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Video shows Alabama police throwing grandfather from India to ground (Police officer fired,arrested)

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Video shows Alabama police throwing grandfather from India to ground

Madison police today released video of officers throwing a 57-year-old Indian citizen on the sidewalk outside his son's home.



The incident left the grandfather temporarily paralyzed and hospitalized with fused vertebrae.


Chirag Patel said his father, Sureshbhai Patel, was visiting to help his wife care for their new baby, a 17-month-old son, so he could pursue his masters degree in electrical engineering at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.


Madison police officer Eric Parker today turned himself in to face assault charges.


Chief Larry Muncey told a small press conference in Madison that he also recommended that Parker be fired for his use of force against a man who committed no crime, did not speak English and could not understand the commands.

Patel's family and attorney say he suffered swelling to his spine and required surgery to fuse two vertebrae. He remains unable to use all of his limbs



Video shows Alabama police throwing grandfather from India to ground | AL.com


Alabama police officer arrested after Indian grandfather left partially paralyzed

By Peter Holley, Abby Phillip and Abby Ohlheiser February 12 at 4:47 PM


Madison Police Department released dashboard camera footage of a police officer throwing a 57-year-old man to the floor in Alabama. The officer, Eric Parker, turned himself in on charges of assault in the third degree. (City of Madison Police Department)
The FBI is investigating an incident in which an Indian grandfather’s encounter with police in Alabama left the man partially paralyzed. An officer involved in the incident is under arrest, and the police chief proposed that he be fired, police said Thursday.

A spokesman for the FBI said that the agency became involved shortly after the Feb. 6 incident, and it is being treated as a civil rights investigation. The findings will be turned over to the Justice Department for review.

Sureshbhai Patel had recently come to the United States from his farm in India to help care for his grandson, who was born prematurely and was suffering from health complications.

At about 9 a.m. on Friday in Madison, Ala., just days into his visit, Patel was strolling through his family’s neighborhood when he was approached by police. A neighbor had called authorities and told them a man who looked “suspicious” was peering into garages, according to the Huntsville Times. That man, police determined, was Patel.

Within minutes, the 57-year-old grandfather was face down on the ground with a severe neck injury that left him partially paralyzed.


A lawyer for Patel has filed a lawsuit against the Madison Police Department, alleging that his constitutional civil rights were violated and seeking damages. The lawsuit was filed Thursday in federal district court.

“First, I’m hoping that the truth will come out, second that this case might bring to life the real issues we have in this country about the police abuse of power where someone can’t try to blame it on the victim,” Hank Sherrod, the family’s attorney, told The Washington Post. “Here we’ve got someone who is truly blameless and innocent. He was brutalized, and hopefully will, but may never, walk again.”

Representatives from the Indian government visited Patel in the hospital on Thursday, Sherrod said.

Madison Police Chief Larry Muncey told reporters Thursday that he has recommended termination for one of the officers involved in the incident. Officer Eric Parker, Muncey, said, has also turned himself in on charges of assault in the third degree.

The Madison police concluded from its investigation into the incident that the officer’s actions “did not meet the high standards and expectations” of his department, Muncey said. Muncey apologized to Patel, Patel’s family, and the community. The police chief added that the FBI was conducting a “parallel inquiry to ascertain if there were any federal violations.” He declined to answer any questions, citing the pending lawsuit.

The department also released portions of audio and video pertaining to the incident. In a non-emergency call to police, a neighbor described Patel as a “skinny black guy” and said that he’d “never seen him before” in the neighborhood. Patel, he said, was “just wandering around” and “walking close to the garage.” The caller added that he was following Patel at a distance. When asked to estimate his age, the caller guessed Patel was in his 30′s.

The neighbor also told the police dispatcher he was “nervous” leaving his wife because of Patel’s presence in the neighborhood.

In a statement to Agence France-Presse, a spokesman for the government called on U.S. officials to conduct a full investigation.

“We expressed concern at what appears from media reports as the excessive use of force by police,” Indian foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin told AFP after meeting with a senior U.S. diplomat. “We have requested expeditious investigations and sharing of investigations and that action (be) taken.”


In an earlier statement, police said that Patel attempted to pull away from officers as he was being patted down, leading at least one officer to force him to the ground, “which resulted in injury.” Patel’s son, Chirag, told the Huntsville newspaper that police escalated the incident, not his father.

“He was just walking on the sidewalk as he does all the time,” said Chirag Patel, who arrived in the United States a decade ago to study engineering before getting married and becoming an American citizen. “They put him to the ground.”

“This is a good neighborhood. I didn’t expect anything to happen.”

Two videos of the incident later released by Madison police include both audio of the officers involved, and visuals of the exchange. In one video, a pair of officers approach Patel and ask him where he’s headed, what his address is, and request to see his ID. One officer says, “he’s saying ‘no English.’ ” The second officer continues to ask Patel questions, including “are you looking at houses and stuff?”

Sureshbhai Patel said he tried to tell the officers that he doesn’t speak English by saying “No English. Indian. Walking,” according to the lawsuit. He says he repeated his son’s house number and pointed toward the residence.

In the police video, an officer then tells Patel, “Do not jerk away from me again. If you do, I’m gonna put you on the ground.” The officer asks, “Do you understand?” and tells Patel to “relax.”

That’s when an officer twisted his arm behind his back, Patel said, and forced him to the ground, face-first. His face was bloodied, but worse, he also injured his neck and was left paralyzed in his arms and legs, the lawsuit alleges.

One of the two police videos shows the officer holding Patel forcefully, pushing him to the ground. Patel, on the ground, is then told to “chill out” by one of the officers. The officer tells a third, approaching officer that Patel doesn’t “speak a lick of English,” and that they were trying to pat him down. “I don’t know what his problem is, but he won’t listen,” one of the officers adds.

Patel remains on the ground as the officers call for medical assistance.

“Stand up, let’s go,” one officer says. “You’re all right.” For several minutes, the officers repeatedly attempt to get Patel off the ground and into a patrol car.

One officer asks, “He OK?”

Patel-and-Madison-Police-Incident3998-2.jpg

Chirag Patel’s family has sued police over the treatment of his father. (Sarah Cole/Courtesy of al.com)
Sherrod, the family’s attorney, said things went wrong as soon as a neighbor who didn’t recognize Patel called police and reported suspicious activity.

“This is broad daylight, walking down the street,” Sherrod told the Huntsville Times. “There is nothing suspicious about Mr. Patel other than he has brown skin.”

Sherrod said officers left Patel on the ground, injured and bloodied and in desperate need of a paramedic.

“This is just one of those things that doesn’t need to happen,” the attorney said. “That officer doesn’t need to be on the streets.”

Speaking to The Post after the Thursday press conference, Sherrod said that he “appreciates [the police] doing the right thing on Thursday,” but criticized the department for not acting sooner. “On Monday they were trying to blame Mr. Patel,” he added.


Patel underwent cervical fusion surgery to relieve pressure on his spinal cord and has regained some feeling in his arms and one leg. He remains partially paralyzed. His left leg is entirely or mostly paralyzed and he lacks grip strength in his arms, the lawsuit said.

A fund was established to help cover the cost of Patel’s medical care and a recovery that could take months. He does not have health insurance.

Patel’s son told the Times that before the incident, he was proud to own a home in Madison. He chose the community, he said, because of the educational opportunities the area would someday provide his son. Now, he said, he’s not so sure about his decision.

“It is a dream for me because I came from a very poor family and I worked so hard here,” he told the paper. “I’m totally devastated that I might have made a big mistake.”
 
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Thank goodness that the dashboard cam was working. Otherwise the police would have charged him with charges of threatening an officer instead and he could not have done anything about it. The US is fast becoming a police state.
 
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No need to go overboard, but police system needs some intervention. May be more awareness training. In this case person was not able to speak in English. Small things and improvement will lead to better police culture. I am in no way implying that ours is good though. But we take lessens from US in civil liberties but things seems to go south nowadays. Thank you.
 
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No need to go overboard, but police system needs some intervention. May be more awareness training. In this case person was not able to speak in English. Small things and improvement will lead to better police culture. I am in no way implying that ours is good though. But we take lessens from US in civil liberties but things seems to go south nowadays. Thank you.

No need to go overboard ? That video made me sick to my stomach. I couldn't even watch it continuously.

What if that was your father who had come to see his grandchild and was brutalized by a Racist and paralysed for life ?

Maybe then you can preach the virtues of awareness training. The day Indians have to take lessons in civil liberties from a former Slave owning nation, I will kill myself.

I seriously hope something similar happens to your parents, then I can come and tell you to relax and no go overboard.

sureshbhai-patel.jpg
 
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No need to go overboard ? That video made me sick to my stomach. I couldn't even watch it continuously.

What if that was your father who had come to see his grandchild and was brutalized by a Racist and paralysed for life ?

Maybe then you can preach the virtues of awareness training. The day Indians have to take lessons in civil liberties from a former Slave owning nation, I will kill myself.

I seriously hope something similar happens to your parents, then I can come and tell you to relax and no go overboard.

sureshbhai-patel.jpg
Sorry if I offended you. I have no intention to claim whether that police person was racist or ignorant. What I meant in my initial mail was that our media(i meant this) should not go overboard and paint all US defence personnel as racist or enemies. That happens most of the time with our media. Hope I cleared something. Thank you.
 
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No need to go overboard, but police system needs some intervention. May be more awareness training. In this case person was not able to speak in English. Small things and improvement will lead to better police culture. I am in no way implying that ours is good though. But we take lessens from US in civil liberties but things seems to go south nowadays. Thank you.
Chicago Police does

 
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yeah I would say that excessive and unnecessary. grandfather couldn't weight more than 110 pounds by the looks of him.
some cops are just assholes and ruthless.

They aren't talking much, doing it like a practiced step. I thik the procedures suck.
 
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Sorry if I offended you. I have no intention to claim whether that police person was racist or ignorant. What I meant in my initial mail was that our media(i meant this) should not go overboard and paint all US defence personnel as racist or enemies. That happens most of the time with our media. Hope I cleared something. Thank you.

I was offended by your comments but apology accepted. Sorry for my comments too.

US President and US Media was quick to jump on India and preach to us about "religious tolerance". Its about time we sent a message home.

This is the Indian Media and the India govt. showing the mirror of "Racism and intolerance" to the US. I am glad the Indian media did this.

I think its about time you grew a Spine and stood up for your country and stop being an apologist.
 
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I was offended by your comments but apology accepted. Sorry for my comments too.

US President and US Media was quick to jump on India and preach to us about "religious tolerance". Its about time we sent a message home.

This is the Indian Media and the India govt. showing the mirror of "Racism and intolerance" to the US. I am glad the Indian media did this.

I think its about time you grew a Spine and stood up for your country and stop being an apologist.
Mate as per my opinion we should not become same evil manners as US media becomes as they have different culture and we have ours. There is saying in our part of world that how will you make your opponent look small. Many people take the shortcut and they cut the size of opponent, rather going for a different approach which calls for making bigger size. We should try to improve our media standards otherwise someday they will come back to haunt us just like Taliban is doing with Pakistan. It's just analogy, again not my intention to defame any way. I believe in co-existence and co-development concept. Thank you.
 
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You have bad officers in all police departments that go overboard.Out of the three countries i have lived in i would say the uk police service is the best in the way it interacts with the public.With panjab police the worst by a long shot.Hopefully this grandfather has a full recovery and the police officer charged.
 
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wow.. absolutely shocking! That police officer is trying to be macho by slamming an unarmed frail old man to the ground! Racial intolerance in American police is coming to the fore off late! Maybe Obama would do well to look within rather than preaching other countries about human rights!
 
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Mate as per my opinion we should not become same evil manners as US media becomes as they have different culture and we have ours. There is saying in our part of world that how will you make your opponent look small. Many people take the shortcut and they cut the size of opponent, rather going for a different approach which calls for making bigger size. We should try to improve our media standards otherwise someday they will come back to haunt us just like Taliban is doing with Pakistan. It's just analogy, again not my intention to defame any way. I believe in co-existence and co-development concept. Thank you.

You can talk softly ONLY when you carry a Big Stick. Otherwise you look like a coward and a fool.

You show good manners to those who deserve to be treated with respect, if you show curtsy to a Thug, he will rob you and then laugh at your foolish behaviour.

US is not an "opponent" but a Business partner and you do not let your partner walk all over you under some idiotic notion of "looking big", whatever that means.

Improving our Media stands is a separate topic, so if you are so keen to talk about that, open a new thread. There you can start using Godwin laws by dragging in Nazi, Taliban, Hitler and what not.

If you belie in co-existence and co-development, make sure you have the strength and Arms to defend that idea. Otherwise you will "co-exist" and "co-develop" as a Slave. :coffee:

You are only defaming yourself with a childish half baked idea of "good behaviour".
 
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No need to go overboard, but police system needs some intervention. May be more awareness training. In this case person was not able to speak in English. Small things and improvement will lead to better police culture. I am in no way implying that ours is good though. But we take lessens from US in civil liberties but things seems to go south nowadays. Thank you.

You are kidding me. Chinese were shot by police for giving their kids baths. Hmong 2 year olds had flash bang grenades used on them by fully armed forces. There's no amount of training that overcomes institutional racism. Its safe to say that I am disappointed but not surprised.
 
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