Crime

Focus on RCC Police Brutality, News, Youth

Viral justice? The media might have moved on, but RCC students won't let a case of potential police brutality on campus fade without a fight

Viral justice?The media might have moved on, but RCC students won’t let a case of potential police brutality on campus fade without a fight AFTER-SCHOOL PROJECT: When video of Boston Police using force to restrain a 16-year-old boy at Roxbury Community College was posted online, RCC students protested near campus and pressed the BPD for answers. The matter is now under investigation by the Suffolk County DA’s office.By CHRIS FARAONE  |  November 23, 2010 The seven-minute YouTube clip begins with five Boston police officers, crowding a Roxbury Community College entranceway, restraining a face-down suspect. Before it’s clear what’s happening, a plainclothes cop in jeans and work boots pins the boy’s left calf, throws four hammer punches to the back, then switches to southpaw and delivers three uppercuts. Moving a uniformed colleague out of the way, the same officer then assumes a runner’s stance, secures his grip, and follows up with three knees to the chest. The suspect is instructed to put his hands behind his back, and responds in evident agony: “My hands are behind my back . . . Who the fuck keeps stepping on me?” That’s just from one angle. A shorter video shot by another witness begins moments earlier, and shows the plainclothes officer connecting with seven blows to the torso, while another cop is swinging on the suspect’s rib cage. Through the ordeal, it’s hard to see the victim’s face, though blood leaks from underneath his green hood and smears the metal grate scraping his nose, as well as the left pant leg of an officer who’s straddling his neck. The video went viral four days after the October 22 incident. Community outrage was fueled by the revelation that the suspect — a fugitive fleeing from Department of Youth Services custody — was only 16 years old, and by a police report that did not appear to match the video. In the days after, RCC students protested near campus, and marched down Columbus Avenue to picket Boston Police Department headquarters. Faith leaders and local activists joined the cause, as did a handful of Boston elected officials. City Councilor Ayanna Pressley tweeted that she was “deeply troubled,” while her colleague, Council President Mike Ross, gave his own condemnation of what he called “an unmeasured use of force.” Ross’s comments drew the ire of an attorney for the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association, who suggested that Ross “spend the day at the police academy, learning how police officers are trained.” Mayor Tom Menino had a more cautious response. “We don’t tolerate this in Boston,” he told reporters. “If we have to bring action, we will bring action, but what you see [in the videos] might not be the whole story.” Under increasing public pressure, BPD Commissioner Ed Davis turned the investigation over to the office of Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley. The DA’s office described the request as unusual in the case of a non-fatal arrest. Other than the police report, which is at odds with what the videos show by claiming the victim violently resisted arrest, there have been few explanations provided by the city — let alone apologies offered. The events of October 22 inflicted lasting wounds, as the images of that juvenile being held down and assaulted remain stuck in the minds of those who witnessed the struggle first-hand, and also on the conscience of many more RCC students who have since taken up the fight against police brutality. Their message: this is not going to blow over. “For this to take place on campus, it means that it can happen to everyone here,” says Tajudeen Akinbode, a second-semester biological-science major and outspoken student rep. “This would not have happened at Boston University. Some people around here don’t want to talk about it, but I’m not keeping quiet. Considering that some students feel insecure and unsafe, this is what we’re supposed to talk about. We have to.” ‘We’re being ignored’At first, the RCC community was divided on how far to pursue the issue — given that the victim was not one of its own. But it now seems determined, as a whole, to get some answers. School president Dr. Terrence Gomes upset some students and faculty with an October 28 e-mail labeling the incident a “police matter,” since the arrested party is not enrolled at RCC. But Gomes has come to sympathize with the RCC’ community’s outrage over cops engaging in what the videos present as violent actions. He says he’d been unaware of the arrest before it hit the Web, and regrets his initial reaction to dismiss the school’s role in healing the resulting wounds. This week, Gomes told the Phoenix he shares the prevailing worry about students’ sense of safety, and is working to support those who are questioning the incident that split their school and shocked the city. “The students are well within their right to protest however they feel they need to,” says Gomes. “Upon watching the video, I observed what in my opinion was excessive force . . . Despite what may go on nearby, this has always been a safe haven, and I don’t want students to ever feel like they have to worry about those kinds of things happening here.” Like her school president, protest organizer India Cox didn’t know about the arrest until she heard about it on the morning news. She’s in her second year at RCC, and a criminal-justice major, yet no one in her circle knew about the melee prior to it making headlines. So when she learned that a teenager had endured such treatment — in plain sight, no less — Cox jumped into action, helping organize two demonstrations in as many days. She had no trouble finding support; others — including Eusida Blidgen, who posted the bombshell videos on YouTube — were also rounding up troops. “We felt then and still feel like we’re being ignored,” says Cox. “The officers have not been fired, so it’s our belief that there’s not

News

Man charged in 4 Mattapan killings held without bail

Man charged in 4 Mattapan killings held without bailBy Laurel J. Sweet and Laura Crimaldi  |   Tuesday, November 23, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Dwayne Moore, center, stands behind a courtroom door to a hallway during his arraignment today on murder and other charges in the Sept. 28 killings of four people in Mattapan.Photo by Mark Garfinkel The Mattapan man accused of gunning down four people Sept. 28, including a toddler, in a bloody massacre marched the victims onto Woolson Street where they met their deaths after a drug-fueled robbery at one of the victim’s homes, prosecutors said today. Dwayne Moore, 33, who has a lengthy arrest record, did not show his face during his arraignment at Dorchester District Court, where grieving family members gathered wearing T-shirts and pins honoring their loved ones. Court records show he was linked to the massacre by an unnamed witness who testified before a Suffolk grand jury. After being arrested at his home yesterday, Moore told investigators he does not want to go back to prison. “I can’t do this. I can’t go back to jail. You’re going to have to kill me,” Moore told officers during an interview at Boston police headquarters, court records show. Moore faces four counts of murder and one count of armed assault with intent to murder for allegedly shooting Eyanna Louise Flonory, 21, her 2-year-old son Amanihoteph Smith, Flonory’s boyfriend Simba Martin, 21, and Levaughn Washum-Garrison, 22. A fifth victim, Marcus Hurd, 32, remains hospitalized in “very critical condition,” said Suffolk Assistant District Attorney Edmond Zabin. Defense attorney John Amabile entered not guilty pleas on Moore’s behalf. A second man, Kimani Washington, 34, was arrested last month after he admitted to police that two firearms seized from his mother’s apartment a day after the killings belonged to him, police said. Zabin said Moore moved into Martin’s apartment at 23 Sutton St. after he was released from prison over the summer after serving time for the stabbing death of a Milton teen in 1995. Moore and Washington went to Martin’s home on Sept. 28 and attempted to lure him out of the house “for the purpose of the robbing him,” Zabin said. Shortly thereafter, Hurd also pulled up to the home. Before losing consciousness, Hurd told rescuers in an ambulance that he went to Martin’s home to buy drugs, Zabin said. Moore “knew the apartment intimately and that drugs and cash could be found there,” Zabin said. When Martin met Hurd outside, Zabin said, they were set upon by the assailants at gunpoint. Hurd and Martin were forced back into the home, where they were forced to strip, Zabin said. Moore then went through the house rounding up cash, drugs and a TV set, Zabin said. Garrison, Flonory, her son, Martin and Hurd were then marched onto Woolson Street, where they were shot, Zabin said. Moore’s cell phone records show he called Martin just before the shooting, Zabin said. After the shooting, Moore called Washington “to divide the proceeds from the robbery,” Zabin added. Amabile said he didn’t know anything about the case. “My client didn’t have any involvement,” he said. “I certainly object to things like my client’s record being put out there for no apparent reason.” A probable cause hearing has been scheduled for Dec. 22. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298378

