Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jul 2003 Source: Pensacola News Journal (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Pensacola News Journal Contact: http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1675 Author: Sean Smith and Steve Mraz ACLU URGES REVIEW OF SHOOTINGS Citizens Panel Sought To Examine Deputies Conduct American Civil Liberties Union of Florida leaders are asking the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate what it calls a "pattern of fatal police shootings by the Escambia County Sheriff's Office." Civil rights marches, state law enforcement investigations and special training have not stemmed what local civil rights groups believe is a burgeoning crisis in community and police relations. "There are issues here of policy and competence. It is the job of the police to apprehend a person and take a person into custody," said ACLU of Florida Executive Director Howard Simon. "When the person you are trying to apprehend ends up dying, that's not a successful police operation." The ACLU and LeRoy Boyd of the local civil rights group, Movement for Change, have invited groups such as the NAACP and Escambia Sociology Center and other community organizations to start a dialogue on creating a citizens' review panel, Simon said. They say forming such a panel to review police conduct is the only way to restore trust in law enforcement. "We want to nip this in the bud. We believe bringing the community in to solve what is a community problem will be successful," said Susan Watson, chairwoman of the Pensacola chapter of the ACLU. "It doesn't need to be an 'us versus them' situation. We all live here. We want our sheriff's department to protect us. We don't want to be afraid of them." The call for a federal investigation comes after two men were killed in confrontations with Escambia sheriff's deputies in the past two weeks. The deaths bring to 14 the number of fatal shootings involving Escambia Sheriff's deputies since 1994. Three of those have occurred since Sheriff Ron McNesby took office in 2001. Lathern Broughton, 64, was shot and killed when an Escambia County Sheriff's Office Special Weapons and Tactics team raided his Ensley home June 16. David S. Lewandowski, who was naked and bleeding after an incident on Blue Angel Parkway and Cerny Road on June 26, was shot in the arm while struggling with deputies. A preliminary medical examiner's report indicated the gunshot wound did not kill Lewandowski. Cuts he received from punching a window might have killed him, but final results of the report are pending. Lewandowski was shot at least once with a deputy's Taser, a stun device that pumps 50,000 volts into a person, but the shots failed to stop him. McNesby declined to comment on ACLU's request. Deputies Cleared In Deaths The request includes all fatal deputy-involved shootings since 1994. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has investigated several of the shootings. The FDLE forwarded its evidence to the State Attorney's Office. In some cases, a coroner's inquest was called. But deputies were cleared in 12 of the shootings, including the shooting of 20-year-old Marvin Juan Hudson, reportedly a drug dealer who was shot in the back of the head as he ran from deputy Lee Perry in 1999. Hudson was unarmed. "Thus far, all the investigations have come back as justifiable homicide," Boyd said. "There is no trust, and, at the same time, the law enforcement does not appear to have a process put in place to resolve the issues about killing someone, about going overboard with their reactions." The FDLE is waiting on toxicology and ballistic test results before it finishes its investigation into the Broughton shooting. In its investigation into the Lewandowski shooting, the FDLE is conducting numerous interviews. Once the FDLE concludes each investigation, that information will be forwarded to the State Attorney's Office, said Lisa Lagergren, FDLE spokeswoman. It should not be much longer before the FDLE finishes the Broughton investigation, Lagergren said. Panel Modeled After Miami Sheriff's Office officials took steps to improve deputy training after the rash of shootings. In 2002, McNesby said he told deputies that lethal force was to be used only as a last resort, and deputies who fire their weapons cannot expect automatic support. In 2001, sheriff's deputies and other officers in Escambia County completed training with the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute for Non- Violence. That training came after an April 2001 protest in which more than 250 people marched in downtown Pensacola to protest the shootings. Simon based the panel idea on a model in Miami, where a federal investigation resulted in indictments of about a dozen officers after a number of shootings there. The voters adopted a review panel by a ratio of more than 3-1, Simon said. "We channeled that community anger into something that was very helpful prospectively," Simon said. "It has the capacity to engage in independent investigations. ... It is an institution to which people in the community can file complaints." Nationwide, most civilian review panels review policy and recommend changes, Simon said. The ACLU has invited several groups to start a community discussion on the issue before approaching the Escambia County Board of Commissioners to approve the panel. Ideally, Simon said, the panel would be appointed by commissioners but not politically tied to them. The panel would be independent of the law enforcement community but might include law enforcement members. "It sounds like a good idea anytime you can involve citizens," said Marie Young, Escambia County Commission chairwoman. The panel should represent a cross section of the community, said Elvin McCorvey, president of the Pensacola chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "I think that would be a good move in the right direction if structured properly," he said. The panel would review conduct of officers beyond arrests and violent confrontations. It would provide a review of formal complaints and allow simultaneous investigations of incidents, not merely waiting to be handed the results of a police investigation, Simon said. Past Shootings Fatal shootings by the Escambia Sheriff's Office since 1992: June 26, 2003: David Sean Lewandowski, 26, is shot by deputies in the woods behind a home on Cerny Road. Lewandowski was behaving erratically in a convenience store on Blue Angel Parkway nearby. He left the store, stripped nude and after dodging traffic, yelling at passing drivers and dropping to the ground in prayer in the roadway, tried to break into a house on Cerny Road. Deputies tasered him at least three times, but he continued on into the woods, where he was shot. A preliminary report from the medical examiner's office indicates he may have bled to death from the cuts he received breaking in the window of the home of Clayton and Dorothy McPhaul. Three deputies - Jennifer Amerson, Kevin Eggleton and Christina Sudduth - were placed on administrative leave. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is investigating. June 16, 2003: Lathern Broughton, 64, is shot by the SWAT team when they enter his house after a 2-hour standoff outside Broughton's Ensley home. Broughton argued with his wife, who fled their house and called 911. He shot at deputies who arrived to investigate her call, shooting out the window of a cruiser, then barricaded himself in his house. After 2 hours of negotiations, the SWAT team used flashbang grenades to enter the house and were fired upon. Family members say police could have waited Broughton out. Seven deputies were placed on administrative leave and restored to active duty pending a psychological evaluation. They were: Mickey O'Reilly, Stanley Reed, Kevin Eggleton, Tony Tampary, Rick Powers, Jared Seabury and James Johnson. FDLE is investigating. May 20, 2001: Michael Paul Robb, 57, of Pace is shot when deputies Kevin Eggleton and Johnny Perkins enter the Cantonment house of Lance Krieger, 35, and find Robb straddling Krieger holding a knife to his chest. They repeatedly tell Robb to drop the knife, but he does not and both deputies open fire. It is the first deputy-involved shooting of Sheriff Ron McNesby's tenure. Oct. 12, 2000: Gregory Kidd is shot by deputy Kevin Coxwell. Kidd, 32, kills a police dog and shoots deputy Mike Mayne. July 22, 2000: David Chaussee, 31, tells deputies they will have to kill him. When he rams a patrol car, he is shot by deputy James Guthrie. June 8, 2000: Otto Fitts, 33, is killed by deputy Mickey O'Reilly while inside the Escambia County Jail as Fitts holds a female sheriff's employee at gunpoint. Oct. 29, 1999: Deputy Lee Perry kills drug suspect Marvin Hudson, 20, as he runs from an undercover drug sale in the Pine Forest area. Dec. 19, 1998: Deputy Mike Workman kills Timothy Jirgens, 47, as he steps out of a Comfort Inn room on New Warrington Road waving a .357- caliber Magnum toward deputies. May 14, 1998: Deputy Bart Fryer struggles with and then shoots and kills Jerry Anthony Campbell as he runs through a Brownsville neighborhood after robbing an 89-year-old man in his home. June 15, 1997: Lt. Bill Chavers shoots and kills Casey Brown, 19, after Brown tries to run over Chavers with a car on Pensacola Beach. Minutes earlier, a 15- year-old girl had identified Brown as the man who raped her. May 20, 1996: As Deputy Bart Fryer searches John Sexton Jr. for drugs, Sexton grabs Fryer's flashlight and swings it at him. Fryer fires a single bullet into Sexton's chest, killing the 36- year-old man. Dec. 13, 1995: Deputies Demetrius Cain and Van Weeks, trying to stop an anticipated pizza delivery robbery, kill Anthony Gee after the 15-year-old sticks an unloaded shotgun in Cain's face. Feb. 12, 1995: Lt. LaRon Summerlin kills Ronald Pinyan, 32, after Pinyan grabs and fires Sgt. Tom Jones' gun during an attempted arrest. July 21, 1994: Lawrence Gotto, a fleeing murder suspect, sprays bullets into rush-hour traffic on New Warrington Road. He injures three deputies before he is shot and killed. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom