Pubdate: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 Source: New York Post (NY) Copyright: 2000, N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc. Contact: http://nypostonline.com/ Author: Rocco Parascandola, David Seifman, Gregg Birnbaum, Robert Hardt, Jr., Maggie Haberman And Devlin Barrett Bookmark: MAP's link to New York articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/ny COP SLAYING AGAIN PITS RUDY VS. REV. AL Mayor Giuliani yesterday rushed to the defense of an undercover narcotics cop who killed an unarmed man as the Rev. Al Sharpton demanded that feds intervene in the case, saying "we can't trust local prosecutors." "There's no question that there was a struggle that took place here," the mayor said. "There's no question that the person who was killed has a criminal record. He's been arrested for robbery, attempted robbery, and possession of a gun. None of that is reported on the news." Yet official records show shooting victim Patrick Dorismond, 26, had pleaded guilty to two disorderly-conduct charges in 1993 and 1996 -- including an arrest in which no gun was ever found -- and had a sealed juvenile arrest. He also was busted in 1996 for possession of marijuana, but the record was wiped clean after six months. "He put his life at risk ... he did things most of you wouldn't have the courage to do," the mayor said of Detective Anthony Vasquez, who fired the fatal shot at Dorismond early Thursday. Vasquez's lawyer said the cop accidentally shot Dorismond after he lunged at him. Sharpton, who said the Dorismond family contacted him to represent them, said he'd go over the heads of local law enforcement to get federal officials involved. A meeting has been set Monday with Loretta Lynch, the U.S. attorney in Brooklyn. Her office refused comment. The Brooklyn U.S. attorney's office started an investigation of the patterns and practices of the NYPD in the wake of the station house sodomy of Abner Louima in 1997. The probe is ongoing, but Lynch is in negotiations with the city over potential reform. "We can't trust local prosecutors to investigate this case," Sharpton said. "Enough is enough." Manhattan Borough President Virginia Fields, the city's top black elected official, said the shooting should convince police they must change their procedures. "Why did a street scuffle escalate into a fatal shooting?" Fields asked. "Without jumping to any conclusion, New Yorkers are justified in asking several questions." Other civic leaders also were troubled over the shooting, coming a little over a year after four cops shot and killed African emigre Amadou Diallo in a hail of 41 bullets. The cops were tried and acquitted last month, but the criticism of police brutality has rocked the NYPD. "I don't like what I see on the face of it," City Council Speaker Peter Vallone said of Dorismond's death. "I haven't the foggiest idea why a gun had to be used." Hillary Clinton, who is running against the mayor for a U.S. Senate seat from New York, said she was "concerned," but would "wait to see the investigation and the results of that investigation." Though Sharpton called for federal intervention, Herb Haddad, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan, was vague about such involvement. The case is being investigated by the Manhattan district attorney's office, and a grand jury will begin hearing evidence soon. "We will stay apprised of that investigation as it proceeds," he said. According to officials, Dorismond was killed during a struggle with undercover narcotics officers on Eighth Avenue near West 37th Street. The off-duty security guard grew angry when one of the officers approached and asked if he and another man knew where he could buy marijuana, sources have said. Officials said the two men attacked the undercover officer, prompting Vasquez and another back-up officer to move in. During the scuffle, Vasquez's pistol went off. "Why was Patrick Dorismond accosted in this fashion?" Fields asked. "Is it because he was a black man and he fits a police profile? ... It is time to curb the use of special undercover police units and time to return to community-based policing." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck