12,000 complaints filed against Seattle Police after weekend of protests

Authored by kuow.org and submitted by Fuzier
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The Seattle Office of Police Accountability says it is processing roughly 12,000 individual complaints against officers in the wake of the demonstrations held over the weekend. The protests were part of a nationwide civilian response to the police killings of Black Americans.

Numerous videos of unrest in downtown Seattle have circulated online, including one showing a young child screaming in agony after reportedly being pepper sprayed during a peaceful rally attended by thousands. Another clip shows two officers apprehending a suspect on the ground, after a group — separate from the protesters — began looting nearby retailers. One of the officers is seen placing his knee upon the person's neck amid the arrest. In Seattle, a protest for George Floyd, and for Black America Both incidents are among the thousands of complaints under review the Office of Police Accountability. Each complaint has been assigned a case number. The progress of the investigations can be checked here. The office says the most frequent allegations include:

Punching two people on the ground who were being arrested

Placing a knee on the neck area of two people who had been arrested (The same tactic used by the Minneapolis Police officer charged in the killing of George Floyd)

Failing to record law enforcement activity on body cameras

The use of flashbangs, including an instance in which a significant thumb injury was sustained

Failing to secure rifles in police cruiser (two of the guns were stolen and ultimately recovered on Saturday)

Officers breaking the windows of a Target store The Office of Police Accountability insists the investigations of the complaints "will be civilian-led and as transparent as possible given the law and police collective bargaining agreements." Evan Hreha, who lives downtown, attended the initial demonstration on Saturday. He filmed the aftermath of the incident in which a child was pepper sprayed. He said a scuffle broke out prior to him filming. "There was a little scuffle over towards the left side on the sidewalk in front of Macy's," he told KUOW. "It's like somebody pushed a sign or something and the cops kind of freaked out. I couldn't see exactly what happened, but then the little girl ran away screaming. So that's when I started recording." Hreha said bystanders began pointing to an officer named Jared Campbell shortly thereafter, and demanding to see his badge number — the view of which was obstructed by a black piece of tape. Campbell's photo was shared online, alongside accusations he was behind the incident and demands that he be disciplined.

The Office of Police Accountability denies that Campbell is responsible for pepper spraying. However, officials have not yet publicly shared any additional findings. Andre Taylor is the founder of Not This Time, a community organization focused on police reform and use of force reduction. He organized Saturday's protest in the Westlake neighborhood. Taylor, whose brother Che Taylor was fatally shot by plainclothes Seattle police officers in 2016, expressed skepticism about how much might become of the complaints. "These things have happened so often before and people are acting so surprised," he told KUOW. He said he urges the Office of Police Accountability to be transparent with the public about its findings — especially those related to the child who was pepper sprayed.

Qlanger on June 2nd, 2020 at 22:19 UTC »

And until a 3rd party, with no relationship with the police, handles the complaints it will not matter in 99% of the complaints.

The guy who killed Floyd had over a dozen complaints. ALL cleared by the same police department he worked.

freemabe on June 2nd, 2020 at 21:42 UTC »

I've read that complaints are dropped after 180 days if not acted upon, as per the contract that the police negotiated on.

AKA almost none of these will be processed lol.

Edit: so this is getting a lot of traction, so here is the the link to all contracts from the city and here is the link to the police contract. I am specifically mentioning the following paragraph which is found under the disciplinary chapter.

Except in cases where the employee is physically or medically unavailable to participate in the internal investigation, no discipline may result from the investigation if the investigation of the complaint is not completed within onehundred eighty (180) days after the 180 day start date (the 180 Start Date)

Feel free to take a look yourself, please do not blindly believe anyone, including me.

BTSunco on June 2nd, 2020 at 21:34 UTC »

They will go in a box, and this box shall be named the “we don’t talk about this box” and be put downstairs.