Author Topic: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case  (Read 1838 times)

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History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« on: September 13, 2015, 12:48:45 PM »
New York -- In 2012, a Queens man said officer James Frascatore pulled him over for a broken tail light, opened his car door and punched him three times in the mouth, unprovoked.

The following year, another Queens resident recalled, Frascatore beat him in his driveway during an arrest after he started to go into his home to retrieve an identification card.

Those accounts, both made by black men, came to light after a rough arrest by the same officer on Wednesday in which he wrapped an arm around the neck of retired tennis star James Blake and threw him to the sidewalk after mistaking him for a suspect in a credit card fraud investigation.



The New York Police Department released surveillance video of the arrest on Friday, offering a minute-long glimpse of the manhandling of a biracial celebrity by a white plainclothes officer that compelled police officials to swiftly strip the officer of his gun and badge.

Blake was leaning against a mirrored beam outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan, his hands clasped and motionless, as he waited to be taken to a corporate appearance at the US Open. Frascatore (38) rushed into the video’s frame, twisting Blake’s left arm, grabbing the back of his neck and pulling him facedown on to the sidewalk.

He finished by digging his knee into Blake’s back and handcuffing him, never easing up even though the Harvard-educated athlete barely flinched as he let himself be tackled.

“As I told the commissioner, I am determined to use my voice to turn this unfortunate incident into a catalyst for change in the relationship between the police and the public they serve,” Blake said in a statement Friday, calling for the city to make “a significant financial commitment”.

Mayor Bill de Blasio and police commissioner William J Bratton, in a joint response, noted the city’s $29 million (€25.6m) investment in retraining police officers and pledged “to vigorously implement these reforms that build trust and respect between police officers and the people they serve”.
Pattern

Frascatore’s history of excessive force complaints, including at least three filed against him with the Civilian Complaint Review Board in 2013 and several lawsuits, revealed a pattern of residents claiming they were detained without explanation and manhandled despite complying.

It also led some lawyers and residents to criticize the police department for not punishing him before he was involved in another rough arrest.

“I don’t know what that dude’s problem is but I’m glad it finally came to somebody who someone would listen to,” said Warren Diggs, who sued Mr Frascatore, claiming that the officer had beaten him in his driveway in 2013.

“Finally somebody’s saying something, and somebody’s listening.”

Frascatore and two other police officers followed Diggs as he rode his bike home from a bodega at night, and then stopped him in his driveway and asked for identification, Diggs said on Friday.

When he began walking into his home to get it, an officer grabbed him from behind and immobilized his arms while Frascatore punched him in his right temple, Diggs said. He collapsed, injuring his shoulder on the pavement. Then, Diggs said, Frascatore threw himself down on his legs and continued to pummel him.

“Frascatore starts punching me again; I’m getting hit all on my side and my back,” said Diggs (39) a handyman. “I’m screaming for my wife to come outside then I just start screaming, ‘Help!’” Another officer sprayed Mace into his face. The officer who grabbed him, still holding him from behind, hooked a forearm around his neck and began to choke him, he said. “I’m saying: ‘I can’t breathe! I can’t breathe!’” Diggs recalled.

Diggs was charged with marijuana possession and resisting arrest, he said. His wife was charged with tampering with evidence when she took his bicycle inside the house. Their daughter, then 12, and son, then nine, wept hysterically, he said. The charges were eventually dismissed.

“The commissioner has taken it upon himself to apologize to James Blake, a wealthy star athlete, for the indignity he was made to endure,” Diggs’s lawyer, Amy Rameau, said. “I’ve never seen that happen.”

Efforts to reach Frascatore, who worked as police officer in Florida before joining the New York police force four years ago, were not successful. The Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association said his arrest of Blake “was made under fluid circumstances where the subject might have fled”.

Several people have complained that Frascatore pulled them over for broken tail lights they denied having, and then treated their questions as a pretext to hurt them.

Leroy Cline, a Queens resident, claimed that Frascatore punched him in the face after the officer ignored his questions and tried to pull him out of his car, according to a memorandum his lawyer sent to the Queens district attorney’s office. Cline was charged with assaulting a police officer. Frascatore later said Cline bit him.

The memo quotes from medical records, reviewed by an expert witness, showing the officer’s cut on his hand was consistent with him punching Cline in the mouth. In the course of arguing for the case against Cline to be dropped, the lawyer, Kenneth Finkelman, of the Legal Aid Society, said he uncovered complaints against Frascatore filed with the review board.

One of them, concerning the arrest of Diggs and his wife, was partially substantiated, but Finkelman said that the complaint was referred to internal affairs investigators and that there was no evidence the officer was punished. (The case against Cline was never brought to trial.)

“Rather than them actually vigorously keeping the public safe, they seem to be trying to shield the police officers,” Finkelman said.

The Irish Times

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #1 on: September 13, 2015, 12:56:57 PM »
I wonder if the dumbshit is even bothering to identify himself as a cop when he pulls a move like that.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #2 on: September 13, 2015, 04:40:00 PM »
"Look, cops don't really abuse people like that, and they're not racists"

- Police Fanboy, Getbig, 2015.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #3 on: September 13, 2015, 05:07:25 PM »
Lol, how this dude is still employed as an officer is beyond me.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #4 on: September 13, 2015, 05:49:44 PM »
Yunno, then some fuckwit has to say this:

Quote
The Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association said his arrest of Blake “was made under fluid circumstances where the subject might have fled".



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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #5 on: September 13, 2015, 11:15:44 PM »
This would probably not get any publicity (and/or consequences for the cop) if a famous person was not affected. Is this criminal going to get an actual punishment or just paid vacation?

"Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association" ::)

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #6 on: September 13, 2015, 11:19:02 PM »
This would probably not get any publicity (and/or consequences for the cop) if a famous person was not affected. Is this criminal going to get an actual punishment or just paid vacation?

"Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association" ::)

they probably issue 1000 of these statements every year.   msot of them are probably prick cops being rougher than needed.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #7 on: September 14, 2015, 07:42:31 AM »
This would probably not get any publicity (and/or consequences for the cop) if a famous person was not affected. Is this criminal going to get an actual punishment or just paid vacation?

"Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association" ::)

I agree.  This wouldn't have made it to our radar if it hadn't been for the victim's identity.  The "officer" would have continued on his rampage against others in the following days and weeks and months and years, and it would be business-as-usual.  How many people would this devil-driven FREAK go on to mow down if it hadn't been for this particular victim, that day?

But to think some fucking POS has to come along and say that, something that makes absolutely no sense, AS THOUGH THEY WILL FOOL ANYONE INTO THINKING THERE IS SOME JUSTIFICATION... it goes too far.  It serves to make people angrier about the police, and I cannot believe they don't understand that.  I really can't.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #8 on: September 14, 2015, 08:21:43 AM »
Two people previously had filed complaints for him punching him.

Do 100% of people assaulted press charges?  My belief is that many of the law-abiding people would file suit, but the wimpy among them may not.  And I bet the shady folks who took a punch would just do nothing. 

If a cop has 3 assault charges, I'd bet he's assaulted 30 people.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #9 on: September 14, 2015, 08:36:11 AM »
Two people previously had filed complaints for him punching him.

Do 100% of people assaulted press charges?  My belief is that many of the law-abiding people would file suit, but the wimpy among them may not.  And I bet the shady folks who took a punch would just do nothing.  

If a cop has 3 assault charges, I'd bet he's assaulted 30 people.

No, more often than not they aren't pursued.  The poorer the person, the less likely it will ever be brought to light.  Among many other reasons, the victims fear having violent police officers out to get them when they know they are trapped in their city/neighborhood.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #10 on: September 14, 2015, 08:49:24 AM »
No, more often than not they aren't pursued.  The poorer the person, the less likely it will ever be brought to light.  Among many other reasons, the victims fear having violent police officers out to get them when they know they are trapped in their city/neighborhood.

I think many people might fear police retaliation- perhaps they will suddenly start being pulled over or detained for bogus reasons or have their homes invaded due to a "tip from an informant" or simply some people might see this as to big an big investment in time and money to take it to court. Don't forget that we would also be talking about cops investigating themselves (maybe they don't want to be judged or investigated by mere scum citizens and some of them would quit if that happened).

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #11 on: September 14, 2015, 09:19:55 AM »
I think many people might fear police retaliation- perhaps they will suddenly start being pulled over or detained for bogus reasons or have their homes invaded due to a "tip from an informant" or simply some people might see this as to big an big investment in time and money to take it to court. Don't forget that we would also be talking about cops investigating themselves (maybe they don't want to be judged or investigated by mere scum citizens and some of them would quit if that happened).

Yes.  I'd say all that and more.  The poor person has close to no power, while the police are all about power.  The police have enough leverage with criminals to cause a victim to be beaten into a pulp, without a single cop needing to be present.  They can manufacture evidence and influence witness statements.  They can plant drugs and weapons.  They can shoot to kill and claim what they want.  

That's just a few of many realistic fears the person would have... and the topper is that the cops know everything about the person while the reverse is just that: the person has no way of knowing how extensive the corruption is.  They become effectively trapped by the circumstances and would prefer to end any fear as quickly and quietly as possible.  It is human nature.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #12 on: September 14, 2015, 10:04:13 AM »
New York -- In 2012, a Queens man said officer James Frascatore pulled him over for a broken tail light, opened his car door and punched him three times in the mouth, unprovoked.

The following year, another Queens resident recalled, Frascatore beat him in his driveway during an arrest after he started to go into his home to retrieve an identification card.

Those accounts, both made by black men, came to light after a rough arrest by the same officer on Wednesday in which he wrapped an arm around the neck of retired tennis star James Blake and threw him to the sidewalk after mistaking him for a suspect in a credit card fraud investigation.