News, Youth

Cops investigating whether mutilated teen fell from plane

Cops investigating whether mutilated teen fell from planeBy Joe Dwinell  |   Tuesday, November 23, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Officials are investigating whether or not N.C. Delvonte Tisdale fell from a plane. The discovery of Tisdale’s body was investigated by Milton Police last week. A note found in his pocket led to his identification.Photo by Herald file Investigators trying to solve the mystery of how the mutilated body of a 16-year-old from North Carolina ended up dropped on a posh Milton lawn are asking Logan International Airport officials to probe if the boy was a stowaway on a jet. “We’ve been requested to look into the possibility of that,” Logan spokesman Phil Orlandella told the Herald this morning. “There’s a remote possibility — a remote possibility,” Orlandella said of the theory the teen could have been hiding on a plane coming into Logan from North Carolina. It is probable the teen could have crept into a wheel well. Orlandella said jets approaching Boston from the south drop their landing gear right above Milton at about “1,500 to 1,700 feet” near the Blue Hills. “As they approach runway 4 Right, usually wheels go down at about that height,” Orlandella said this afternoon. When asked if a plane was due into the airport around the time of the teen’s death Nov. 15, Orlandella said there are numerous planes coming into Logan from North Carolina at all times of the day and night. A spokesman for the FAA also said jets from the south do pass right over Milton, but at a slightly higher altitude of 2,900 feet. Orlandella added “law enforcement agencies” have turned to Logan officials and investigators to help in the puzzling case. “We’ve been asking questions,” he said this morning. The mutilated body of Delvonte Tisdale was discovered on a Milton lawn last Monday night at 9:30 off Brierbrook Street and his identity was confirmed this weekend by detectives using a fingerprint match on “a known personal item.” Investigators had traveled to Tisdale’s home in Charlotte to hunt for any DNA clues or fingerprints to help identify the boy. An autopsy did not show any clear signs of a cause of death beyond the obvious trauma, police said. Toxicology results are still pending. Norfolk District Attorney William Keating’s office sent out a statement today saying they won’t divulge steps being taken in the probe. “The Norfolk District Attorney’s Office is investigating every possibility regarding how Delvonte Tisdale came to be found dead on Brierbrook Street in Milton, Mass., on Monday, Nov. 15, but the office continues to decline to detail specific investigatory measures being taken,” the statement reads. “The investigation remains active and ongoing on multiple fronts.” Police told the Herald on Friday Tisdale had severe head trauma — with some of his remains found in two places on the street — and his arms and legs were broken. Tisdale, a North Mecklenburg High School student was last seen in Charlotte on Sunday. A missing person report was filed Monday, the day the unidentified body was found in Milton. There was no identification on Tisdale when he was discovered on the lawn wearing a pair of jeans over gray boxer shorts, but no shirt. He did have a note in his pocket — believed to be a hall pass — that included his last name. That note proved to be a big break in the case. The teen’s heartbroken dad said this afternoon he has no idea about any theory his son was a stowaway or why his boy would even leave Charlotte. “I still can’t believe our son isn’t with us,” said Anthony Tisdale, 38. “My son was a hard working young man. He didn’t frequent the streets … he loved ROTC … and video games.” “This is the most baffling thing we can understand,” a family friend said in the televised press conference. The family added Delvonte did not have a fascination with planes. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298347

News

Cops: Gang war sparked JP shootout 3 dead shatters calm at pizzeria

Cops: Gang war sparked JP shootout3 dead shatters calm at pizzeriaBy Richard Weir  |   Tuesday, November 23, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Angela RowlingsAn apparent grudge match between warring gang members left three men dead, police and friends said yesterday as a usually tranquil Jamaica Plain neighborhood reeled in the wake of the pizza-parlor blood bath. “We have not seen this kind of violence around here for a long time. I have not seen it ever in the center part of JP,” said state Rep. Liz Malia, a 40-year Jamaica Plain resident, as she sat at a table yesterday inside the popular Same Old Place pizza shop — scene of Sunday’s deadly rampage. The outbreak of violence in the family-friendly Centre Street area spurred vows of a quick response by law enforcement. “That type of incident is unusual in a typically quiet neighborhood. However, incidents like that are not acceptable on any street in the city,” said BPD spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll, adding that any “individuals who associate with these three should anticipate a significant amount of aggressive enforcement coming their way.” Gangs have long warred in the Jackson and Egleston Square areas of Jamaica Plain, but the neighborhood’s gentrified downtown has been immune from shootouts. That changed around 7:30 p.m. Sunday, when members of rivaling blocks stumbled across each other at the scruffy, 37-year-old pizzeria, police said. One slug left a spider’s web of cracks in a mirrored wall, another bullet pierced a wall separating the dining area from the kitchen and a third shattered the restaurant’s window. That bullet — or shrapnel — grazed the wife of Boston labor lawyer Alan Shapiro, who happened to be walking nearby with two other women. She’s fine,” said Shapiro, adding his wife — whose name is being withheld by the Herald at the request of her family — was grazed but treated and released from Faulkner Hospital. Pizza shop owner Fred Ciampa, who was not working, said his staff told him they did not know the three men involved in the fight before. “Nothing like this has ever happened before,” he said. “We’re like an institution here. Everybody knows us.” Boston police released few details yesterday on what triggered the outburst, other than that all three male victims had arrest records and were involved in gangs. “The altercation began inside and made its way outside,” Driscoll said. “One individual pulled out a knife. The other individual pulled out a gun and was able to shoot the two other individuals.” The 20-year-old who wielded the knife, identified by his friends and a police source as Johnnel “Bo” Cruz Nova of Jamaica Plain, managed to fatally stab his 20-year-old foe before that man fatally shot him and mortally wounded his 28-year-old friend. Eric Vila, 21, a tattoo artist, said he bumped into Cruz Nova as the two friends ordered pizza at Same Old Place moments before the shootings. They talked about expanding the tattoo of a .38 snub-nosed revolver on his friend’s right arm. “He told me, ‘I’m trying to do my whole arm. I want to put ‘Money, respect, power, with a whole bunch of gunsmoke. Can you do that?’ I told him no problem. See me tomorrow. … I said, ‘You be careful,’ ” recalled Vila, who left the pizzeria to go to a 7-Eleven, only to get a phone call minutes later that his pal had been shot. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298288

News

Cops nab main suspect in Mattapan massacre

Cops nab main suspect in Mattapan massacreBy O’Ryan Johnson  |   Tuesday, November 23, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Framed portrait of Eyanna and her son Amani at the funeral services for Eyanna Flonory and her son Amannetep ‘Amani’ Smith at the Morning Star Baptist Church. Photo by Ted Fitzgerald (file) A man was arrested on murder charges last night for the Mattapan massacre in which four people, including a toddler, were gunned down in what police say was a drug deal gone bad. Dwayne Moore, 33, of Mattapan was charged with four counts of murder and one count of assault with intent to murder. He is expected to be arraigned in Dorchester District Court today. Moore is the only suspect charged with the killings in the Sept. 28 bloodbath on Woolson Street. Another man previously was charged with firearms violations. In 1996. Moore, then 19, was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 15 to 18 years in the 1995 stabbing death of a Milton teen, Keema Braxton, 17, at a party in Mattapan, according to a law enforcement source and news reports. It was unclear last night when and under what circumstances he was released from prison. The early morning massacre happened on a street plagued by gunfire. The mass killing signaled a spike in deadly violence throughout the city this year, capped by a triple-homicide Sunday in Jamaica Plain. There have been 69 homicides in the city so far this year, compared with 45 at the same time last year. The Mattapan homicides stunned the community with the heartless slaying of 2-year-old Amanihoteph Smith, who was shot through the heart in the arms of his mother, Eyanna Louise Flonory. Also killed were Flonory’s boyfriend, Simba Martin, 21, and Levaughn Washum-Garrison, 22, formerly of Roslindale. A fifth victim, Marcus Hurd, remains on life support. The other suspect who was arrested days after the killings, Kimani Washington, 34, admitted to police that two firearms seized from his mother’s apartment a day after the killings belonged to him, police said. He remains jailed on firearms violations. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298259

News

Third person dies in aftermath of Jamaica Plain restaurant shooting

Third person dies in aftermath of Jamaica Plain restaurant shootingBy O’Ryan Johnson and Laura Crimaldi  |   Monday, November 22, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Angela Rowlings Another victim caught in the crossfire of a shooting last night on Jamaica Plain’s bustling Centre Street has died, bringing the death toll to three and prompting police to vow a crackdown on gang members. Police say all three victims are believed to be gang affiliated. Police spokeswoman Elain Driscoll told the Herald this afternoon the department now has a “laser focus” on gang members tied to the brazen gunfight. “As a result of this incident, the individuals who associate with these three (victims) should anticipate a significant amount of aggressive enforcement coming their way,” Driscoll said. One of the victims, described as a 21-year-old Hispanic man, was taken into police custody before he died, said Driscoll. He suffered from “possible stab wounds” and was pronounced dead at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, police said. A second victim, also described as a 21-year-old Hispanic man, suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, police said. A third victim, a 28-year-old man Hispanic man, died today. He was previously listed in stable condition earlier today at Boston Medical Center. Officer Eddy Chrispin told the Associated Press the fight began Sunday night at Same Old Place. He says the fight continued out on the street in front of the eatery and shots were fired. A fourth victim, who is female, was treated and released from Faulkner Hospital, police said. The shooting started at 7:24 p.m. when a fight broke out and three men were shot inside the restaurant. A woman passing by outside was grazed in the leg, police said. One of the men shot was apprehended outside the restaurant holding a gun, Police Commissioner Edward Davis said. “The initial report is all part of a fight and it’s all self-contained,” Davis said. “They are all here.” An eyewitness, John, 45, who declined to give his last name but was interviewed by police at the scene, said he had just left J.P. Licks and had crossed the street when he heard about seven shots and saw a man fall on the pavement. “It was really scary. It was like the Wild West. It was just like the Wild West,” John said. Police cordoned off a large section of the neighborhood last night while homicide detectives rounded up a number of witnesses who were placed inside of an MBTA bus to await further questioning. Patrols have been increased in the neighborhood. Richard Weir contributed. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1297970

News

Two dead, two injured in Jamaica Plain restaurant shooting

Two dead, two injured in Jamaica Plain restaurant shootingBy O’Ryan Johnson and Laura Crimaldi  |   Monday, November 22, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Chitose Suzuki Two people were killed and two were injured after a shooting on Jamaica Plain’s bustling Centre Street last night, police said, in a scene one witness likened to the “Wild West.” One of the victims, described as a 21-year-old Hispanic man, was taken into police custody before he died, said Boston police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll. He suffered from “possible stab wounds” and was pronounced dead at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, police said. A second victim, also described as a 21-year-old Hispanic man, suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, police said. Officer Eddy Chrispin told the Associated Press the fight began Sunday night at Same Old Place. He says the fight continued out on the street in front of the eatery and shots were fired. A third victim, who was described as a 28-year-old Hispanic man, is in stable condition at Boston Medical Center. A fourth victim, who is female, was treated and released from Faulkner Hospital, police said. The shooting started at 7:24 p.m. when a fight broke out and three men were shot inside the restaurant. A woman passing by outside was grazed in the leg, police said. One of the men shot was apprehended outside the restaurant holding a gun, Police Commissioner Edward Davis said. “The initial report is all part of a fight and it’s all self-contained,” Davis said. “They are all here.” An eyewitness, John, 45, who declined to give his last name but was interviewed by police at the scene, said he had just left J.P. Licks and had crossed the street when he heard about seven shots and saw a man fall on the pavement. “It was really scary. It was like the Wild West. It was just like the Wild West,” John said. Police cordoned off a large section of the neighborhood last night while homicide detectives rounded up a number of witnesses who were placed inside of an MBTA bus to await further questioning. Patrols have been increased in the neighborhood. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1297970

News

DA identifies dead 16-year-old found in Milton

DA identifies dead 16-year-old found in MiltonBy Joe Dwinell  |   Sunday, November 21, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage A Milton Police cruiser sits at the scene where a mutilated body was found Monday night in the middle of the street in front of 57 Brierbrook Street.Photo by Matt Stone The identity of the young man found horribly mutilated on a Milton street almost a week ago has been confirmed by a fingerprint as 16-year-old Delvonte Tisdale of Charlotte, N.C., the Norfolk DA announced tonight. The teen’s body was found with severe head trauma and his legs and arms were broken, police told the Herald last week. His remains were found on Brierbrook Street near the Blue Hills reservation. Here’s the release just into the City Desk: “Using a fingerprint analysis by State Police Crime Scene Services Section, authorities have been able to identify the young man found dead on Monday night in Milton as Delvonte Tisdale, born November 8, 1994, of Charlotte, North Carolina, Norfolk District Attorney William R. Keating announced tonight. Massachusetts State Police detectives attached to Norfolk District Attorney William R. Keating’s Office and Milton Police traveled to North Carolina this week to continue the investigation into the identity of the man and the circumstances of his death. Massachusetts detectives and detectives from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg County Police Department collected a finger print from a known personal item of Delvonte Tisdale while in North Carolina. That finger print is a match to the finger print taken from the remains of the man in Massachusetts. The investigation into this death remains active and ongoing.” The Charlotte Observer reports that Tisdale may have been traveling to Baltimore with friends who were headed to Boston. A white Audi A4, called “a car of interest,” was spotted in Dorchester and the owners have been interviewed by cops. One is believed to be a Curry College student, police have said. WBTV in Charlotte reports Tisdale was an ROTC student at North Mecklenburg High School and was last seen on Nov. 14. Neighbor Carol Brinson told the TV station Delvonte would volunteer to help her take her garbage out. “He would always stop by and talk, he wouldn’t just wave,” Brinson told WBTV. “But he was soft-spoken and sweet and well-mannered; always out in the yard, helping his dad.” “What kind of person would do this to such a wonderful kid?” she told the station. A hall pass was found on Tisdale’s body that included a name beginning with the letter “D,” followed by “Tisdale,” a signature beginning with the letter “K” and a date: “10/19/2010.” It proved to be the key break in this grisly missing person mystery. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1297964

News

4 hospitalized in JP restaurant shooting

4 hospitalized in JP restaurant shooting By O’Ryan Johnson  |   Sunday, November 21, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Four people were shot on Jamaica Plain’s bustling Centre Street tonight and police said at least two of the victims suffered life-threatening injuries. The shooting started at 7:24 p.m. inside a restaurant called Same Old Place, police said. A fight broke out and three men were shot inside the restaurant. A woman passing by outside was grazed in the leg, police said. One of the men shot was apprehended outside the restaurant holding a gun, Police Commissioner Edward Davis said. “The initial report is all part of a fight and it’s all self-contained,” Davis said. “They are all here.” An eyewitness, John, 45, who declined to give his last name but was interviewed by police at the scene, said he had just left J.P. Licks and had crossed the street when he heard about seven shots and saw a man fall on the pavement. “It was really scary. It was like the Wild West. It was just like the Wild West,” John said. Police cordoned off a large section of the neighborhood while homicide detectives rounded up a number of witnesses who were placed inside of an MBTA bus to await further questioning. All four victims were taken to local hospitals, cops said. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1297988

Education, News, Youth

Bullet strikes Mattapan school window

Bullet strikes Mattapan school windowNovember 18, 2010 Boston police said a bullet apparently struck the window of a classroom at the Young Achievers Science and Math K-8 School in Mattapan. Police were called to the school at about 11 a.m., after a teacher walked into the classroom and saw a shattered window. “Thankfully, there are no reported injuries,’’ said Elaine Driscoll, spokeswoman for Boston police. Police responded to a call for shots fired several days ago, far from the school, Driscoll said.

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