Thursday, October 24, 2019

COP MURDERS IN AMERICA - THUG COP RAY VILLALVAZO SHOOTS 16-YEAR-OLD ISIAH MURRIETTA-GOLDING IN THE HEAD

SHITBAG COP SAYS HE WAS AFRAID OF A 5'4" BOY!




"Police chief Jerry Dyer subsequently maintained that the shooting was justified. He claimed that the unarmed boy “reached into his waistband several times,” and that the officer fired in self-defense because he was afraid for his life."

Never-before-seen surveillance video shows a California cop fatally shooting an unarmed 16-year-old boy in back of the head while he was running away, as his partner shouts 'good shot'

  • Isiah Murrietta-Golding was wanted in connection to a homicide in April 2017 

  • New video of his death has been released as part of wrongful death lawsuit 

  • It shows Fresno cop Sgt Ray Villalvazo shooting him in the back of the head 

  • Partner of the cop who opened fire is heard after saying, 'Good shot' 

  • Office of Independent Review later concluded that use of lethal force was justified because police believed teen was reaching for a gun  
Shocking surveillance footage has been released showing the moment California cops shot and killing an unarmed, 16-year-old boy while he was running away.
The never-before-seen video shows Fresno officers gunning down murder suspect Isiah Murrietta-Golding after he fled from a traffic stop.
The clip from surveillance cameras show the pursuing cops shooting him in the back of the head after he jumped over a fence in a bid to escape.
The teen was killed in April 2017, but the video was only released this week as part of a wrongful death lawsuit launched by Murrietta-Golding's family.   
An investigation of the shooting found that the cops' use of lethal force was justified because they thought he was reaching for a gun, but his father thinks the recently-surfaced video shows otherwise. 
Murrietta-Golding was wanted in connection to a homicide when the car he was riding in with his brother was pulled over by police on April 15, 2017. 
Fresno police officer fatally shoots fleeing teen in the back


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This screenshot from a a surveillance video shows a Fresno, California, a police officer fatally shoot 16-year-old  Isiah Murrietta-Golding in April 2017
This screenshot from a a surveillance video shows a Fresno, California, a police officer fatally shoot 16-year-old  Isiah Murrietta-Golding in April 2017 
Murrietta-Golding was a suspect in a homicide
He led police on a chase after a traffic stop, which ended in the yard of a day care center
Murrietta-Golding was a suspect in a homicide. He led police on a chase after a traffic stop, which ended in the yard of a day care center 
After taking just eight steps in the yard, Sgt Ray Villalvazo (pictured behind the fence on the lef) drew his gun and opened fire
After taking just eight steps in the yard, Sgt Ray Villalvazo (pictured behind the fence on the lef) drew his gun and opened fire 

Video shows Fresno police officer shooting unarmed 10th grade boy in the head

A video made public yesterday shows police officer Ray Villalvazo shooting 16-year-old Isiah Murrietta-Golding in the head from behind as he was running away.
Described as a “small boy,” Isiah was 5 foot 4 inches tall and weighed 109 pounds. He was a good student at the Carter G. Woodson school in Fresno, where he was in the 10th grade. He liked sports and playing video games with his siblings.
He was shot in the head on April 14, 2017 in Fresno, California. He died in the hospital several days later.
Police chief Jerry Dyer subsequently 
maintained that the shooting was justified. He 
claimed that the unarmed boy “reached into 
his waistband several times,” and that the 
officer fired in self-defense because he was 
afraid for his life.
The video, taken from a surveillance camera, demonstrates that the official story is a complete fabrication. The boy is shown climbing over the fence of a preschool in broad daylight and then running a few steps onto a sunny green lawn.
He does not “reach into his waistband” once, let alone several times. While one police officer attempts to scale the fence in pursuit, another police officer is shown crouching and firing a single shot through the bars of the fence. The fleeing boy immediately collapses.
The video then shows an officer approaching the boy’s body, jerking it up by one arm like the carcass of a slaughtered animal, kicking it over, pulling the other limp arm out from under the body, and then putting the wrists in handcuffs.
The video was released by Fresno attorney Stuart Chandler, who represents the boy’s father. The boy’s parents have a pending civil rights and wrongful death lawsuit against the officer and the City of Fresno, which is scheduled to proceed to trial next year.
Isiah Murrietta-Golding was apparently targeted in connection with an incident that had happened the previous day. On that day, according to the lawsuit, two teens had gotten into an escalating argument with four men at a pizza take-out in Fresno. Ultimately, one of the teens fired a gun at the car driven by the four men. None of the occupants were struck by the bullets, but the car crashed and the driver was killed. The police claim to have suspected that Isiah was one of the two teens.
When he was pulled over with two other teens the following day, Isiah initially complied with instructions but then attempted to run away. He did not display a weapon, make any threats, or attempt to injure anyone. He ran through a parking lot, “holding a hat in his right hand,” and climbed over a fence bordering the yard of a preschool.
It was a Saturday, so the preschool was closed. After falling clumsily over the other side of the fence, Isiah ran several steps into the yard before being shot from behind. The bullet tore through his occipital lobe, according to the lawsuit. On the video, another police officer can be heard reacting to the shooting by shouting “good shot.”
The lawsuit also alleges that several minutes elapsed before medical care was summoned for the critically injured boy. When paramedics arrived, the boy was in a coma and was breathing only weakly. However, the officers refused requests from the paramedics to remove the handcuffs.
Police shootings are an industry in the United States. Police department policies are carefully crafted and calibrated to embrace the broadest range of wanton violence. After each act of brutality, an “internal investigation,” conducted by the police themselves, is convened to help perpetrators polish their story, to confiscate all of the available evidence, and to discredit the victim.
The internal investigation almost inevitably concludes that the officers’ actions were “within policy.” Meanwhile, specialized law firms are engaged to defend the officers in court. Investigators are dispatched to dig up dirt on the victim and the victim’s family. “Police practices” experts are retained and paid hundreds of dollars an hour to bolster the officers’ story.
On average, police in America kill more than a thousand people per year, maiming and disfiguring many more. This epidemic of police violence enjoys the full backing of the state, from local administrations all the way to the highest levels of the federal government.
At the request of lawyers from both Democratic and Republican administrations, the Supreme Court has repeatedly intervened in recent years to expand the authoritarian doctrine of “qualified immunity” for police officers.
President Trump has made the celebration of official brutality a centerpiece of his fascistic appeal to police officers. “When you see these towns and when you see these thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy wagon, you just see them thrown in, rough,” Trump gloated in a 2017 speech. “I said, please don’t be too nice.”
At a recent rally, Trump appeared flanked by police officers wearing “Cops for Trump” shirts.
In the case of Isiah Murrietta-Golding, the results of the internal investigation were announced in March 2018: “Sgt. Villalvazo’s actions were within department policy.”
The Fresno Bee reports that despite the release of the video, the Fresno Police Officers Association “is in full support of the sergeant and says its members believe the shooting to be justified.”


Officer Resigns After Being 


Filmed Slamming 11-Year-Old 


Girl To Ground



The New Mexico police officer accused the girl of assaulting a school administrator. “This proved not to be true,” his police chief later said.


A New Mexico police officer is off the force after body camera footage captured him slamming an 11-year-old girl to the ground while ignoring school officials’ commands to release her.
Farmington police officer Zachary Christensen resigned after bodycam footage taken on Aug. 27 showed him wrestling the sobbing girl after she was accused of being disruptive at her middle school, including taking extra milk from the cafeteria.
The officer had been assisting school administrators in trying to get her to cooperate when she appeared to push past a man identified as the school principal, prompting assault allegations by Christensen, the video shows.



“OK, I’ve had enough of this. Take your bag off. You’re done. You are done. ... You’re not going to assault the principal,” he’s heard telling her before pushing her into a brick wall and then to the ground.
The administrators repeatedly asked the officer to allow the girl to stand, with one man telling him: “We are not going to use excessive force to get this done.”
“We’re not excessive,” Christensen responds as the girl cries for him to stop.
Farmington Police Chief Steve Hebbe, in a statement on Sunday, said an internal affairs investigation found that there were policy violations and Christensen’s claim of assaulting the school administrator was “proven not to be true.”
Hebbe said he has personally met with the girl and her family and apologized to her for how she was treated. He added that the case has been referred to the New Mexico state police for possible charges and that a supervisor who was at the scene has been reassigned and demoted.
“There’s no excuse for the way this girl was treated,” Hebbe said.
The scuffle left the girl with a mild concussion as well as scrapes and bruises, Hebbe told the Farmington Daily Times.
The case was also referred to the San Juan County District Attorney’s Office, which the Daily Times reported has no plans to press criminal charges against either the officer or the student.


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