Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jul 2000 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2000, Newsday Inc. Contact: (516)843-2986 Website: http://www.newsday.com/ Author: Leonard Levitt DORISMOND'S FAMILY NUMBED BY DECISION In an emotionally charged news conference, the mother of Patrick Dorismond called yesterday on President Bill Clinton to find justice for a son she said was killed because "he said no to drugs." "Dear President Clinton, I address you as a black woman," Marie Dorismond said after a Manhattan grand jury declined to indict a detective who fatally shot her son. "My son said no to drugs and now where is he? A cop killed him because he said no to drugs." The Rev. Al Sharpton, clearly aiming at first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, followed up by "calling on the candidates for the U.S. Senate race to take a position" on the grand jury's decision. "What position they take," he said, "will determine how and on what level we will support them." Family members described themselves as numbed by the decision, in which the grand jury declined to indict an undercover detective who fatally shot Patrick Dorismond, 26, in a scuffle in midtown Manhattan on March 16. Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said the evidence showed that when the detective approached Dorismond to attempt to buy narcotics, Dorismond, who was not selling drugs, "lost his temper, and he hit someone." Dorismond never realized he was confronting police officers, the prosecutor said. Sharpton said the decision was "the epitome of an insult to the intelligence of the people of this nation." Referring to former Chief Judge Sol Wachtler's quote that a prosecutor could indict a ham sandwich, Sharpton said, "It seems like a ham sandwich has more likelihood of being indicted in Manhattan county than a New York City police [officer]." He said the federal government had to get involved "so we would not be playing with the politics of local DAs." In a statement, Morgenthau said that the grand jury "is not a forum for the expression of political views or the resolution of policy disputes. To allow it to be used for those purposes would simply layer an injustice upon a tragedy." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk