Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
International

'US Cop Slamming Indian Grandfather Acted Without Reason'

IANS, 05 Sep, 2015 12:22 PM
    An Alabama police officer accused of using excessive force against a "no-English" speaking Indian grandfather walking in his son's neighbourhood had no reason to think he may have committed a crime, a US court was told.
     
    "The question should have been: Is there a language barrier?" said Assistant US Attorney Robert Posey on the third day of the trial of former police officer Eric Parker, 26, in a Huntsville, Alabama federal court.
     
    "They had no reason to try to think of a crime he may have committed," said Posey as reported by local news site Al.com.
     
    He was responding Judge Madeline Hughes Haikala regarding how Parker tackled Sureshbhai Patel, 58, who had arrived from India six days earlier, on Feb 6 when he came on the scene in response a suspicious person report.
     
    The judge asked if it was not a requirement for citizenship that an individual learn English. Patel is a permanent resident.
     
    She said the call about a suspicious person and Patel's behavior could be interpreted as indicative of a burglar.
     
    The judge said the prosecution argument uses the language barrier to disregard that he walked away.
     
    "You can't disregard that," she said. Plus, she said it's not necessarily true he committed no crime.
     
    "Can an officer not stop an individual who said 'no English,' who was fleeing from them, because it is a crime to be in the country illegally?" she asked.
     
     
    Posey said Patel was never "fleeing" and that police had no right "to shake him down for immigration papers."
     
    But the judge argued police were required to investigate due to the neighbour's call.
     
    Posey suggested a jury might find Patel was neither resisting nor pulling away, which would make the takedown unreasonable.
     
    Posey called it a manoeuvre "guaranteed to cause some injury. Some injury. I'm not saying he meant to break his back."
     
    The jury Friday also heard from Johnny Lee Smith, a blackbelt who helped create the martial arts training program now used by police academies in Alabama, as well as in several other Southern states.
     
    Quizzed by federal prosecutors Smith said when officers arrived they believed "crime may be afoot" and that Patel can be seen on the recording to take two, then four, then nine steps away.
     
    But the video shows small shuffling steps. "You wouldn't describe it as escape attempt," asked prosecutor Saaed Mody. "No, sir," said Smith.
     
    Mody argued that Parker knew four things by the moment of the takedown: Patel was an older looking man; on a public sidewalk; the man did not speak English; and Patel had no weapons, as the trainee had completed the pat down a moment before the takedown.
     
    "I couldn't tell from the video if he completed the pat down," said Smith, referring to an area in the front waist band that's hard to see on the video and that a trainee may not have frisked Patel correctly.
     
    But Mody asserted that even if Patel had been a burglar, Parker still doesn't get to slam him face first into the ground if he is not resisting.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Denmark claims North Pole through Arctic underwater ridge link from Greenland

    Denmark claims North Pole through Arctic underwater ridge link from Greenland
    COPENHAGEN — Scientific data shows Greenland's continental shelf is connected to a ridge beneath the Arctic Ocean, giving Danes a claim to the North Pole and any potential energy resources beneath it, Denmark's foreign minister said.

    Denmark claims North Pole through Arctic underwater ridge link from Greenland

    IS blows up biggest prison in northern Iraq

    IS blows up biggest prison in northern Iraq
    The Islamic State (IS) jihadi group has blown up the biggest prison in northern Iraq after transferring the prisoners to the Syrian province of Raqqa, its main...

    IS blows up biggest prison in northern Iraq

    Indian arrested for drug possession at Kuala Lumpur airport

    Indian arrested for drug possession at Kuala Lumpur airport
    The Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) Customs Department has detained a 27-year-old Indian national in connection with the seizure of 5.34 kg...

    Indian arrested for drug possession at Kuala Lumpur airport

    Da Vinci's earlier Mona Lisa makes world debut

    Da Vinci's earlier Mona Lisa makes world debut
    An earlier version of one of Leonardo Da Vinci's most celebrated works of art, "Mona Lisa", Monday made its world premiere in Singapore....

    Da Vinci's earlier Mona Lisa makes world debut

    Al Qaeda affiliate seizes Syrian military base

    Al Qaeda affiliate seizes Syrian military base
    Al Qaeda's affiliate in Syria Monday took control of a government military base in the northern province of Idleb, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said....

    Al Qaeda affiliate seizes Syrian military base

    Independent inquiry into Britain's flight chaos

    Independent inquiry into Britain's flight chaos
    An independent inquiry will be initiated into the air traffic control computer failure which disrupted flights at Britain's airports last week, officials said Monday....

    Independent inquiry into Britain's flight chaos