Black Man Dies After being Handcuffed In Custody Of Special Police

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Man Dies After He Was Handcuffed In Custody Of Special Police

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WASHINGTON -- A 27-year-old man died after he was found handcuffed in the custody of private police officers in Washington, according to the Metropolitan Police Department, which said Tuesday it was investigating.

D.C. police said officers responded to a report of an "assault in progress" on Sunday at a residential building in Southeast Washington. They found the man, identified as Alonzo Smith, in the custody of what city police said were "special police officers working at the location."

Special police officers are licensed by the District of Columbia, and city police must sign off on their application for the job.

Smith was found handcuffed, unconscious and not breathing, police said. He was transported to a hospital, where he later died.

Smith self-published a book of poems in 2013 that he said he wrote between the ages of 14 and 22, starting when he was put in the juvenile justice system. In his author bio, he said he was working in a private school assisting with special needs youth and finishing his social work degree.

"To dream freely with a life at my own pace, carelessly happy released of my hate, who can say they don't wish on this star, a star so bright and promising yet so far," he wrote in one poem, titled "The Road."

Several of Smith’s colleagues at an alternative school in Virginia took to Facebook to mourn his death. One wrote that Smith was “one hell of a great worker” who “kept the kids smiling, and did his job right." Another friend from college wrote that “very few people” knew Smith’s past, but everyone believed he was “destined for greatness.”

On his Facebook page, Smith was enthusiastic about his work. Pictures show him dressing up for sports day and spirit week. "I'm all in for these kids," he wrote on Oct. 27. An earlier post reads, "I will be at work with my smile and anxious to hear 'Mr. Smith' from the students. Bless my soul."
 
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Why do they always tell us backstory on the victim

and never about the savage pigs that had him in custody,

what is their background and police history?????

fuckin media loves mind fuckery!!!

They dug up no dirt on drugs or beating someone senseless, but watch and wait....they'll say he smoked weed in 7th grade.
 
Why do they always tell us backstory on the victim

and never about the savage pigs that had him in custody,

what is their background and police history?????

fuckin media loves mind fuckery!!!
You are right. That is definitely the pattern. As of this story, so far... I don't think it applies, as the backstory is positive stuff. It's definitely a good idea to humanize innocent victims.
 
What in the fuck is a "special police"?! :confused:


Why do they always tell us backstory on the victim

and never about the savage pigs that had him in custody,

what is their background and police history?????

fuckin media loves mind fuckery!!!

:yes::smh:
 
Special police officers are licensed by the District of Columbia, and city police must sign off on their application for the job.

http://mpdc.dc.gov/page/security-officers-management-branch-somb

Thanks for the link! What's the training like I wonder? Cops are already so undertrained and the bar seems so fucking low. Presumably this sets the bar even lower? Good times.

They had special police in Germany in the 40s...they were the SS.

spooky parallel. :smh:
 
http://www.eliteipatraining.com/DC SPO/DC_SPECIAL_POLICE.html

How to become DC Special Police Officer (DC SPO)?

dc spo badge small
STEP 1:
Complete mandatory 40 Hours of DC SPO training and obtain completion certificate. (course details)
STEP 2:
Get SOMB specified and approved Drug test.
Fee: $30.00 - cash or money order.
Details of Step 2 will be given during training.
STEP 3:
Get SOMB specified and approved Physical Examination.
Fee: $35.00 - cash or money order.
Details of Step 2 will be given during training.
STEP 4:
Upon completion of Steps 1, 2, and 3 (above); take following to the employer PRIOR TO REPORTING TO SOMB.

The 40 Hours course consists of:
Law & Regulations
General Duties & Responsibilities
Patrols, Access Control, Communication & Documentation
Emergency Procedures
Confrontation Management
Firearms maintenance, Safety, & Handling
Firearms Safety Rules/Common Sense
Basic Marksmanship
Use of Force
Fundamentals of Shooting
Course of Fire
Dry Fire Practice
Live Range Qualification

FEES - $250.00
 
So with 40 hours of training and $500 bucks you can go play cop in DC?

fuck everything right about now....

