A man’s attempt to bring the ashes of his grandfather home to Indianapolis ended with an angry scene in a Florida airport, with the ashes spilled on the terminal floor.

John Gross, a resident of Indianapolis’ south side, was leaving Florida with the remains of his grandfather — Mario Mark Marcaletti, a Sicilian immigrant who worked for the Penn Central Railroad in central Indiana — in a tightly sealed jar marked “Human Remains.”

Gross said he didn’t think he’d have a problem, until he ran into a TSA agent at the Orlando airport.

“They opened up my bag, and I told them, ‘Please, be careful. These are my grandpa’s ashes,’” Gross told RTV6’s Norman Cox. “She picked up the jar. She opened it up.

“I was told later on that she had no right to even open it, that they could have used other devices, like an X-ray machine. So she opened it up. She used her finger and was sifting through it. And then she accidentally spilled it.”

Gross says about a quarter to a third of the contents spilled on the floor, leaving him frantically trying to gather up as much as he could while anxious passengers waited behind him.

“She didn’t apologize. She started laughing. I was on my hands and knees picking up bone fragments. I couldn’t pick up all, everything that was lost. I mean, there was a long line behind me.”

TSA rules say a crematory container in carry-on baggage must pass through the X-ray machine at the security checkpoint.

But the agency’s own website says human remains are to be opened under, “no circumstances.”

“I want an apology,” said Gross. “I want an apology from TSA. I want an apology from the lady who opened the jar and laughed at me. I want them to help me understand where they get off treating people like this.”                                    

ORLANDO, Fla. —

A federal jury has found an Orlando police officer guilty of using excessive force when he broke an 84-year-old man’s neck during an arrest in 2010.

Officer Travis Lamont broke Daniel Daley’s neck while performing what Lamont referred to as a controlled takedown.

Daley’s attorney asked the jury for more than $1 million in damages. Instead, the jury awarded Daley $880,000 for pain and suffering, as well as for past and future medical bills.

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ORLANDO, Fla. — An officer accused of throwing a woman to the ground, knocking her teeth out, did use excessive force, according to an internal investigation by the Orlando Police Department.

OPD Internal Affairs said in a news conference on Thursday that Officer Livio Beccaccio will face consequences for the incident involving 20-year-old Lisa Wareham.

Beccaccio was suspended without pay. Officers said that was the stiffest punishment they could give Beccaccio with current union labor agreements.

The Orlando Police Department also apologized for Beccaccio’s actions.

Last September, Orlando Police Chief Paul Rooney said a 42-page criminal investigation report by the department shows Beccaccio did nothing criminal when he restrained Wareham.

The February incident was captured on surveillance video.

Police called what the officer did an arm bar technique, which caused the 100-pound Wareham to land face-first on the ground, suffering two broken front teeth and bruises.

“I tasted some blood and I thought I maybe had a busted lip, and that’s when I realized I spit my teeth into my hand,” Wareham said.

“That one moment in time the officer takes her and throws her face-first into the pavement, that is force far in excess of what was necessary,” said Wareham’s attorney, Andrew Zelman.

“They’re going to hit you with a nightstick, with their fist, throw you to the ground; they’re going to get away with it. Why? Because they’re a cop,” said Wareham.

LAKELAND | A Winter Haven man died because of the way Orlando police officers subdued him — including with repeated jolts from a Taser — on the sidewalk at Universal CityWalk, according to the recently released results of a 10-month inquiry into his death.

A medical examiner determined the death was a homicide. Prosecutors ruled Orlando police officers didn’t use excessive force and won’t face charges in the April 22, 2011, death of Adam Spencer Johnson, 33, who had struggled with them outside a movie theater.

But a review of reports on Johnson’s perplexing death raises questions, including:

Was he shocked for too long and too many times with a Taser? OPD Officer Edward Michael used the weapon while he and three other officers wrestled with Johnson after they said he became unruly and uncontrollable.

Why didn’t Orlando paramedics arrive sooner? The Fire Department has come under criticism by a law enforcement expert, Johnson’s family and a lawyer representing his family.

A recently released autopsy report found no drugs in

Johnson’s body, including alcohol.

During the altercation with police, he was shocked four times with a Taser, in bursts 31, 5, 4 and 5 seconds long.

“Thirty-one seconds? That’s way too much,” said Andrew J. Scott, a Taser expert and former Boca Raton police chief contacted by The Ledger. Scott owns a police consulting business and says the Taser is a good police tool — if used properly.

Scott said five-second shock cycles are recommended by the International Association of Chiefs of Police, and no more than three shocks should be administered.

The danger of a 31-second shock is considerable, Scott said, because it can cause the subject’s lungs to quit functioning, as reports said Johnson’s did.

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