of the story," attorney Franz Zibilich, who represents one of the officers, said of the grand jury.
According to police, the officers went to the bridge that day believing they were answering a call of two fellow officers down. One officer fired at Madison only after Madison turned toward them and reached into his waistband, they say.
As with many events in the days after Katrina struck, reports of what happened at the Danziger Bridge vary widely. At the time, the sweltering city was still littered with corpses as rescuers tried to evacuate stranded residents and looters ransacked stores. The storm had hit just six days earlier.
Police initially said the shootings occurred after shots were fired at Army Corps of Engineers workers.
According to a police report, several officers responded to a radio call that two fellow officers had been hurt. When they arrived, they saw seven people running, and four people began firing at police, the report said. The officers returned fire, killing Madison, 40, and James Brissette, 19.
Madison's brother, Lance, has said they were crossing the bridge on their way to another brother's dental office when a group of teens ran up behind them and began shooting. As the brothers fled, Lance Madison said, seven men jumped out of a rental truck and also began firing at them. He denies his brother was armed. (Full story)
Police Sgts. Kenneth Bowen and Robert Gisevius and officers Robert Faulcon and Anthony Villavaso were charged with first-degree murder. Officers Robert Barrios, Mike Hunter and Ignatius Hills were charged with attempted murder.
State District Judge Raymond Bigelow gave the indicted officers 24 hours to surrender. He said there would be no bond for the four accused of first-degree murder, which carries a possible death sentence. For the other officers, the bond will be $100,000 per count, Bigelow said.
Attorney Eric Hessler, who represents Gisevius, said Friday morning that he was trying to get that period extended because some of the officers weren't in town. He wouldn't say which officers were away or how many of them.
A spokesman for Mayor Ray Nagin declined comment.
The indictments further scars the reputation of the city's police department. More than 200 officers on the 1,500-member force were disciplined after the hurricane for various offenses, including failure to show up for work, and some were accused of joining in the looting.
List of charges
The officers and the charges they face:
Sgt. Kenneth Bowen: one count of first-degree murder of Brissette and seven counts of attempted first-degree murder of Leonard Bartholomew, Susan Bartholomew, Lesha Bartholomew, Jose Holmes Jr., Lance Madison and Ronald Madison.
Sgt. Robert Gisevius: one count of first-degree murder of Brissette and two counts of attempted first-degree murder of the Madisons.
Officer Anthony Villavaso: one count of first-degree murder of Brissette and four counts of attempted first-degree murder of the Bartholomews and Holmes.
Officer Robert Faulcon: two counts of first-degree murder of Brissette and Ronald Madison and attempted first-degree murder of the Bartholomews and Holmes.
Officer Robert Barrios: four counts of attempted first-degree murder of the Bartholomews and Holmes.
Officer Michael Hunter: two counts of attempted first-degree murder of the Madisons.
Officer Ignatius Hills: one count of attempted second-degree murder of Leonard Bartholomew IV.
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