Sent from my SM-G920P using Tapatalk
 
http://www.eliteipatraining.com/DC SPO/DC_SPECIAL_POLICE.html

How to become DC Special Police Officer (DC SPO)?

dc spo badge small
STEP 1:
Complete mandatory 40 Hours of DC SPO training and obtain completion certificate. (course details)
STEP 2:
Get SOMB specified and approved Drug test.
Fee: $30.00 - cash or money order.
Details of Step 2 will be given during training.
STEP 3:
Get SOMB specified and approved Physical Examination.
Fee: $35.00 - cash or money order.
Details of Step 2 will be given during training.
STEP 4:
Upon completion of Steps 1, 2, and 3 (above); take following to the employer PRIOR TO REPORTING TO SOMB.

The 40 Hours course consists of:
Law & Regulations
General Duties & Responsibilities
Patrols, Access Control, Communication & Documentation
Emergency Procedures
Confrontation Management
Firearms maintenance, Safety, & Handling
Firearms Safety Rules/Common Sense
Basic Marksmanship
Use of Force
Fundamentals of Shooting
Course of Fire
Dry Fire Practice
Live Range Qualification

FEES - $250.00

Basically a glorified armed security guard. :smh:

Last thing we need is more bozo security guard wanna be cops.

Because this is the result.

Security guard biz is the hustle out here in DC. Everybody got a security service making fools pay all these fees to be a guard and shit. :smh:

I already knew a security guard that shot someone in a crowded Mc Donald's near college park while fighting a guy. The police cleared him of any wrong doing.
 
Last thing we need is more bozo security guard wanna be cops.

Because this is the result.

Security guard biz is the hustle out here in DC. Everybody got a security service making fools pay all these fees to be a guard and shit. :smh:

I already knew a security guard that shot someone in a crowded Mc Donald's near college park while fighting a guy. The police cleared him of any wrong doing.[/QUOTE]


If and when I move out there I'm going to apply for this shit so I can legally own and carry a gun in D.C.
 
lionelzeus said:
If and when I move out there I'm going to apply for this shit so I can legally own and carry a gun in D.C.

Unless you want to be police/security guard this is unnecessary. You don't have to apply to this to carry a gun in DC there are several companies offering the training to carry a licensed gun.

However, you still won't be able to carry a gun in the federal controlled parts of DC. It's just not allowed. I've known guys who were sheriffs who thought they would get a pass still get hemmed up cuz they thought it was all good.
 
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nat...7-dies-custody-special-cops-article-1.2423319

Investigation underway after handcuffed man, 27, dies in custody of special police officers in Washington, D.C.

Police have launched an investigation into the mysterious death of a 27-year-old man who was found lifeless in handcuffs while in custody of security guards at a Washington, D.C. apartment complex.

Alonzo Smith was found unconscious and not breathing Sunday when Metropolitan Police arrived at the Marbury Plaza Apartments where he was being held about 4 a.m., authorities said.

Smith later died at a nearby hospital, although the circumstances surrounding his death are unclear.

City police officers said they were responding to an "assault in progress" at the complex, where he was in custody of "special police officers."

Smith’s cause of death was still pending Wednesday, the city's medical examiner's office told the Daily News.

It's unclear why he was being held by officers or if he was a resident at the apartment complex.

His family lawyer told Fox 5 the officers were building security guards and not affiliated with city cops.

A witness heard Smith running down the second floor hallway and screaming, "Help! Help! They're going to kill me," according to the news station.

The attorney believes he may have been beaten and was "very much alive" before the private guards cuffed him.

Marbury Plaza declined to comment.

Smith's mother Beverly Smith, who started a GoFundMe page to pay for her son's funera, did not immediately return a call for comment Wednesday.

Her beloved son was a teacher in Virginia for the last three years and a self-published poet, according to the Huffington Post.

"Alonzo departed this earth and gained his heavenly wings," Smith’s mother wrote on the fundraising page. "We all know he was loved by many.
 
Never forget! FTP!
I just re read this and didnt know its not even the piglice it was fuckin

security guards...

that shit might have to be handled locally..

@playahaitian

but NO UPDATE on this case tho...

 
Security guards will not be charged in death of Alonzo Smith
By fox5dc.com staff
Published October 13, 2016

WASHINGTON - Officials say two security guards investigated in the death of a man who died after being taken into custody at a Southeast D.C. apartment building will not face charges.

On Thursday, the mother of 27-year-old Alonzo Smith walked out of the U.S. Attorney's Office feeling disappointed, but not defeated.

"This fight is not over," said Beverly Smith, Alonzo's mother. "It is not over. I am not discouraged."




She says she is convinced that the two special police officers who handcuffed her son that morning used excessive force and Beverly promised to get to the bottom of it through litigation.

