Update: Phoenix officer calls 5-day suspension too harsh for running and slamming young girls head into concrete wall.

This YouTube video sparked a yearlong investigation. A disciplinary review board recommended a 32-hour or 4-day suspension. But Chief Daniel Garcia thought the punishment should be more severe and gave Larrison a 40-hour or 5-day suspension. Typically that’s the maximum number of days you can suspend an officer.

So a 4 day punishment is adequate? And the asshole fights a 5 day punishment? They’re both unreasonable! That asshole needs to be fired. What he did could’ve given that girl brain damage.
Look, the cop assaulted her and he did it under the colors of his badge. He should be served with the same assault charges that the general public is charged with.
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Update: Phoenix officer calls 5-day suspension too harsh for running and slamming young girls head into concrete wall.

This YouTube video sparked a yearlong investigation. A disciplinary review board recommended a 32-hour or 4-day suspension. But Chief Daniel Garcia thought the punishment should be more severe and gave Larrison a 40-hour or 5-day suspension. Typically that’s the maximum number of days you can suspend an officer.

So a 4 day punishment is adequate? And the asshole fights a 5 day punishment? They’re both unreasonable! That asshole needs to be fired. What he did could’ve given that girl brain damage.

Look, the cop assaulted her and he did it under the colors of his badge. He should be served with the same assault charges that the general public is charged with.

Read More
News video mirror

Phoenix Arizona police

Phoenix Arizona police

PHOENIX –   The family members of John Loxas, Jr., who was killed instantly after being shot in the forehead while holding his seven-month-old infant grandson, today filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the City of Scottsdale and the Scottsdale Police Department. The 50-year-old Scottsdale man was shot in February by Officer James Peters without warning and despite having no weapon and posing no threat.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Loxas’ daughter, Alexandria Loxas, and his father John Loxas, Sr. They are being represented by attorneys with the Chicago-based law firm of Loevy & Loevy and the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona. The plaintiffs seek an unspecified amount of damages.

“My father was my best friend,” said Alexandria Loxas, 23, whose son, Neo, fell to the ground after her father was shot. “I felt safe knowing I had him in our life because he was always there to protect us, and now he’s gone forever.”

In addition to listing Officer Peters as a defendant, the lawsuit also names Scottsdale Police Chief Alan Rodbell, arguing he failed to implement adequate policies to hold the City of Scottsdale and abusive officers accountable.   Officer Peters was involved in an unprecedented seven shootings over the past ten years – six of them fatal. A Scottsdale Police Department official acknowledged that Peters’ history of shooting civilians was “an anomaly in our department, and in most departments.” Peters also had a long history of excessive use of force against civilians, including dozens of incidents involving Tasers; he was the subject of four separate citizen complaints in the three months leading up to the fatal shooting of Loxas.

“There may well be no other police officer in the country who has been involved in more fatal shooting incidents over this time period,” said attorney John Loevy of Loevy & Lovey. “Our lawsuit alleges that the Department had no business trusting him with a gun after he had killed so many other Scottsdale residents.”

The incident that led to Loxas’ death occurred shortly after 6 p.m. on February 14th, when police officers showed up at his house after he got into a dispute with his neighbors who called police.  Several Scottsdale police officers arrived at the house and confronted Loxas while he was standing in the doorway of his home. He was unarmed and holding his grandson in his arms. Without any warning, Officer Peters shot Loxas in the forehead with a scope-equipped rifle, killing him instantly. None of the other officers at the scene fired a weapon. 

There is no indication that since starting as Police Chief in 2003, Defendant Rodbell has ever determined that a   shooting by a Scottsdale officer that resulted in death was improper or outside of police department policy.  The complaint outlines the inadequacies in the city’s internal review process for officer-involved fatal shootings, including the failure to obtain testimony from civilian witnesses and the reliance on the involved officers’ self-serving version of events.

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