Pubdate: Mon, 04 Dec 2006 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2006 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Anemona Hartocollis Note: Daryl Khan and William K. Rashbaum contributed reporting. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Sean+Bell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Amadou+Diallo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Patrick+Dorismond Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?246 (Policing - United States) FATAL SHOOTINGS BY POLICE: HARD TO INVESTIGATE, EVEN HARDER TO PROSECUTE With Sean Bell now eulogized and buried, the emotions surrounding his death are swirling around the investigation into whether police officers committed a crime when they fired 50 bullets into Mr. Bell's car. Although every investigation is different, cases like that of Mr. Bell, an unarmed black man who was killed on his wedding day, have come to follow a similar rhythm and pattern. And experts and those involved in the investigation say that through the history of those cases, they have learned that it is very difficult to convince a grand jury or a trial jury that police officers, who are empowered to defend the public with deadly force if necessary, went too far. In many cases of police shootings, with tensions high, the facts and legal fine points are difficult to isolate from a much larger context. "What makes these cases so hard are issues that go well beyond the incident itself," a high-ranking official in the office of Richard A. Brown, the Queens district attorney, said last week, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is continuing. "It's the racial tension that still exists in the city," the official continued. "It's the mistrust in the minority community. It's cops that are faced with danger every day and have to react in seconds. It's safe to say, if they're wrong, somebody dies" -- whether a civilian or an officer. Everyone involved knows the stakes. While the district attorney's office investigates, civil rights activists and lawyers for the victims and the police officers are struggling to shape public opinion and find witnesses who buttress their points of view. At a news conference yesterday at the scene of the shooting, some of those people called for an independent prosecutor, saying that a district attorney should not be investigating a police department he regularly deals with. "They work with the cops on a daily basis, and they have a conflict of interest," said Norman Siegel, a civil rights lawyer, at the news conference yesterday. He described the shooting as "an enormous minefield." But Mr. Brown said in a statement yesterday that calls for a special prosecutor "are neither helpful nor productive -- nor are they in any respect justified." He said earlier that his investigation would be "independent of that being conducted by the Police Department." One official involved in the investigation said that Mr. Brown had asked his chief of homicide to prepare a list of what was needed to move forward, and had passed it on to police. The list contained about 30 items, like autopsy and toxicology reports; 911 and radio transmission tapes; hospital reports for both the civilians and the police officers involved in the shooting; ballistics reports; the criminal histories, if any, of witnesses; and photos or videos taken by civilians or the police. Mr. Brown has said several times that the investigation is in its earliest stages and it remains unclear what the inquiry and testimony before the grand jury will show. But the investigation will focus sharply on what occurred in the minutes leading up to the shooting, and in those frenzied seconds when the officers fired 50 bullets at a car, killing Mr. Bell, the groom, and wounding two friends as they left the Club Kalua, a strip club in Jamaica, nine days ago. The recent history in such cases is mixed. In the case of Amadou Diallo, fired on 41 times by the police as he stood in his Bronx vestibule in 1999, four officers were tried on criminal charges, including second-degree murder and manslaughter, and acquitted. In the case of Patrick M. Dorismond, killed in Manhattan in March 2000 during a scuffle with an undercover narcotics detective who said he thought the man was a drug dealer, a grand jury declined to indict. But a year ago, a State Supreme Court justice convicted Bryan Conroy, an undercover officer, of criminally negligent homicide in the death of Ousmane Zongo, shot during a raid in a Chelsea warehouse. "When you listen to people in the community talk about a case like this, it doesn't take long before the conversation goes well beyond the incident in question," said the official in the Queens district attorney's office. "It goes to other incidents in the past. It goes quite frankly to the general interaction between cops and people in the community." Michael Hardy, who along with Sanford A. Rubenstein is representing the shot men's families, said they had not ruled out seeking a federal civil rights investigation, but he said the evidence of racial bias was not clear-cut. Of the officers who fired on Mr. Bell's car, two are black, one is black and Hispanic, and two are white. The police pursuing the inquiry are playing a complex role. On the one hand, they profess impartiality; on the other hand, they are put in the position of investigating their colleagues' own conduct while showing that they take a stand against excessive violence. The investigators will knock on doors at different times of the day and different days of the week to try to find everyone who may have seen or heard something early that Saturday, one official involved in the investigation said. "Ideally, you want to know as much as you can know before you talk to the key witnesses," another official said. But to a large degree, investigators for Mr. Brown will be working parallel with the Police Department, which is conducting an internal investigation and may have already knocked on the same doors. One of the issues the district attorney is considering, the official in Mr. Brown's office said, is at what point a mistake by police officers becomes a criminal act. The answer, prosecutors say, is more complicated than a layman might expect, because state law gives police somewhat more latitude in using deadly force than it gives civilians. Mr. Bell, 23, and the two wounded men -- Joseph Guzman, 31, shot at least 11 times, and Trent Benefield, 23, hit three times -- were not armed, and no gun was found. But moments before the shooting started, an undercover detective outside the strip club heard one man in Mr. Bell's party say, "Yo, get my gun," according to a person briefed on the detective's account. The detective said he positioned himself in front of the car, identified himself as an officer -- a point lawyers for the victims dispute -- and ordered the men to show their hands. After Mr. Bell clipped the officer with his car and rammed into a minivan where other officers were waiting, the detective began to shoot, said the person briefed on his account. Police officials have acknowledged that the conduct of the undercover detective -- for example, in taking action rather than relying on backup, and in firing at a moving car -- was unusual. "This is a real question," one official involved in the inquiry said. "But it doesn't mean that what the undercover did was bad." This official said that some of the five officers who fired shots probably faced greater potential criminal liability than others. Although the number of shots fired has provoked outrage, 50 shots can be squeezed off in a matter of seconds, making the number of bullets fired less important than what started the shooting. "There is nothing in the law that says you can use deadly force but only fire a certain number of shots," that official said. "The number of bullets is certainly startling to the general public, but the key question is why was the first shot fired by each of them. "You can't view this as monolithic," the official said. "It's five individuals who made five individual decisions. "The most important thing is the first shot," he said, "not that the others aren't important. But the most important is the first shot." The perception of the officer firing the first shot -- whether he felt his life was in danger -- will weigh more heavily than what Mr. Bell and his companions inside the car saw or heard, lawyers said. "It's a twofold test," Kyle B. Watters, a criminal defense lawyer, said. "First you look at the subjective part: What does the officer believe from what he sees? Then you put against that, what would a reasonable person believe?" Investigators will also look at the tactical plan for the unit on the night of the shooting, the official in the district attorney's office said. When the grand jury gets the case, another question is if the officers will testify, and if so, what they will say. Philip E. Karasyk, the lawyer representing the undercover detective who fired the first shots, and whose name has not been publicly disclosed, said that he intended to have his client speak voluntarily to the prosecutors, and testify without immunity to the grand jury because he wanted the panel members to hear the man's story from his own mouth. "I want people to understand exactly what he was experiencing and why he did what he did," Mr. Karasyk said. "There is no better way to know what was going in someone's mind than to have them get up there and tell you. Then they can judge his credibility. I want him to put the grand jurors in his shoes and to recreate what he was experiencing at the time, because, unless you've been there, you have no idea what it's like." Stephen L. Worth, the lawyer for Michael Carey, a white backup officer who fired three times, said that his client had not yet decided whether to testify before the grand jury. "We're keeping our options open," Mr. Worth said. "The truth is the truth, and it's really a matter of when it will come out. It may be at the grand jury. It may be talking to investigators." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake