Posted on 10/06/2012 9:48:13 AM PDT by Altariel
Tamon Robinson was in coma after struck by cop vehicle
TAMON ROBINSON tried to outrun cops, but couldnt.
The 27-year-old coffee barista died in April after being struck by an NYPD squad car that began chasing him as he swiped paver stones in the predawn light at his Brooklyn housing project.
Now his moms being chased anew, hounded by a collection agency hired by the city with a cruel final demand, the Daily News has learned.
The city has ordered her to pay the $710 cost of repairing the police car that killed her boy.
Were still grieving, and this is like a slap in the face, Robinsons mom, Laverne Dobbinson, 45, told The News.
They want my son to pay for damage to the vehicle that killed him. Its crazy.
The blood-money letter dated Sept. 27 and mailed to her son seeks $710 for property damage to a vehicle owned by the New York Police Department.
It also threatens to slap the family with a lawsuit if the claim isnt paid.
Isnt there respect for the dead? asked John Torrence, 50, the victims uncle.
Police said Robinson was fleeing after being caught red-handed stealing the decorative stones from the grounds of the Bayview Houses in Canarsie on April 12.
He ran toward his building on E. 102nd St., but he was struck by the vehicle driven by Officer Volkan Uretener.
Robinson slipped into a coma and never regained consciousness, dying six days later of blunt impact head injuries.
The city medical examiner ruled his death an accident.
A spokesman for Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes said Thursday that the incident remains under investigation. The NYPDs Internal Affairs Bureau was also probing allegations from witnesses that Robinson was deliberately mowed down.
Photos taken of the squad car show a large indentation on the front, left-hand side of the vehicle.
Dobbinsons lawyer, Sanford Rubenstein, has filed a notice of intent to sue the city, and hes warned the NYPD not to do any repairs. Any modifications to the car would be a violation of a court order to preserve it as evidence in the pending criminal investigation.
Rubenstein called the $710 bill a disgrace.
In my 40 years of practicing law in this city I have never seen anything as heartless as this, he said.
A man who identified himself as a paralegal for the law firm of Linebarger Goggan Blair & Sampson, which was hired by the city to collect the money, said he is barred by federal law from discussing the notice with anyone but Robinson or a representative of his family.
An NYPD spokesman did not return a call or email seeking comment.
Dobbinson said her family has been dismayed from the start by the lack of respect shown by the city. As Robinson lay brain dead in Brookdale Medical Center, cops kept him shackled to his bed under police guard.
Dobbinson said she had to get permission from the NYPD to visit her sons bedside and was permitted to stay for only 20 minutes.
In a made-for-movie twist, on the day of Robinsons funeral, cops broke down the door of the familys apartment and later acknowledged they had executed a search warrant at the wrong location. The city repaired the door the same day, according to Dobbinson.
At the time of his death, Robinson worked at a Connecticut muffin shop in Fort Greene, but also tried to make extra money hawking items, including the paving stones, to scrap dealers, his mother said.
Dobbinson suggested that instead of repairing the damaged squad car, NYPD officials should instead make sure its never again returned to patrol.
Just like those officers shouldnt be on the street, either, she said.
And that means exactly what?
Just saying. There’s always two sides. The Post never mentioned the letter being revoked and all that.
Just saying. There’s always two sides. The Post never mentioned the letter being revoked and all that.
Too busy with the Polanco homicide.
Fixed it. Now if you accidently kill yourself fleeing from police whose fault is that?
No. The police did not intentionally try to run down and kill this person because he was stealing some pavement stones. But running from the police during a robbery is not a good idea. It can lead to unforeseen circumstances such as getting run down by a police car.
That he may be stealing because he doesn't have anything.
Yes,there are two sides.If,by chance,the cop was wrong about the dead guy having been stealing then all bets are clearly off.If the cop acted in a wildly irresponsible fashion by chasing the guy that,too,would paint a different picture.But,for example,take that case in Midtown Manhattan a few weeks ago where a guy murdered his boss,was chased by the cops and shot dead.Several innocent civilians were hurt in that police gunfire.Under the law,the dead guy is responsible for the injuries suffered by innocent civilians.Same here...the guy stole...the cops tried to detain him...he fled...they chased...the cop car was damaged.The dead guy's responsible for that damage under the law.
Or that he had found that kind of theft to be lucrative and was making a decent "living".
I don’t understand why a woman is held liable for damage done by her adult son. If he were a minor, I’d get it.
never mind, I read the other comments, I see now that it would be his estate, if any, that owes. Which makes fiscal sense.
It was about the letter that was rescinded. The Post never mentioned that. I’m thinking The Post just wanted to incite outrage. Sells papers.
The deceased had at least $700 worth of paving stones and a couple of bricks as his estate. The city street dept., the police, the tax men, the lawyers, the hospital, the ambulance service, the doctors, the funeral home, the florist, all are trying to figure how to divide the estate.
In a made-for-movie twist, on the day of Robinsons funeral, cops broke down the door of the familys apartment and later acknowledged they had executed a search warrant at the wrong location.
I understand that. But there was no allegation she’d violated creditor rights or that the city had filled a claim in probate.
The second story makes sense. The first was blarney.
See post #34. Doesn’t that seem like a very bizarre coincidence?
Didn’t the old Soviets charge the families for the cost of the bullet used to execute their family members?
Unreal.
Indeed.
It really doesn’t look good for the officers with the apparent retaliation (”Wrong house” raid). But government employees really don’t think about how such blatant criminal corruption causes them to lose supporters and sympathy.
“The State will not tolerate anything but immediate and quiet compliance, Citizen. You must be punished.”
The raid wasn’t an “accident”.
Simple harassment.
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