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Could Key West Reach the Ferguson Flashpoint?
Key West The Newspaper ^ | August 22, 2014 | Arnaud and Naja Girard

Posted on 08/24/2014 4:11:34 AM PDT by Elle Bee

“Cartwright began yelling as loud as he could, and almost immediately a large crowd began forming around us […] Within minutes a crowd of at least 50 bystanders surrounded us and Det. Wormington called for additional Officers while I held down Cartwright.”

Police officers were arresting bad boy Ricky Cartwright who had ridden his bicycle through a stop sign while texting, allegedly with a beer in his hand. They tased him in the back. He was now screaming in pain in the middle of the road, attracting an angry crowd which, according to Detective Siracuse’s police report, kept “drawing closer and closer… despite numerous commands to stay back.”

No, this is not Ferguson, Missouri. This is Bahama Village, Key West, May 9, 2014. Detective Siracuse had just tased a black man on Emma Street and yes this is the same Siracuse who three years ago tased Matthew Murphy into a coma.

On May 9th, lost in their imaginary war, Detectives Siracuse and Wormington believe they are now under siege. Wormington calls for the cavalry – literally – First on scene is an officer riding a horse; the one you see during Fantasy Fest. He is working “crowd control” by rearing the butt of his horse into the crowd of protesters. More police cars show up. Siracuse and Wormington decide it’s safer to move north to the next corner of Emma Street where they would be more protected. Quite a circus.

So, could Key West reach that “flashpoint”? Could we find ourselves watching angry mobs throw rocks through shop windows on Duval Street?

Why were the residents of Bahama Village so upset? According to one bystander, Siracuse kept jerking the electric wires connected to the Taser probes buried in Cartright’s back causing him to scream in pain.

In the crowd, Siracuse recognizes a man he knew as Johnny Taylor. Taylor is visibly upset at Siracuse’s treatment of Cartwright. [Taylor is the man wearing the neck brace in the video.]

“Ya’ll quick to put that shit in somebody but y’all don’t want to put that shit outta nobody,” Taylor is heard saying on the dash cam video.

A female voice:

“Illegal search! Illegal search! What they stop the man for? For nothin. They stopped him for nothin.”

After sending Cartwright off to jail, Siracuse came back to arrest Taylor for “resisting an officer without violence.”

Protests against police methods have now become one of the most explosive issues in the nation.

“Freedom of speech,” said Taylor, “I can say whatever I want to say. What are you arresting me for? For speaking my mind?” Three months later Taylor is still in jail awaiting trial.

Siracuse disagrees with Taylor on the free speech issue. In his report he claims that Taylor “kept drawing closer and closer, egging on the crowd,” that he ordered Taylor to stay back but that he kept coming. He finally claims that another officer, Officer Hall, was also unsuccessful in containing Taylor. The problem is the dash cam video clearly shows Taylor very upset, but not moving from the area where he stood when the incident began, even after Cartwright is taken away in a police car. It’s hard to discount that officers intended to retaliate against free speech in the charge against Taylor.

It appears that police officers don’t react well to criticism and have alienated themselves from many black communities. This is what is really at stake in these protests. As in Ferguson, this explosive mix was not created in one day. The shooting of Michael Brown was just “the straw that broke the camel’s back,” as one Ferguson resident interviewed by CBS News put it. Abuse and apparently police discrimination against blacks had been going on for years in Ferguson.

Stopping and searching Cartwright gave officers the opportunity to [allegedly] find a minute amount of drugs [which apparently was so small that Cartwirght managed to smash it into the ground.] But how many young black men are frisked in this way before police score that half-gram of cocaine?

One resident explained: “By the time the police has searched 100 people for drugs, nobody cares if on the 101st time they caught a guy with a crack rock. Everybody hates their guts by then, for not letting us have a life.”

Some comments are more colorful: “The police ain’t worth two dead flies in Chinese money.”

“All people want is to go about their business in peace.”

The methods used by certain officers who work Bahama Village are simply appalling. Officer Siracuse is now famous for the latex gloves that he slaps on in order to, in plain view of the public, proceed with cavity searches of suspected drug dealers. There are at least two videos showing black men on the street with their legs spread apart, while Siracuse apparently sticks his fingers up their butts.

“We still have rights,” said Bobby Mosby, who personally experienced Siracuse’s humiliating search methods, “I could see doing that inside, at the jail. But out in public, in front of everybody?” As a matter of fact, those searches are prohibited. Under Florida Statute 901.211, “visual or manual inspection of genitals; buttocks; anus; breasts,” can only be performed “on premises where the search cannot be observed by persons not physically conducting … the search pursuant to this section.”

Glenn Hayes, also a black man from Bahama Village, was filmed standing at the back of a police cruiser. Sergeant Pablo Rodriguez kicks his feet apart while Officer Siracuse gets into “exploration mode”.

“I didn’t know y”all could go in their behinds and look in their assholes,” says Sheila Butler sarcastically, as she films the whole thing. “I didn’t do it,” laughs Rodriguez. Hayes asked for a rape test when he was booked into the Monroe County jail.

“This is not new,” says attorney, Julio Margalli, “my office used to be on Petronia Street. I remember looking at the police systematically stopping and frisking black kids — boys really. I got so sick of it I threatened one officer with a lawsuit. And what happened? He came back the next day to slap a parking ticket on my car. My car, I might add, parked inside of my own parking lot.”

Three weeks ago we reported on an incident that made us about fall off of our chairs. Detective Leahy had taken three officers over to Grandma Yvonne Edwards house in the Village. Wearing hoods on their heads, they burst into the tiny home to arrest then 23 year-old black resident, Shamika Clark on a theft charge. [We wrote: “granted the hoods were not white and pointy, but what could possess four white police officers to do such a thing considering this country’s history?”]

This week we discovered a disturbing photograph those officers took of their catch: handcuffed, partially-clad, Shamika. “They stayed way too long with her inside that bathroom,” said grandma Edwards, “Why wasn’t there a woman officer in there with them?”

No drugs, no weapons, the whole affair revolved around a dispute between two ex-lovers over the ownership of a puppy and some electronics. With what ease the Court handed Shamika five years probation and 15 months in prison!

We also reported that the same Detective Leahy took a SWAT team over to an apartment at Fort Street Village last April. There they found eleven year old Shanyia Winn home alone and pointed all of their guns at her. Leahy interrogated her outside her home with a shotgun to her head. Did we say she was eleven years old? Eleven years old!!! “They pointed guns at me so that if I had moved or my dog had barked I would have been dead.”

The same day KWPD officers stopped a car carrying Sheila Carey. They pulled her out of the car and pushed her to the ground to handcuff her. Then they forced her six-year old son and her eleven-year old daughter out at gunpoint. The police claimed they were looking for Carey’s boyfriend Marvin Smith, but it was later learned that he was already in police custody at the time. [We asked, “Would these children have been treated that way if they had been white?”]

Warning the City Commission last Tuesday about the possibility of similarities between the problems in Ferguson and in our own City, Key West citizen activist Christine Russel quoted from the poem “Harlem” by Langston Hughes. “What happens to a dream deferred?… Does it explode?”

But Mayor Cates dismissed Russel’s concerns saying [and we are not making this up], “There are organizations all over this town being involved with children… They try to give them brand name stuff that people donate so they do have some sense of pride, so they can go on and be productive.”

The most disturbing thing is not that much the unnecessary brutality, but the fact that it appears to be systemic, with the City seemingly willing to rubberstamp, disguise, or cover-up what is occurring.

When Glenn Hayes arrived at the jail complaining of Siracuse’s intrusive cavity search, the jail called the hospital about a rape test, but it also contacted the KWPD. According to Hayes KWPD officials asked the jail not to send Hayes to the hospital because FDLE was going to send their own nurse to conduct the examination. “I have no idea what is going on with my complaint,” said Hayes who is at the Monroe County Detention Center awaiting trial.

As observed in the Charles Eimers death-in-custody case, FDLE appears to have an overly cozy relationship with KWPD, and the fact is, evidence incriminating to the police has been jeopardized: Eimers body was nearly cremated before autopsy on FDLE’s watch. Mathew Shaun Murphy’s Taser accident was never even investigated. Donnie Lee, the Chief of Police, appears ready to add to misinformation about police activities, publicly stating that Siracuse repeatedly ordered Murphy to stop fighting before firing his Taser, even though that account is contradicted by all witness statements, including the officer’s own testimony.

In Bahama Village, the police are the “Princes of the Projects.” It seems that the Housing Authority rarely has to bother with civil process. Complaints by tenants are often met with police force. Any guest or family member can be issued a “No Trespass Warning” followed by an arrest. Police officers are literally on the Housing Authority’s payroll. The entire community lives in a parallel legal universe.

And the police, apparently stick to their own, no matter what. Officer Henry Arroyo Jr. was recently discharged from the force over several very serious accusations of child sexual molestation. He was, however, immediately hired by the Housing Authority, which already employs many of his fellow officers as security guards. No one, aside from the residents, seems to be concerned that an alleged sexual predator was hired to work in housing complexes where hundreds of children are at risk. The residents of course perceive it as yet another slap in the face.

People wonder if our police force is lost in a dark and disconnected dream of paramilitary violence. There are approximately 90 Key West police officers and so far 99% of the problems that have been reported to The Blue Paper have been about the actions of a handful of officers. Those few, however, appear to be operating under the total protection of a system that will obstruct justice, endorse the officers’ lies and even lie for them, defend them at any cost, or simply fail to take action, all in line with what the good Doctor King called, “The intolerable silence of the good people.”

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TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: fergson; keywest; police
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To: PeteB570
Go back a few issues in the newspaper at the link There's a story almost every week. But nothing ever happens

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21 posted on 08/24/2014 4:55:48 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Look it up it’s true. Matty would provide little boys to the wealthy patrons then rob and/or blackmail them. NYPD just looked the other way while the genovisse family ran a string of unlicensed clubs in and around the Village,


22 posted on 08/24/2014 5:00:03 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: DaveA37
>"consider if YOU were a police officer and had to put up with the lying, stealing, looting, murdering, etc. “street rat” mentality they deal with everyday."

Sounds like a good reason to repeal drug prohibition laws!

Take away the LE targets and they return to public servants instead of tyrants.

Nazi drug squads kickin in doors in the middle of the night with machineguns and grenades dont make many friends. No wonder the people and the cops are paranoid of each other. And the prohibition cartel rolls on.

23 posted on 08/24/2014 5:01:22 AM PDT by rawcatslyentist (Jeremiah 50:32 "The arrogant one will stumble and fall ; / ?)
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To: Elle Bee

How many of those problems have the created for themselves?


24 posted on 08/24/2014 5:02:35 AM PDT by DaveA37
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To: DaveA37

As a police office you are lied to just about every hour dealing with people making very bad / really stupid decisions. It gets harder and harder to be objective. If you were an officer and you saw a guy with an open containersbgo right through a stop sign while texting I think we’d agree we’d pull him over too. But what if he ignored you several times and it was obvious he’s a traffic nightmare waiting to happen? You might taze him too. I don’t think I would have wiggled the wires to cause more pain though. Of course I wasn’t there so who knows what really happened...


25 posted on 08/24/2014 5:02:59 AM PDT by jsanders2001
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To: Elle Bee

Oh, I believe you, but they’ve mythologized the Stonewall Riots into the Bunker Hill of the “battle” for gay rights and no amount of facts is going to change that. Boy, that “blackmailing homosexuals” game must’ve gone the way of the rotary phone and the livery stable by now.


26 posted on 08/24/2014 5:07:06 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself.)
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To: Popman
HA. Well Jessie Jackson can be found in his speedo vacationing on SunSet Key

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27 posted on 08/24/2014 5:07:13 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: DaveA37

I tend to look at it like I do Psychologists/therapists etc.

If the people you deal with the most on a daily basis are nuts in one way or another you tend to look at everyone in the world the same way. The same thing goes for police officers.


28 posted on 08/24/2014 5:07:22 AM PDT by The Working Man
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I suppose they made for easy pickings and the NYPD wen along for the ride so with no place to turn a hand full of people gathered and broke a window. To hear it now they were all gay Rosa Parks torching the East Village

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29 posted on 08/24/2014 5:11:03 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: DaveA37
I know there are a number of “cop haters” here on FR but before you all jump on what I have to say, consider if YOU were a police officer and had to put up with the lying, stealing, looting, murdering, etc. “street rat” mentality they deal with everyday.

Then a person shouldn't become a cop in the first pace if he or she doesn't have the personality and psychological disposition to put up with bad people without abusing them and disregarding the Constitution. This is no different than a teacher who can't stand children or a an EMT who can't stand the sight of blood. Pick a different profession.

Yes, there are rogue cops but by in large, the majority are good cops doing a job most other people would not.

The majority of cops are not good cops as long as they are part of the blue wall of silence, which allows the rogue cops to stay on the force. By analogy, the Honor Code at the United State Military Academy simply states that a "cadet will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do." A cadet who fails to blow the whistle on a fellow cadet is subject to the same discipline as the cadet who lies, cheats, or steals. There is an affirmative duty to speak up and the failure to do so will result in discipline, including, suspension or expulsion from the Academy. All cops should be held to the same standard.

30 posted on 08/24/2014 5:26:54 AM PDT by Labyrinthos
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To: jsanders2001
You understand this is a kid on a bicycle on an island with a 30mph speed limit and a stop sign on every corner?

The big crime down island is bike theft. They're stolen by the dozens painted black, resold and stolen again. But a 120+ man force on a 2x4 island never stops the cycle (no pun intended). There's an ever growing homeless population that has made bicycle theft a thriving business. There are several yards over in Bahamas village where you can find dozens of black bicycles being 'chopped' and resold. The cops never lift a finger. It's a protected racket

burglary muggings. The tourists never come back for trial so why care? Try to file a police report! The make you stand in line outside of the locked station to fill out a form then wait at least an hour to speak to a detective through a bullet proof glass window - he's inside your out in the sun

a very effective way to dissuade citizens from reporting crime and stilling your crime stats

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31 posted on 08/24/2014 5:27:49 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: Labyrinthos
Exactly. Very very well put

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32 posted on 08/24/2014 5:30:25 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: Elle Bee

If its as bad as you say Elle call in the FDLE let them sort out what is going on and let the chips fall where they may.
The FDLE,Fla. Dept. of Law Enforcement, is one of the finest law enforcement agencies in the state(perhaps anywhere) and was created for situations exactly like this one so let them handle this.


33 posted on 08/24/2014 5:30:38 AM PDT by rodguy911 (FreeRepuplic:Land of the Free because of the Brave--Sarah Palin our secret weapon)
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To: Elle Bee

Naja Girard d’Albissin

Addresses
1214 Newton St
Key West, FL 33040-7024

Phone number
305-296-1816

...needs to be called and asked why she is stoking the divisional flames and attempting to get a race war started - instead of writing about true atrocities in the Middle East, especially when it comes to ISIS...


34 posted on 08/24/2014 5:31:20 AM PDT by BCW (ARMIS EXPOSCERE PACEM)
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To: Labyrinthos
And least we forget a corrupt judiciary and state attorney's office that support the Blue Wall

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35 posted on 08/24/2014 5:32:38 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: Elle Bee

LOL>

Key Worst is filled with a bunch of libtards. Let ‘em see what happens when they decide not to have law breakers.

See, folks? When nothing is wrong, when there are no absolutes, you have chaos.

Enjoy the world you built, Key Worst.


36 posted on 08/24/2014 5:34:46 AM PDT by SoFloFreeper
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To: rodguy911; Elle Bee

I agree. Indeed, the only time the KW cops seem to behave is during large events when the Florida State Police are on joint patrol with the locals.


37 posted on 08/24/2014 5:35:13 AM PDT by Labyrinthos
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To: BCW
Maybe because she writs for a small town newspaper that hasn't asked her to cover international affairs????

just guessing

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38 posted on 08/24/2014 5:35:27 AM PDT by Elle Bee
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To: Elle Bee

or maybe she trying to jump on the wagon and get her name out there by writing a story of a simple arrest that goes on in any state of city everyday???? That story had no substance - no point...


39 posted on 08/24/2014 5:37:50 AM PDT by BCW (ARMIS EXPOSCERE PACEM)
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To: DaveA37

When you treat the average citizen like “..the lying, stealing, looting, murdering, etc. “street rat” ..” don’t be surprised if public opinion of LEO’s falls.

Don’t try and excuse it. If you can’t take it quite - don’t take it out on citizens.


40 posted on 08/24/2014 5:40:09 AM PDT by PeteB570 ( Islam is the sea in which the Terrorist Shark swims. The deeper the sea the larger the shark.)
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