"They are still holding back information, they are still not giving me any information and therefore it's a cover-up and they are complicit in my son's murder," Beverly explained.

Back in December, the medical examiner ruled Alonzo's death a homicide. But the U.S. Attorney's Office says rather than excessive force by the two special police officers - Alonzo died from a combination of high level of cocaine intoxication while being restrained.
"The evidence shows that Mr. Smith suffered a sudden cardiac incident that resulted in death," the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia said in a statement Thursday.

According to the evidence, the U.S. Attorney's Office says Smith was shirtless and shoeless as he ran through the Marbury Plaza apartment complex on the morning of Nov. 1 screaming for help and that someone was trying to kill him. Alonzo caught the attention of the special police officers who then followed him.

When he ran inside the building, prosecutors say Alonzo banged on doors and then climbed a ladder that led to the roof. That's when the special police officers grabbed Alonzo in a bear hug, put him on the ground and handcuffed him. Prosecutors also say when D.C. police officers arrived on the scene, they found Alonzo conscious and breathing.

"What she is saying is, when they arrived, he was breathing and he was conscious," said Smith's mother. "I said, 'Well, if that is true, then why did a police officer perform CPR on my son?' It does not make sense. But like I said, it is not over."

Prosecutors say there is no evidence the special police officers punched, kicked or struck Alonzo.

"There is insufficient evidence to pursue federal criminal civil rights or local charges," the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia said in the statement.

The names of the special police officers have never been released. They work for Blackout Security based in Charles County, Maryland. At this time, it is unclear if they are back on the job.
 
Security guards will not be charged in death of D.C. man




Beverly Smith lost her son, Alonzo Smith, in November while he was in the custody of law enforcement. She is photographed Aug. 3 in her Washington home. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)
By Ann E. Marimow ,
Keith L. Alexander and
Perry Stein
October 13, 2016

Federal prosecutors announced Thursday that they will not pursue criminal charges against two security guards involved in a deadly November confrontation with a District man at a Southeast Washington apartment complex.

Alonzo Smith, 27, was stopped by the guards after he was spotted running through the complex, shirtless and shoeless, yelling for help. The U.S. attorney’s office offered condolences to Smith’s family for what it called a “tragic incident” but said there is “insufficient evidence” to prosecute the guards.

Prosecutors said Smith suffered a cardiac incident. He was “under the influence of a significant amount of cocaine and was being restrained” by the guards, prosecutors said, “both of which may have contributed” to his death.
After interviewing more than two dozen witnesses and reviewing medical reports and other records, prosecutors concluded there was not enough evidence to prove that the guards “violated Mr. Smith’s civil rights by using excessive force or that they possessed the requisite criminal intent at the time of the events,” according to a lengthy statement released by the office of U.S. Attorney Channing D. Phillips.


The District’s medical examiner last year ruled Smith’s death a homicide. The examiner found that compressions to the torso contributed to his death, and officials said the injury may have occurred as a guard pressed his knee into Smith’s back.
Alonzo Smith, 27, who died Nov. 1, 2015, after being found handcuffed by special police officers in an apartment building in Southeast Washington. (Family photo)
[U.S. attorney’s office full statement on Alonzo Smith]

Standing outside the prosecutor’s office, Smith’s mother told supporters and reporters that she was not satisfied with the explanation.

“They are still not giving me any information, so therefore it’s still a coverup and they are still complicit in my son’s murder,” Beverly Smith said after meeting privately with prosecutors before the official announcement.
[D.C. woman seeks answers in death of son following confrontation with guards]

The encounter unfolded early Nov. 1, 2015, at the complex on Good Hope Road near Anacostia, where the guards were working as “special police.” Such guards are armed, have limited arrest powers and are licensed by the District. They protect schools, libraries, local and federal government buildings, and apartment complexes.

Smith worked as a teacher’s assistant at Accotink Academy Learning Center, a private school in Springfield, Va., for students with special needs and those with troubled histories. His family previously said that he may have been visiting a woman and that the two may have had a dispute.
Authorities said the incident began when complex residents called 911 to report a man racing through the halls, shouting and banging on doors.

In the detailed account issued Thursday, prosecutors said Smith arrived just before 2:30 a.m. to visit a friend and then abruptly returned to his car about an hour later. Multiple witnesses told investigators that they saw Smith running outside — shirtless and shoeless — and yelling for help. One resident saw him trying to climb a fire escape ladder leading to the roof.

Two residents reported hearing a voice telling Smith to calm down and to come down from the ladder.
According to prosecutors, one guard grabbed Smith in a “bear hug-type move, pivoted, and put Mr. Smith onto the floor” after Smith tried to “jump past the special police officer and/or over the railing.”
No witnesses told investigators that they saw anyone chasing or assaulting Smith. Prosecutors also said there is no evidence that either guard “punched, kicked, or otherwise struck” Smith.
D.C. police officers arrived at the complex just after 4 a.m. The scene was captured on police body-camera footage, which was the first such video released by Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D).
The officers found Smith lying on his stomach on a staircase landing, conscious and breathing. His hands were cuffed behind his back. One of the guards knelt next to him, kneeling “occasionally on” Smith’s lower back, according to prosecutors. The other held Smith’s head down.

The guards told the officers they believed Smith was high on PCP, and an officer shackled Smith’s ankles “in case of a drug-induced violent outburst,” according to the statement.
About a minute after police arrived, prosecutors said, the officers realized Smith had “stopped moving and making sounds, although he still had a pulse.”

Officers administered CPR before Smith was rushed to United Medical Center, where he died just after 5 a.m.
Prosecutors said Thursday that the toxicology screening showed Smith had “an exceedingly high amount of cocaine in his blood,” which can cause hallucinations and erratic behavior similar to reactions associated with PCP.
According to the autopsy, Smith had no broken bones, no injuries to his vital organs, and no signs of trauma to his spine or neck. The autopsy did show “blunt force injuries” — described as abrasions, contusions and hemorrhages — on Smith’s head, neck and torso.

Although the medical examiner ruled Smith’s death a homicide, prosecutors said such a determination is “insufficient, in and of itself” to prove that a person is criminally responsible for the death.
To prove that any officer violated local laws or federal criminal civil rights laws, prosecutors must be able to show that officers “willfully used more force than was reasonably necessary,” a bar the U.S. attorney’s office described Thursday as a “heavy burden.”
Defense attorney Justin Dillon, a former homicide prosecutor, said the large amount of cocaine probably contributed to the decision not to charge the guards.
“The government would still have to prove that they were grossly negligent, and you can’t assume that simply because someone died during an arrest — especially when they had acute cocaine toxicity that may have required more force than usual for the arrest.”

Defense attorneys Danny Onorato and Steven McCool, who represent the guards, declined to comment on the case.
In the year since Smith’s death, his mother has repeatedly sought more information, including the names of the guards, which officials have not made public. She also has taken on a public role as an advocate, speaking out against police brutality and gun violence.

While Beverly Smith met with prosecutors Thursday, about two dozen protesters stood outside the Judiciary Square office chanting, “Justice for Zo,” a reference to her son’s nickname. Representatives from various organizations, including Black Lives Matter, called for an end to police violence and what they described as systemic racism.
 
Death of Man in Custody of Security Guards Ruled a Homicide
Published December 14, 2015 • Updated on December 14, 2015 at 9:28 pm




The death of a man after he was taken into custody by two private security guards at a D.C. apartment complex has been ruled a homicide, the medical examiner said Monday.

Alonzo Smith, 27, died in November after being placed in the custody of special police officers at the Marbury Plaza apartments on Good Hope Road SE.

The chief medical examiner ruled that Smith's cause of death was sudden cardiac death complicating acute cocaine toxicity while restrained, and the manner of death was homicide, a spokesperson for the office said Monday.

An additional contributing factor to Smith's cause of death was the compression of his torso, the spokesperson said.

D.C. police were called to Marbury Plaza just after 4 a.m. Nov. 1 for the report of an assault in progress. In a press release, authorities said police who responded to the scene found Smith handcuffed and in the custody of the special officers. He was unconscious and not breathing.
Officers performed CPR, but Smith died a short time later at a local hospital.

Smith's mother, Beverly Smith, says she viewed her son's body at the medical examiner's office.

"He had a broken neck, bruises on his chest, a swollen jaw," she said.

Family members are upset that the D.C. police officer who wrote the report initially classified the death as a "justifiable homicide," which officials later said was an error.

On Dec. 1, Smith's family held a vigil outside the Marbury Plaza apartments, calling for an independent investigation into his death. At the time, they said they hadn't heard much about the investigation into his death, but did know the guards were no longer working at the apartment complex.

Blackout Investigations, the company that provides security for the Marbury Plaza complex, has not commented.

Beverly Smith said Dec. 1 that she was especially upset that the security company has not reached out to her with condolences.
 
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