The Police Exposed, Yet Again
February 16, 2009
Police Officer David London has become the latest member of the NYPD whose life has been forever changed by the realities of our high-speed digital age, where security cameras are everywhere and practically everyone carries a cell phone and can share his pictures with the world via the Internet.
In the summer of 2008, a security camera in a West Side housing project caught London allegedly beating a handcuffed man whose only “crime” was trying to visit his mother. The security tape showed Walter Harvin on the ground as London repeatedly hit him with a police baton.
Worse, the camera allegedly caught London, a 16-year veteran, pausing to take a 90-second call on his cell phone before resuming his beating.
After the video surfaced, prosecutors dropped charges against Harvin, an Iraq war veteran, of assault and resisting arrest,. Last week, Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau indicted London for fraud and assault. If convicted, he faces seven years in prison.
Before we proclaim that transparency is breaking out everywhere, let us point out that cameras cannot compensate for the past 15 years of no official oversight for the NYPD, courtesy of former mayor Rudy Giuliani and his mirror image, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly. [There is also somebody known as Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has abdicated his responsibilities in this regard.]
Nonetheless, police cannot as easily spin their version of events when pictures tell another story.
Recall that, in March 2003, police claimed they had arrested anti-Iraq war demonstrators for being unruly and refusing to disperse. Video footage, however, showed that the protestors couldn’t disperse because police barricades had pinned them down just as police mounted units began to advance.
Video cameras also showed that many people arrested at the Republican National Convention in 2004 had not broken any law, leading the Manhattan District Attorney to drop virtually every case.
A year later, a teenager’s MP3 player caught a veteran detective in an apparent lie that all but ended his career and might even send him to prison. Under oath, Bronx detective Christopher Perino repeatedly denied he had interrogated Erik Crespo, a 17-year-old shooting suspect, at the 44th precinct and urged him to sign a confession before his relatives arrived. Perino never imagined the kid was secretly recording their talk, including Perino’s warning, “And our conversation right now does not exist, you following me?”
Two years later when the recording was revealed in court, Perino was charged with 12 counts of perjury. Although a surveillance camera had captured Crespo shooting his victim in the face, Perino’s lie allowed him to get seven years off his sentence.
Then, there was the video shot by someone in always-crowded Times Square last
July, which contradicted rookie cop Patrick Pogan’s sworn complaint that a bicyclist had deliberately driven into him and resisted arrest. Instead, the video, seen by a quarter of a million people after being posted on YouTube, showed Pogan charging the cyclist without warning and violently flinging him off his bike to the ground.
“It looks … totally over the top and inappropriate,” said Bloomberg. “In terms of the officer, it certainly looked like — inappropriate is a nice way to phrase it.”
The Manhattan District Attorney dropped the charges against the cyclist and indicted Pogan for assault and filing a false document. He, too, may lose his job.
The day after this footage aired on YouTube, another video surfaced. This one
showed an officer three weeks earlier striking a man on the Lower East Side ten times with the modern version of a police nightstick— a collapsible metal baton. It looked like the cop had used too heavy a hand in subduing someone he thought was committing the minor crime of carrying liquor into the park. The NYPD ended up investigating the officer for excessive force.
While the camera can help keep the police honest, it also can have unexpected — and tragic — consequences. It may well have contributed to the pressures on Emergency Service Unit lieutenant Michael Pigott, who committed suicide last fall. The lieutenant could not forgive himself for making a mistake, albeit a big one, which was captured on videotape and played over and over on television and the Internet.
On Sept. 24, 2008, Pigott ordered an officer to Taser Iman Morales, a naked, emotionally disturbed man, perched on a second-floor ledge of his Brooklyn building, and brandishing an eight-foot long fluorescent light bulb at a cop who was trying to rescue him. After Pigott ordered the officer to Taser Morales, he fell head first to the pavement and died, his awful end filmed by witnesses.