Teen sues Fresno PD using body cam video of officer punching him multiple times

Authored by abc30.com and submitted by horus000

EMBED >More News Videos BODY CAM FOOTAGE: Several body cameras recorded the confrontation, which is now the subject of an internal affairs investigation.

EMBED >More News Videos An internal affairs investigation is being carried out into an incident in which an officer in the MAGEC unit punched a high schooler repeatedly.

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- From one officer's perspective, you can see tensions escalating during a gang enforcement operation.Body cameras caught several angles as an officer grabbed a 17-year-old and punched him over and over again."It's a very disappointing situation. You can see London Wallace crying. You can see him bleeding," said attorney Nolan Kane.London Wallace had no gang connections and no criminal history."He's a high school kid. He likes playing basketball. He's a nice, calm, timid person," Kane said. "And you can kind of see that in the video. He's not used to police contact."But police arrested him for resisting arrest after this January incident.Officer Christopher Martinez wrote in his report that he thought Wallace was going to try to run away. He said he punched Wallace three times in the face, which let the officer get his back off the second story balcony railing.An attorney for Wallace says the video tells a very different story and prosecutors dropped the charges against the teenager who is now using the video as the foundation of an excessive force lawsuit against the police department.Legal analyst Ralph Torres says police usually have a built-in civil lawsuit defense of fearing for the officer's safety."But in this case, the kid was patted down. There was nothing there," Torres said. "And I don't see anything that was consistent with an officer basically putting his fist right through his face."Nolan Kane says it's important for the public to see the body camera footage so they can get the full picture, which often benefits police, but not in this case."In this case, it's not going to be London's word against the officer's word. The jury's going to get to see the full footage and they'll be able to decide whether this is something that's acceptable," Kane said.Police chief Jerry Dyer saw the video for the first time Tuesday.In a press conference Wednesday, Dyer said the confrontation seen in the video happened on January 23, when detectives from the Multi-Agency Gang Enforcement Consortium were conducting a probation search of an apartment. He said there were several known gang members and firearms present.Wallace, who has no criminal history, was in a bedroom at the time.Dyer said a family member emailed the department on March 25, indicating they wanted to lodge a complaint, but according to police, they couldn't locate that person until May 7. The internal affairs investigation was prompted once they obtained a recorded statement."I'm asking people reserve final judgment until the entire investigation is complete and findings are rendered," Dyer said.In addition to looking for witnesses and conducting officer interviews, they'll be reviewing 40 body-worn cameras that were there.The chief said he has asked those findings be expedited within the next 30 days.Based on the outcome, he said appropriate action will be taken.Officer Martinez has been placed on routine modified duty.

AMW1234 on August 21st, 2019 at 19:38 UTC »

Reading the cop's statement shows just what a sociopath this officer is. He not only beat the kid's ass for nothing, but then he arrests him for resisting arrest and writes this complete fabrication in his report:

"[Victim] continued to fight and he threw a punch at me, which grazed my left cheek. [Victim] . . . continuously resisting as he was rushing towards me and backing me towards the railing. At . . . there were too many people surrounding me and I was not able to safely deploy any of my . . . force option tools on my tactical vest due to the rapidly unfolding event. By punching [Victim] in the face I acheived the desired effect, by creating the distance between me and [Victim], which a[llowed?] me to get my back off the second story balcony railing."

Other cases this officer was involved in should be reviewed.

Edit: replaced paraphrase with actual quote

Edit two: took out a partial word starting with "le" due to numerous comments stating definitively that it means law enforcement. If you watch the video, you see there are more letters after "le" though the viewer does not get a view of the rest of the word. It could say "lethal." It could say "less-than-lethal." It may even say leprechaun, but it really doesn't matter. The story is ridiculous enough without any speculation into unknown facts so I will just delete the ambiguity created by the partial word.

GhostFish on August 21st, 2019 at 17:21 UTC »

But police arrested him for resisting arrest after this January incident.

For fucks sake.

BambaCannabinoid on August 21st, 2019 at 17:20 UTC »

That cop went after the young man for no reason. The charges against the young man were dropped and now the taxpayers will ultimately pay for this officers violent abuse of power. To top it off the chief of police who oversees these thug cops is now running for mayor.