Dontrunner Robinson murdered by the Baton Rouge, LA devil-ass pigs in 2013. Images just released (WARNING GRAPHIC)

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Family, NAACP call for investigation into 2013 death during police raid

[news story video, click link below]

By Perry Robinson
Published: Jun. 14, 2021 at 1:59 PM UTC|Updated: Jun. 15, 2021 at 12:32 AM UTC

BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) - Dozens of people formed a circle at Galvez Plaza over the weekend praying and calling for “Justice for Trun,” a man who died in 2013 during an encounter with Baton Rouge Police Department (BRPD) narcotics detectives.

The NAACP organized the rally alongside family members of Dontrunner “Trun” Robinson.

He died after reportedly swallowing drugs while BRPD narcotics detectives carried out a search warrant at a house on Flag Street. His mother, who lived next door, recounted the last time she saw and spoke to her son.

“My son crawled to the door, he threw his body against the door, and he said, ‘Mama, help me,’” said Casa Robinson-Bean. “He told me he couldn’t breathe.”

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The East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office said in 2013, that “no foul play” was detected but family members want the case reopened because of additional injuries mentioned on the autopsy.

“I think we have a lot of blame that can be tossed around,” said Eugene Collins, Baton Rouge president of the NAACP. “Why did they seem fit to clear these officers of any wrongdoings?”

Several graphic photos of Robinson taken after he died were shared online over the weekend. They appear to show heavy bruising on his head, neck, shoulders, and chest believed to be a result of blunt force leading family members to question how he died.
CLICK HERE to view the photos. WARNING: The images are graphic.

Family members said they saw the photos for the first time Friday, June 11, 2021.
“Somebody has to do something. They’ve let this slip through their fingers for eight years,” added Robinson-Bean.

NAACP named Sgt. Drew White as the officer who allegedly beat Robinson during the search. White’s name is listed on the police report as an officer involved in the search but The Advocate reports White was cleared of wrongdoing after an internal investigation into the Flag Street incident. White was reassigned to uniform patrol following a separate internal investigation of the BRPD narcotics unit.

RELATED: BRPD reassigns 4 narcotics officers amid ongoing probe

The family also claims Robinson and White had a prior run-in months before his death that ended in Robinson getting a black eye.

The family’s representing attorney, Ron Haley, said in order for charges to come, they will have to come from the district attorney’s office. He added the officer’s bill of rights won’t allow BRPD to take this specific case to court.

“The DA’s office can look at what happened and take this to a grand jury,” said Haley.

Officer Jeremiah Ardoin, who was charged as part of the misconduct investigation but was not part of the Flag Street search, has reportedly been cooperating with investigators since resigning and has been blowing the whistle on other wrong-doings within the department.

RELATED: THE INVESTIGATORS: Former officer arrested third time tied to potential corruption within BRPD narcotics division

Ardoin is said to have tipped off BRPD about internal jokes within the narcotics division and called out Sgt. White for his alleged involvement. According to The Advocate, detectives dubbed the incident, “The Flag Street Massacre.”

Robinson’s family members are asking city and state leaders to take action against those involved in what they’re calling a cover-up of the events leading to Dontrunner Robinson’s death.

Robinson-Bean said she’s forgiven the officers but she wants to see more done. Robinson’s wife also filed a wrongful death lawsuit back in 2014 claiming BRPD officers beat him during the search.

“I forgive him. In order for this to work for me and get some relief, I forgive Drew but something else needs to happen,” said Bean.
The 9News Investigators have filed a number of investigative reports into claims of misconduct within the BRPD narcotics unit.
Click here to report a typo.
Copyright 2021 WAFB. All rights reserved.


 
another article with more detail:

BRPD narcotics detectives accused of joking about 2013 in-custody 'Flag Street Massacre' death





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Advocate staff photo by RICHARD ALAN HANNON — Mike McClanahan, left, president of the Baton Rouge branch of the NAACP, meets state Sen. Elbert Guillory, R-Opelousas, right, and Edmond Jordan, prior to the start of a press conference in front of the 19th JDC announcing a wrongful death lawsuit by Guillory against the Baton Rouge Police Department and the city in May 2014. Guillary and co-council Jordan are representing the family of Dontronner Robinson, 32, of Baton Rouge, who died in 2013 after ingesting crack cocaine during a SWAT raid.


Among many allegations he dropped just before resigning from the Baton Rouge Police Department, Jeremiah Ardoin accused some longtime narcotics detectives of joking about the 2013 death of an unarmed Black man after a violent struggle with officers.
The incident — which the detectives dubbed the "Flag Street Massacre" — became an inside joke, according to Ardoin, an ex-cop with no firsthand knowledge of what happened that evening on Flag Street. His claims about widespread misconduct within the narcotics unit, however, prompted a corruption probe that remains ongoing.

Authorities said Dontrunner Robinson died from choking on a bag of crack cocaine, which he ate right before the confrontation with police. His wife later filed a wrongful death lawsuit claiming officers beat Robinson so viciously he was unable to completely swallow the bag, which lodged in his throat.

Photos from the scene show blood pooled on the floor and smeared on the walls throughout his house. An autopsy report notes cuts and bruising to his face.

The lawsuit remains unresolved, but the recent statements from Ardoin and the ongoing corruption inquiry raise new questions about the case, which critics consider indicative of a larger cultural problem inside the narcotics division.

Soon after being arrested in December for buying stolen property, Ardoin penned two memos accusing his colleagues of even worse misconduct. He shared both with the police chief.

In the second missive, Ardoin pointed a finger at Sgt. Samuel "Drew" White, one of four high-ranking narcotics detectives reassigned to street patrols earlier this year.

"I got tired of hearing them laughing and joking about how Drew White killed Dontrunner Robinson, an unarmed black man, by beating him to death with his hands and pistol, which they called the Flag St. Massacre," Ardoin wrote in the memo.

White was cleared of wrongdoing after an internal investigation into the Flag Street incident back in 2013 — years before Ardoin joined the narcotics division. Ardoin also clarified in an interview this week that he was not accusing White of killing Robinson, simply highlighting what he thought were inappropriate jokes about the incident.

"Once again, Jeremiah Ardoin is speaking on stuff he has absolutely no knowledge about," said Kyle Kershaw, a BRPD union attorney representing White. "Clearly he just wants to bring others down with him — people who still have their jobs with the police department."
Recent attempts to reach White were unsuccessful because BRPD officers are largely forbidden from commenting in the media.

Ardoin was the only Black officer in the 12-person narcotics division before his arrest and resignation. He claims his supervisors would target Black communities across Baton Rouge, searching people without probable cause, executing petty arrests and planting drugs on suspects.
Baton Rouge Police Chief Murphy Paul said his department is investigating everything in the memos, including the Flag Street incident. Some of the other claims have already resulted in pending criminal charges against Jason Acree, another disgraced former detective accused of stealing drugs from the evidence room, among other missteps.


A violent struggle

The fatal Flag Street encounter occurred May 2, 2013. BRPD narcotics officers had a no-knock search warrant for the house, where detectives had reason to believe a man known as "Tron" was selling drugs, according to police reports. White was among the officers who showed up to serve the warrant.

In a written report describing what happened, White said he and another officer entered the house and discovered a locked bedroom door. The other officer stepped aside while White tried to kick down the door, finding he was met with resistance from someone inside, later identified as Robinson, the report says.

Finally, Robinson released the door and tried to run past detectives and escape the room. "Det. White was still facing backwards and swung a right elbow, striking Dontrunner in the face," the officer wrote. He said the strike knocked Robinson back into the room and allowed detectives to enter.
In an interview during the resulting death investigation, White told deputies he was holding an AR-15 rifle when Robinson charged him, police reports show. White said he struck Robinson near his shoulder to get him away.

"Det. White then pushed Dontrunner to the ground, as he was flailing around violently," White wrote in his report, which describes an ensuing struggle that ended with Robinson in handcuffs.

White initially was trying to keep Robinson on the ground while other officers searched a nearby closet, first by stepping on his back. Those efforts "were unsuccessful due to the violent rolling around and jerking motions of Dontrunner," White wrote in the report. The officer then used his knee to restrain Robinson and handed off his rifle to another cop, the report says.

Police reports show White had fought with Robinson before, using violence to gain compliance during an arrest several months earlier. In August 2012, White spotted Robinson with marijuana and ended up chasing him, then punching him repeatedly in the face because Robinson was swinging his fists and violently resisting arrest, White wrote in a report.
By the time Robinson was handcuffed in the Flag Street incident, he was bleeding from the forehead and still refused to stop moving around, White said. The officers brought Robinson into the living room while White returned to the bedroom to search for potential hidden contraband. When he finished searching, White discovered that "Dontrunner had been moved outside, and was being brought back inside, unresponsive," according to the report.

White said officers quickly started performing CPR, which caused Robinson to start breathing again; then medics arrived and took over. They tried to intubate him, but found blockage in his throat, according to another police report. Medics then used a suction tool, which caused a piece of suspected crack cocaine to become lodged in the intubation tube, police said.

Robinson was pronounced dead at the hospital.

An autopsy report deemed his death accidental, the result of asphyxia "due to swallowing of translucent bag."

The report, signed by a forensic pathologist with the East Baton Rouge Office of the Coroner, also notes several bruises and other injuries, including scrapes around his eyes and nose. Photos from the autopsy investigation show blood caked across his face, with a deep cut above one eye.
Ardoin, the author of the memos, said he saw Robinson while working extra duty at the hospital that night and described him as "severely beaten" — bruised and bloodied with his eyes swollen shut and a busted lip, bleeding from the nose. Ardoin made those comments during a recent radio interview with Baton Rouge NAACP President Eugene Collins.

Robinson died from the bag of cocaine blocking his airway, the pathologist found. A drug screen showed THC, cocaine and opiates in his system, though the drugs were not considered a factor in his death. Neither were the facial injuries.
In addition to his medical records, the report cites a statement from his wife, Alaysha Alexander. A police report says she recounted watching her husband place an unknown amount of crack in his mouth just moments before officers kicked down the bedroom door.

'An execution of the worst sort'

In an interview Friday, Alexander denied telling police she saw Robinson swallow the drugs, but acknowledged the possibility he ingested them.
She was also inside the bedroom when police kicked down the door. She called the scene that followed horrific: officers beating and kicking her husband, hitting him with a long gun while she yelled for them to stop.
After she and Robinson had been handcuffed and moved to the living room, she noticed him struggling to breathe — "flailing around like a fish out of water" — and pleaded with officers to help him, she said. When officers later separated them, she heard Robinson desperately yelling for his mom.

Alexander also referenced photos from the scene showing a pool of blood in the bedroom and more smeared on the walls and dripped across the wood floors where officers dragged Robinson through the house after the beating.
"Police should not be executioners," she said. "But for all this time, it was just my word against theirs."



A pool of blood is visible in the bedroom and more smeared on the walls after Dontrunner Robinson engaged in a violent struggle with Baton Rouge police officers in May 2013. He later died from choking on a bag of crack cocaine, an autopsy report says.
Provided photos
Surveillance cameras in the house likely captured the incident, but police seized the footage, Alexander said. Several years would pass before BRPD equipped its officers with body cameras.
Alexander filed a wrongful death lawsuit in 2014 against Baton Rouge and its police department, seeking damages for herself and her son. Her attorneys — Elbert Guillory and Edmond Jordan — hosted a press conference outside the 19th Judicial District courthouse in downtown Baton Rouge to announce the suit.

But seven years later, the case remains unresolved.

Attorneys for the city recently filed a motion for dismissal because of inaction from Guillory. The request is still pending, leaving the future of the lawsuit unclear. Alexander also said Guillory has been inattentive for years.
Guillory, however, said the case is delayed, not stalled. He feels optimistic a resolution will come in the near future, especially given the backdrop of recent misconduct claims against White and other narcotics detectives. He said Robinson suffered "an execution of the worst sort" and his family deserves justice.

For her part, Alexander said she found new attorneys and hopes to either revive the existing case or file another lawsuit. The family could still sue on behalf of a different surviving child because the statute of limitations includes an exemption for minors.

"Once again, members of the BRPD narcotics unit have been exposed," attorneys Ron Haley, Dedrick Moore and Baron Roberson said in a statement Friday, claiming officers inflicted "a bloodbath of pain and terror against Mr. Robinson."

Meanwhile, leaders of the Baton Rouge NAACP are calling for a grand jury to review all evidence from the case and consider bringing criminal charges against the officers involved. East Baton Rouge District Attorney Hillar Moore III said prosecutors will review whatever evidence is provided.
"This situation has been overlooked since 2013," said Collins, the Baton Rouge NAACP president. "We want justice."



Email Lea Skene at lskene@theadvocate.com.


 
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Here's more about the pig that murdered him:

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The kkk infested all police forces.. but its a special kind of demonic infestation in Louisiana....

the more I peep shit... the more I realize this was about killing us and stealing our estates...

and its waaay more deeper than I thought it was....

good news..end game for all that bullshit....

and it just started...demons are running scared

I could sense their demon flesh burning....
 
I wish the black community had an elite group of military trained brothers who would go in and do what the courts won't do: Eliminate all threats of police corruption to our community by the only means these murdering pigs understand - violence.
 
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