Pubdate: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2006sPeoria Journal Star Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 Note: Does not publish letters from outside our circulation area. Author: Andy Kravetz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) WRONGFUL DEATH SUIT FILED OVER SHOOTOUT The estate of a Fulton County man gunned down by a police last year during a drug raid is suing in federal court, saying the officers acted improperly. The five-count suit, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court, claims officers with the Illinois State Police and the West Central Illinois Task Force violated the rights of David Green when they raided a Fulton County house in June. Green, 47, was shot 10 times and died. The suit names "unknown officers" as defendants and accuses them of wrongful death, unreasonable entry and assault and battery, and seeks an undetermined amount in damages. James P. Ginzkey, a Bloomington attorney representing Green's estate, said Thursday the police have rebuffed his attempts through the Illinois Freedom of Information Act to see any of the reports regarding the case, and the suit was filed, in part, to obtain access to those documents. "We have not seen document No. 1 from any of those agencies," he said, including a 300-or-so-page report from the Illinois State Police's Division of Internal Investigation. At about 6 a.m., June 23, 2005, nearly four dozen officers served a search warrant after spending two months investigating marijuana production on the property. An official report given at a coroner's inquest last year stated officers went to the upper floor and found Green hiding in a "hole type area against a wall." Police used "flash-bang" grenades designed to disorient a person but shot Green when he came out with a handgun pointed at them. Ginzkey, however disputes that, saying an independent forensic pathologist believed many of the shots were to Green's back, not to his chest as earlier reported. Also, the attorney states, not all of the action took place upstairs. "It was an upstairs room that Green allegedly confronted the police with a handgun, but there is a lengthy trail of blood throughout the downstairs. The blood is human, and DNA testing shows it is David Green's," Ginzkey said. "So, the shooting was not confined to upstairs." Another man was charged in connection with several marijuana plants found on the property. Daniel C. Matheny pleaded guilty last November in Fulton County Circuit Court to unlawful production of marijuana plants. He was sentenced to two years of probation and 30 days in jail. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman