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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2015 10:45:40 AM

Teen sues Los Angeles for $20 million after getting shot by cop

Yahoo News

CBS-Losangeles
$20 Million Lawsuit Filed By Family Of Teen Shot By LAPD Officers

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An African-American teenager who was shot and injured while one of his friends was holding a toy gun has filed a $20 million lawsuit against the City of Los Angeles.

Jamar Nicholson, 15, and his friends were standing in an alley near 10th Avenue in South Los Angeles before school Feb. 10 when he sustained a gunshot wound to the upper back.

“Jamar is really lucky to be alive. With respect to the other kids, they are lucky as well that they weren’t hit. It doesn’t appear that the officer who shot used a lot of discrimination with where he aimed the pistol,” Herbert Hayden, an attorney with Harris & Associates, said in an interview with Yahoo News.

Hayden, who is representing Nicholson, sees a connection between this shooting and the killing of Walter Scott in South Carolina. He laments that no one recorded the incident involving Officer Miguel Gutierrez, who shot and killed a dog in 2008 while responding to a possible traffic collision.

“The police department’s officers have each other’s backs. If there is no camera rolling, they are free to construe the facts how they see fit,” Hayden said. “It’s so bizarre in this incident that testimony of the people we interviewed is so drastically different from the story the LAPD has been pumping out since this first started.”

The LAPD says that about 7:45 a.m. on the day of the shooting, officers with the Criminal Gang and Homicide Division saw one of the teens holding what appeared to be a firearm at another individual in the alleyway.

“Officers ordered him to drop the weapon multiple times. The individual ignored the officer's commands,” a police news release reads.

The claim for damages filed with the city clerk says two plainclothes detectives appeared without warning and without identifying themselves before opening fire.

According to the claim, the detectives, after shooting at least three rounds of bullets, said, “Get on the ground, motherf---ers.”

Police say the “replica firearm” has been booked as evidence at the Scientific Investigation Division.

“The toy gun that the police officers say they think they saw was never brandished by any of the kids,” Hayden said.

One of Nicholson’s friends, 17-year-old Jason Huerta, has joined him in suing the city.

The LAPD did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Yahoo News. A police spokesman told the L.A. Times on Wednesday that Gutierrez has returned to full duty since the incident, though it remains under investigation.

Related video:


Unarmed Teen Shot by LAPD Speaks Out


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2015 11:06:07 AM

Huge French protests as strikes close schools, Eiffel Tower

Associated Press

Reuters Videos
Labor unrest causes disruption across France


PARIS (AP) — Thousands of protesters, many blowing whistles and waving union flags, marched through Paris and other French cities on Thursday in a day of nationwide strikes that kept many children out of school, forced the closure of the Eiffel Tower and cancelled some 2,000 flights in and out of France.

Stepping up pressure on President Francois Hollande's already-unpopular Socialist government, the protesters aired an array of grievances against state funding cuts, planned increases in the retirement age, and business-friendly reforms that could make firing workers easier.

The strikes, called by key unions like the Communist-backed CGT, in the protest-friendly country follow recent complaints by groups as diverse as doctors and notaries against new government reforms, and come on top of ongoing strikes by air traffic controllers and workers at the state radio.

The CGT union estimated late Thursday that 300,000 people turned out in marches nationwide, including 120,000 in the capital. Paris police put the figure in the city at 32,000.

Workers have traditionally made up the bedrock of support for Hollande's Socialists, and the protests suggested that his government's recent move to the political center — including with business-friendly reforms — has rankled many on the left.

Analyst Pascal Perrineau said the mishmash of movements suggested that Hollande, who has cast himself as primarily a negotiator since he was elected in 2012, has not been clear enough with the French about his plans for getting the economically struggling country back on track.

"This proves that, if you will, he (Hollande) has lost control. When you're the president, it's not enough to be a negotiator. You have to able to fix a clear line for everyone," said Perrineau, a professor at Paris' Sciences Po political university.

The air traffic controllers were holding the second half of a two-day strike. It led to the cancellation of some 2,000 flights, mostly short- and medium-haul routes, in and out of France Thursday, according to Eric Heraud, spokesman for the French civil aviation agency DGAC.

Their walkout, in part over plans to raise their maximum retirement age to 59, was expected to resume in each of the next two weeks. Many European carriers were avoiding French airspace.

Employees at Radio France, the state-backed broadcaster, were entering the third week of their walkout to protest budget cuts — and many of them were expected to be carrying banners at the Paris protest.

Railway workers, health care providers, teachers and energy sector personnel and others honored Thursday's general strike, partially to register discontent against the government's proposed so-called "Macron Law" that would reduce workplace protections coveted by many French employees.

"All the established social rights of our labor law are being questioned with this bill," said Nicolas Mas, a teacher marching in Paris. "We are back to the nineteenth century. It is incredible. A total loss of all the benefits of the working class obtained through years."

The CGT's website laid out 10 of its reasons for employees to stay off the job — such as to end wage stagnation for state workers, demand equal pay for women and men and defend the state-supported health care system.

A spokeswoman for the Eiffel Tower said it closed because many employees of the famed Paris landmark took part in the protest in solidarity with the overall movement. A sign out front said it was closed until 6:30 p.m. local time, frustrating some eager would-be visitors.

"The Eiffel Tower closed because of the strike in the peak season, it's kind of disappointing," said Diane Powell, a 49-year-old tourist from New York.

___

Oleg Cetinic and Nicolas Garriga contributed to this report.





"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2015 1:23:31 PM

Florida officer's shooting of mentally ill man investigated

Associated Press

CBS-Miami
Family Of Man Killed By Cop Releases Video Of Shooting

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MIAMI (AP) — Prosecutors are looking into the fatal shooting of a mentally ill man by a Florida police officer, but his family called this week for an independent investigation of the incident, releasing footage from a police dashboard camera to bolster their case.

In February, Miami Gardens officer Eddo Trimino went to the home of Lavall Hall,25, after his mother called 911 to report that her son was having a violent episode. Hall suffered from schizophrenia and had recently been released from a mental hospital, according to a federal wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family against the city.

Authorities say Hall repeatedly swung a metal broom and refused commands to stop, although the 19-minute dash camera video released Wednesday by family attorney Glen Goldberg does not show that. It does, however, include audio with Trimino yelling at Hall to get on the ground.

"Get on the ground or you're dead," Trimino, 34, yells just before firing five shots while appearing to back up. Hall is off camera at that point.

Earlier, another officer, Peter Ehrlich, is heard saying that Hall is carrying a broom.

"Every time I go near him he walks away," Ehrlich says.

State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle's office is investigating the case, but in Florida it is rare for a police officer to be charged with a crime in a fatal shooting.

Goldberg said the video, which was released to him by the city, raises questions, and on Wednesday he called for an outside agency to launch a separate investigation.

"The officers had made up their minds they were going to kill Hall," Goldberg said.

Trimino's attorney told the Miami Herald (http://hrld.us/1E7cYBo) the officer feared for his life as he retreated from Hall, who disobeyed commands.

Although Hall was black and Trimino is white, Hall's family and NAACP members stressed at a news conference Wednesday that the shooting is more about police dealing with the mentally ill than with any race issues. No racial epithets are heard on the video.

"After seeing the video, it's clear to me that the incident was avoidable," said Eric Pettus, NAACP executive board member in Miami. "This was a call that was a mental health issue."

According to the wrongful death lawsuit, Hall was struck by two of the five shots. Officers also used electric stun devices at least twice but they had no effect on Hall, the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages from the city, also says police had previous encounters with Hall at his mother's home and "knew or should have known that Hall suffered from a mental condition" when they responded that night.

_____

Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Miamicurt






Police dash camera video shows Florida cop Eddo Trimino yelling at Lavall Hall to get on the ground before firing.

Investigation underway



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2015 3:45:47 PM

Video shows California deputies beating man fleeing on horse

Associated Press

KABC – Los Angeles
'Disturbing' arrest after Apple Valley horse pursuit prompts investigation

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HESPERIA, Calif. (AP) — A news video shows California sheriff's deputies tracking down a man fleeing on horseback and then punching and kicking him dozens of times when he's on the ground.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's office ordered an investigation into the beating Thursday.

"The video surrounding this arrest is disturbing," San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner John McMahon said.

A sheriff's statement said Francis Pusok, 30, fled from deputies early in the afternoon as they tried to serve a search warrant in an identity-theft investigation. He eventually abandoned a car in the Hesperia area and stole a horse, but was tracked down by deputies.

KNBC-TV (http://bit.ly/1H8UC3D ) helicopter footage shows the man dressed in bright red clothing falling from the horse as a deputy runs up and uses a stun gun on him. The sheriff's department statement said the stun gun was ineffective.

The man falls face-down with his arms and legs outstretched and the video shows two deputies appearing to come up and kick him in the head and crotch. He puts his hands behind his back as they continue to pound him. Other deputies arrive moments later.

KNBC-TV said up to 13 deputies eventually surrounded the man, and some of them kicked, hit and punched him dozens of times over a two-minute period.

Pusok's attorney said to him the video showed "thugs beating up my client."

"These questions about what was he doing, what were they doing?" attorney Jim Terrell told KCAL-TV.

The beating of Pusok, who is white, came as recent violent episodes by law officers dealing with suspects have provoked outrage after being captured on video, including the shooting death of an unarmed black man as he ran from a police officer last weekend in North Charleston, South Carolina.

Pusok's girlfriend of 13 years Jolene Bindner said he has had several run-ins with the law but is a great father.

"I'm not going to stand here and say that he's perfect, because who is?" she told the TV station.

"I couldn't believe it," Bindner said after seeing the video. "The first thing I said was 'they cannot do that.'"

The American Civil Liberties Union released a statement saying it is "deeply troubled by the video images" and applauding McMahon's call for an investigation.

Pusok was taken to a local hospital with unknown injuries, according to the Sheriff's Department.

Two deputies suffered dehydration, a third was kicked by the horse and all were taken to a hospital for treatment, the statement said.








Several California deputies can be seen repeatedly kicking and punching a suspect who fled on horseback.

Investigation ordered


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/10/2015 5:45:45 PM

Most Americans side with gays in religious freedom disputes: Reuters/Ipsos poll

Reuters

A box of cupcakes are seen topped with icons of same-sex couples at City Hall in San Francisco, June 29, 2013. (REUTERS/Stephen Lam)


By Steve Holland

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A majority of Americans believe businesses should not be allowed to refuse services based on their religious beliefs in the wake of controversies in Indiana and Arkansas over gay rights and religious freedom, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found on Thursday.

The poll, conducted April 6 to 8, also found that 52 percent of Americans support allowing same-sex couples to marry, far more than the 32 percent who oppose it.

The survey results suggest a split over the issue between Americans and some of the politicians who represent them.

Indiana's Republican governor, Mike Pence, triggered a firestorm in his state this month by signing a law that would allow businesses to refuse services to certain groups or people based on their religious beliefs.

Gay rights activists saw the law as discriminatory and the resulting backlash forced Indiana's state legislature to make changes to the law.

Days later, Arkansas's Republican governor, Asa Hutchinson, forced his state legislature to change a similar law in order to avoid having it blow up into a controversy in his state.

The poll found solid opposition to allowing businesses to refuse services or refuse to hire people or groups based on religious beliefs.

Fifty-four percent said it was wrong for businesses to refuse services, while 28 percent said they should have that right. And 55 percent said businesses should not have the right to refuse to hire certain people or groups based on the employer's religious beliefs, while 27 percent said businesses should have the right.

The Reuters-Ipsos poll found divisions among Americans on where same-sex marriage laws should be made.

The largest grouping, 34 percent, believes same-sex marriage laws should be made by the U.S. Supreme Court declaring a nationwide constitutional right.

Another 22 percent said same-sex marriage laws should be made at the state level by voter referendum. Eleven percent said laws should be made by state legislators and 8 percent would leave it up to Congress. The poll found 24 percent did not know how best to handle it.

The poll said 55 percent want to see all states - even those that do not permit same-sex marriages - recognize such unions from states where same-sex marriage is legal.

For the survey, 892 people aged 18 years old and over were interviewed online. The Reuters/Ipsos online poll was measured using a credibility interval. It has a credibility interval of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.

To explore more of the poll: http://bit.ly/1aKHlSN

(Reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Caren Bohan and Lisa Shumaker)

Related video:



Ending gay conversion therapy


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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