Quite a margin of error, that.
They waited for hours, singing spirituals,
praying and chanting for justice. In a flash, the crowd gathered
outside a Queens courthouse Friday erupted in anger and grief.
Men cursed and shouted. Women wailed and covered their faces.
"Oh, no! No!" they yelled as word spread that three police
officers had been cleared of all charges in the 50-bullet shooting
that took Sean Bell's life on his wedding day in 2006.
Trent Benefield, a friend of Bell's who was wounded in the hail
of gunfire, staggered down the courthouse steps with a look of
angry disbelief on his face, a friend's arms tightly wrapped around
his shoulders.
"Not guilty. Not guilty. It's real," Benefield said, while
dozens of people wearing Bell's face on hats, T-shirts and buttons
burst into sobs.
Angry supporters of the Bell family shouted at police officers
and journalists outside the courthouse, but within an hour the
crowd of about 200 people had settled down and dispersed. Despite
some pushing and shoving in the crowd, no arrests were made.
The protests were muted compared with past verdicts where
officers were cleared in police shootings of black men, perhaps a
result of improved race relations and the complicated nature of the
Bell case. Bell was black, but so were two of the three officers
charged in the shooting, including the one who fired the first
shot.
Civil rights leaders demanded a federal investigation, but
supporters of the officers said justice had been served.
"How do I spell relief? N-O-T G-U-I-L-T-Y," said Michael
Palladino, president of the Detectives Endowment Association, a
police union.
Bell, 23, was killed outside a seedy strip club in Queens in
2006 as he was leaving his bachelor party with two friends. The
officers _ undercover detectives who were investigating reports of
prostitution at the club _ said they thought one of the men had a
gun.
The slaying heightened tensions in the city and stoked
long-standing allegations of racism and excessive use of force on
the part of New York City's police. Police had assigned extra
officers to the courthouse Friday and had helicopters in the air to
help deal with any unrest.
Justice Arthur Cooperman's verdict in the non-jury trial
elicited gasps as well as tears of joy and sorrow. Detective
Michael Oliver, who fired 31 of the shots, wept at the defense
table, while the mother of victim Sean Bell cried in the packed
courtroom. Shouts of "Murderers! Murderers!" and "KKK!" rang
out in front of the building......
The defense painted the victims as drunken thugs who the
officers believed were armed and dangerous. Prosecutors sought to
convince the judge that the victims had been minding their own
business, and that the officers were inept, trigger-happy cowboys.
Bell's companions _ Benefield and Joseph Guzman _ were both
wounded; Guzman still has four bullets lodged in his body. Both
testified. Guzman, a burly ex-convict, grew combative during
cross-examination, and said of Isnora: "This dude is shooting like
he's crazy, like he's out of his mind."
None of the officers took the stand. Instead, the judge heard
transcripts of the officers telling a grand jury that they believed
they had good reason to use deadly force.
The officers said that as the club closed around 4 a.m., they
heard Guzman say, "Yo, go get my gun" _ something Bell's friends
denied.
Isnora claimed that after he warned the men to halt, Bell pulled
away in his car, bumped him and rammed an unmarked police van that
converged on the scene. The detective also said Guzman made a
sudden move as if he were reaching for a gun.
Benefield and Guzman testified that there were no orders from
the police.
With tires screeching, glass breaking and bullets flying, the
officers said they believed they were the ones under fire. Oliver
responded by emptying his semiautomatic pistol, reloading, and
emptying it again. Isnora fired 11 rounds, and Cooper four. Two
other officers who fired weren't charged.
When the smoke had cleared, there was no weapon inside Bell's
blood-splattered car.
Police Kill unarmed man using 50 shots, full Acquittal for the cops
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