The New York Police Department released surveillance video of the arrest on Friday, offering a minute-long glimpse of the manhandling of a biracial celebrity by a white plainclothes officer that compelled police officials to swiftly strip the officer of his gun and badge.

Blake was leaning against a mirrored beam outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan, his hands clasped and motionless, as he waited to be taken to a corporate appearance at the US Open. Frascatore (38) rushed into the video’s frame, twisting Blake’s left arm, grabbing the back of his neck and pulling him facedown on to the sidewalk.

He finished by digging his knee into Blake’s back and handcuffing him, never easing up even though the Harvard-educated athlete barely flinched as he let himself be tackled.

“As I told the commissioner, I am determined to use my voice to turn this unfortunate incident into a catalyst for change in the relationship between the police and the public they serve,” Blake said in a statement Friday, calling for the city to make “a significant financial commitment”.

Mayor Bill de Blasio and police commissioner William J Bratton, in a joint response, noted the city’s $29 million (€25.6m) investment in retraining police officers and pledged “to vigorously implement these reforms that build trust and respect between police officers and the people they serve”.
Pattern

Frascatore’s history of excessive force complaints, including at least three filed against him with the Civilian Complaint Review Board in 2013 and several lawsuits, revealed a pattern of residents claiming they were detained without explanation and manhandled despite complying.

It also led some lawyers and residents to criticize the police department for not punishing him before he was involved in another rough arrest.

“I don’t know what that dude’s problem is but I’m glad it finally came to somebody who someone would listen to,” said Warren Diggs, who sued Mr Frascatore, claiming that the officer had beaten him in his driveway in 2013.

“Finally somebody’s saying something, and somebody’s listening.”

Frascatore and two other police officers followed Diggs as he rode his bike home from a bodega at night, and then stopped him in his driveway and asked for identification, Diggs said on Friday.

When he began walking into his home to get it, an officer grabbed him from behind and immobilized his arms while Frascatore punched him in his right temple, Diggs said. He collapsed, injuring his shoulder on the pavement. Then, Diggs said, Frascatore threw himself down on his legs and continued to pummel him.

“Frascatore starts punching me again; I’m getting hit all on my side and my back,” said Diggs (39) a handyman. “I’m screaming for my wife to come outside then I just start screaming, ‘Help!’” Another officer sprayed Mace into his face. The officer who grabbed him, still holding him from behind, hooked a forearm around his neck and began to choke him, he said. “I’m saying: ‘I can’t breathe! I can’t breathe!’” Diggs recalled.

Diggs was charged with marijuana possession and resisting arrest, he said. His wife was charged with tampering with evidence when she took his bicycle inside the house. Their daughter, then 12, and son, then nine, wept hysterically, he said. The charges were eventually dismissed.

“The commissioner has taken it upon himself to apologize to James Blake, a wealthy star athlete, for the indignity he was made to endure,” Diggs’s lawyer, Amy Rameau, said. “I’ve never seen that happen.”

Efforts to reach Frascatore, who worked as police officer in Florida before joining the New York police force four years ago, were not successful. The Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association said his arrest of Blake “was made under fluid circumstances where the subject might have fled”.

Several people have complained that Frascatore pulled them over for broken tail lights they denied having, and then treated their questions as a pretext to hurt them.

Leroy Cline, a Queens resident, claimed that Frascatore punched him in the face after the officer ignored his questions and tried to pull him out of his car, according to a memorandum his lawyer sent to the Queens district attorney’s office. Cline was charged with assaulting a police officer. Frascatore later said Cline bit him.

The memo quotes from medical records, reviewed by an expert witness, showing the officer’s cut on his hand was consistent with him punching Cline in the mouth. In the course of arguing for the case against Cline to be dropped, the lawyer, Kenneth Finkelman, of the Legal Aid Society, said he uncovered complaints against Frascatore filed with the review board.

One of them, concerning the arrest of Diggs and his wife, was partially substantiated, but Finkelman said that the complaint was referred to internal affairs investigators and that there was no evidence the officer was punished. (The case against Cline was never brought to trial.)

“Rather than them actually vigorously keeping the public safe, they seem to be trying to shield the police officers,” Finkelman said.

The Irish Times

That cop needs to be fired. 

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #13 on: September 14, 2015, 10:11:40 AM »
That cop needs to be fired. 

X2... the PD should want to get rid of the guy asap and do everything possible to minimize future risk.

The PBA shouldn't have offered comment, either.  They shot their credibility right in the balls.

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Re: History of Complaints Against Officer in Blake Case
« Reply #14 on: September 14, 2015, 01:03:18 PM »
that kind of blow when you're not expecting it could lead to neck or back problems down the road too. 

It's like being in a car accident.  Whiplash can develop.  I hope the department pays him for the soreness he's no doubt feeling.

agree with LV on the PBA comment too - - I now question every time they have defended violence.  I bet the PBA defended the other 2 claims against the man (which were punches, much worse than this takedown).