NYC groom shooting reaction and video of how quickly detective could have fired 31 ro

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NYC groom shooting reaction and video of how quickly detective could have fired 31 rounds
NEW YORK -- Nicole Paultre Bell bolted from the courtroom Friday as a judge acquitted three New York City detectives of all charges in the shooting death of her fiance.


Nicole Paultre Bell is helped from court Friday as the judge acquits officers charged in the death of her fiance.

1 of 3 "I've got to get out of here," Paultre Bell said.

Justice Arthur Cooperman was announcing the verdict clearing Detectives Michael Oliver and Gescard Isnora of manslaughter, assault and reckless endangerment in the death of Sean Bell.

Detective Marc Cooper was cleared of reckless endangerment.

"What we saw in court today was not a miscarriage of justice," the Rev. Al Sharpton said on his radio program.

"Justice didn't miscarry," he said. "This was an abortion of justice. Justice was aborted."

Sharpton, who has been advising Bell's family, had called for calm Wednesday.

Bell, 23, died in November 2006 in a 50-bullet barrage -- 31 fired by Oliver -- hours before he was to be married. Two of his companions were wounded in the gunfire outside a Queens nightclub.


The three officers made brief statements more than four hours after the verdict.

"I want to say sorry to Bell family for the tragedy," Cooper said.

Isnora thanked the judge "for his fair and accurate decision today."

Oliver praised Cooperman "for a fair and just decision."

That's not how one community leader viewed it.

"This case was not about justice," declared Leroy Gadsden, chair of the police/community relations committee of the Jamaica Branch NAACP. "This case was about the police having a right to be above the law. If the law was in effect here, if the judge had followed the law truly, these officers would have been found guilty.

"This court, unfortunately, is bankrupt when it comes to justice for people of color."

Patrick Lynch, president of the New York Police Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, said "there's no winners; there's no losers" in the case.

"We still have a death that occurred. We still have police officers that have to live with the fact that there was a death involved in their case," Lynch said.

But, he added, the verdict assured police officers that they will be treated fairly in New York's courts.

Many people outside the courthouse saw it differently.

"You can't be proud of wearing that hat. You can't be proud of wearing that badge," a black woman shouted at a black police officer. "You must stop working for the masters! Stand down! Stop working for the masters!"

"Fifty shots is murder. I don't care what you say. That's what it is," another woman said.

Despite the evident anger and a brief fistfight, the crowd remained generally orderly.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg issued a statement saying, "An innocent man lost his life, a bride lost her groom, two daughters lost their father, and a mother and a father lost their son. No verdict could ever end the grief that those who knew and loved Sean Bell suffer."

However, he said, the legal system must be respected.

"America is a nation of laws, and though not everyone will agree with the verdicts and opinions issued by the courts, we accept their authority."

Bloomberg also said he had spoken briefly with Paultre Bell on Wednesday and agreed with her on the need to ensure that similar incidents would not occur in the future.

Queens County District Attorney Richard A. Brown echoed the mayor's sentiments.

"I accept his verdict, and I urge certainly that all fair-minded people in this city to the same," Brown said.

"The bottom line is that all of us working together -- the law enforcement community, our elected public officials, our individuals who are involved -- have got to make certain that that which occurred ... is never again repeated."

In announcing the verdict, Cooperman said he found problems with the prosecution's case. He said some prosecution witnesses contradicted themselves, and he cited prior convictions and incarcerations of witnesses.

"At times, the testimony just didn't make sense," Cooperman said, according to a transcript released by his office.

He also cited the demeanor of some witnesses on the stand.

Bell was killed just before dawn on his wedding day, November 25, 2006. He and several friends were winding up an all-night bachelor party at the Kalua Club in Queens, a strip club that was under investigation by a NYPD undercover unit looking into complaints of guns, drugs and prostitution.

Undercover detectives were inside the club, and plainclothes officers were stationed outside.

Witnesses said that about 4 a.m., closing time, as Bell and his friends left the club, an argument broke out. Believing that one of Bell's friends, Joseph Guzman, was going to get a gun from Bell's car, one of the undercover detectives followed the men and called for backup.

What happened next was at the heart of the trial, prosecuted by the assistant district attorney in Queens.

Bell, Guzman and Trent Benefield got into the car, with Bell at the wheel. The detectives drew their weapons, said Guzman and Benefield, who testified that they never heard the plainclothes detectives identify themselves as police.

Bell was in a panic to get away from the armed men, his friends testified.

But the detectives thought Bell was trying to run down one of them, believed that their lives were in danger and started shooting, according to their lawyers.

A total of 50 bullets were fired by five NYPD officers. Only three were charged with crimes.

No gun was found near Bell or his friends.

Paultre Bell, Guzman and Benefield have filed a wrongful-death lawsuit in federal court that has been stayed pending the outcome of the criminal trial.

Federal prosecutors will conduct a review to determine whether there were any civil rights violations, Brown said.

Alexander Jason, an expert witness for the defense, produced a video demonstrating how quickly Oliver could have fired off 31 rounds, including a pause to reload.

Here is the video

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Preventing another Bell tragedy

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Sean Bell and daughter Jada.
Our city can weather the storm of civil disobedience promised by those outraged by the acquittals of the cops who slaughtered Sean Bell, just as we have survived other court decisions that violated basic notions of fairness and common sense.

But weathering the storm isn't enough; we've got to come through it stronger. Here are six measures to help heal the city and make it less likely there will be another Bell killing.

Discipline the Cops Responsible for This Tragedy

Nobody involved in the case, including the NYPD, has called the undercover operation at Club Kalua anything but a fumbling string of police mistakes that led to deadly force being used in a situation that yielded not a single arrest for guns, drugs or prostitution - or even a fistfight.

In announcing the verdict, Justice Arthur Cooperman twice mentioned police "carelessness and incompetence" as issues worth addressing, albeit not in his courtroom. Using the NYPD's departmental trial system, Commissioner Raymond Kelly should move to fire, demote or reassign the officers whose lax supervision and flawed instincts cost Bell his life.

Publish the Patrol Guide for All to Understand

Parents, ministers, mentors and guidance counselors citywide are at wit's end trying to figure out what to tell black boys and men about how to avoid or defuse overreactions by the police.

A lot of well-intentioned advice is probably irrelevant: the suggestion to follow whatever instructions come from a law-enforcement officer, for instance, can be useless when cops are conducting undercover operations.

The NYPD should publish the patrol guide on its Web site and work with community leaders to create a plain-English commentary that makes clear, among other things, the ways officers are supposed to identify themselves and when they are authorized to use deadly force.

Make Breathalyzers Mandatory as a Matter of Law

Some of the cops who shot Sean Bell, Trent Benefield and Joseph Guzman had been drinking at Kalua as part of their undercover assignment, but weren't required to prove they weren't intoxicated.

Kelly has since issued an order requiring cops to be tested in such situations in the future - but that rule could be revoked at any time by Kelly or a future commissioner.

There should be a law that cops who have been drinking on duty for any reason get tested for drunkenness if they have fired their weapons and/or killed someone.

Create a Special Prosecutor to Handle Police Misconduct Cases

Conspiracy theorists say Queens District Attorney Richard Brown's office deliberately botched the prosecution in order to see the cops who killed Bell go free.


That's nonsense; the prosecutors tried really hard. But they weren't experienced in how to mount an all-out case against cops, who are their allies in 99% of all prosecutions.

To cut through the built-in conflict of interest, we should have a citywide special prosecutor whose only job is to examine and prosecute allegations of police conduct.

Address the Racial Aspects of Violent Crime and Police Brutality Forthrightly

Most violent crimes in our city are committed by blacks against other blacks. And virtually all cases of cowboy craziness by cops (whatever their race) get aimed at black and Latino men.

There. Was that so hard to read?

Both situations are unacceptable and tear at the fabric of the city, yet political leaders run from pronouncing these hard truths and starting a public dialogue about their causes and effects.

Will it be a difficult conversation? Of course. But real leaders don't shy away from a job just because it's hard.

Urge Union Bosses to Act Like City Leaders

It's understood that PBA President Patrick Lynch and detectives union President Michael Palladino are paid to defend their members fiercely. But many of their statements during the Bell trial denigrated the lives, lifestyles and human worth of the victims.

That only feeds the false and poisonous idea, prevalent in black neighborhoods, that most cops hate or fear the communities they are sworn to protect.

A little restraint when it comes to "dirtying up" unarmed victims would go a long way - and earn union leaders respect as genuine leaders concerned about more than their next re-election.

elouis@nydailynews.com

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Bell cop attorney ripped Diallo cops

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Bell cop attorney ripped Diallo cops
BY NICOLE BODE
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
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Friday, May 2nd 2008, 4:00 AM

The lawyer for one of the cops acquitted in the Sean Bell shooting wrote a brief in 2000 urging the feds to go after the police officers who shot Amadou Diallo.

"The New York City Police Department has acted with impunity in its pattern of excessive use of force and violence against members of the African-American and Latino communities," Anthony Ricco, lawyer for Detective Gescard Isnora, wrote in the March 13, 2000, missive to the Justice Department.

"The tragic litany of violence shall continue unless and until the United States Department of Justice aggressively prosecutes the police officers who are responsible for the violation of basic civil rights of the citizens they are hired to protect," says the letter, obtained by the Daily News.

Ricco co-authored the 11-page amicus brief on behalf of the Alliance of African-American Attorneys.

Ricco was not a lawyer in the criminal or civil cases that followed the death of Diallo, an unarmed African immigrant cops mistook for a rape suspect. The officers were acquitted. No federal case was brought.

The arguments are in stunning contrast to Ricco's tack during the Bell case, in which he portrayed the victim and his friends as drunken criminals who brought the shooting upon themselves.

"Isnora's case is different," Ricco said Thursday. "I don't believe that ... Isnora willfully deprived the rights of Sean Bell, Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield. And I think that the facts of the trial completely support that he did not deprive them of their civil rights."

Bell's relatives did not see the distinction.

"Oh, wow," said his father, William Bell, 54, "And he had the nerve to defend these guys...? I don't understand. What's so different? I don't see nothing different. Matter of fact, I think it's worse."

The revelation comes as Ricco prepares to accept a lawyer of the year award from the Metropolitan Black Bar Association on May 14. He said he has been warned of protests at the award ceremony.

Diallo, 23, was shot in a hail of 41 bullets in the vestibule of his Bronx apartment building on Feb. 4, 1999. The officers believed Diallo - who was reaching for his wallet - had a gun, but no gun was found.

After all four Bronx officers were cleared by an Albany jury, Ricco wrote that the shooting "cries out for further prosecution."

"The act of accosting Mr. Diallo and subjecting him to the excessive and powerful use of gunfire is unquestionably conduct encompassed by a federal offense," Ricco wrote.

Bell, 23, was driving away from a Queens strip club Nov. 25, 2006, after his bachelor party when he was killed and his friends wounded in a hail of 50 police bullets. The officers said they believed Bell's friends had a gun. No gun was found.

Queens Supreme Court Justice Arthur Cooperman cleared Isnora and fellow Detectives Michael Oliver and Marc Cooper of all charges after an eight-week bench trial.

nbode@nydailynews.com
 
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