Philando Castile

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  • #48450
    zn
    Moderator

    PHILANDO CASTILE DISPATCH RECORDING: AUDIO REVEALS COP PULLED HIM OVER FOR HAVING ‘WIDE NOSE’, TAIL LIGHT NOT OUT

    Philando Castile Dispatch Recording: Audio Reveals Cop Pulled Him Over For Having ‘Wide Nose’, Tail Light Not Out

    Police scanner recordings obtained by a local Minneapolis news station reveals that St. Anthony police officers pulled over Philando Castile not because of a busted tail light but because he looked similar to a robbery suspect due to his “wide nose.” The startling dispatch recording indicates that not only was Castile seemingly racially profiled for his “wide nose,” his girlfriend says that officers lied when they claimed the stop was for a tail light that was out as the tail light was seen functioning in other videos taken at the scene of the incident.

    ARE11 reports that police scanner audio captured just moments before Philando Castile would be gunned down by a St. Anthony police officer reveals the real reason that the vehicle was pulled over and it had nothing to do with a tail light. In fact, the audio seems to indicate that Castile was pulled over because he had a “wide nose” which looked similar to a robbery suspect that the police were looking for that day.
    In the damning audio, the officer can be heard telling a dispatcher that he is going to pull over a vehicle and check IDs on the occupants because the driver looks like “people that were involved in a robbery.”
    “I’m going to stop a car. I’m going to check IDs. I have reason to pull it over. The two occupants just look like people that were involved in a robbery. The driver looks more like one of our suspects, just ’cause of the wide set nose.’”

    Just a minute and a half after the officer says he is going to pull over the vehicle, an officer relays to dispatch that “Shots fired Larpenteur and Fry.” The St. Anthony Police Department refused to verify the dispatch recording for KARE11, but the news station notes that the license plate indicated in the recording matched that of Castile’s and that it was sent into dispatch just a minute and a half before the “shots fired” was reported to dispatch. Therefore, the news station notes that all evidence suggests that the call is authentic.

    In a public statement made by Castile’s girlfriend Diamond “Lavish” Reynolds, who was also in the car and videoed the horrifying aftermath of the officer-involved shooting, it was noted that police indicated at the time of the stop that the vehicle was being pulled over for a “busted tail light.” However, Reynolds notes that the tail light was in working order and video taken of the vehicle at the scene backs up her story.

    In addition to pulling Castile’s vehicle over despite no traffic violations, video taken moments after the officer shot Castile shows Reynolds calmly telling officers that her boyfriend was only complying with orders to get his driver’s license when he was unjustly shot. The video of the moments following the shooting are graphic and show Castile bleeding to death in the car as Reynolds is told not to move as an officer held a gun pointed at the dying man.

    The officer who shot Castile has been identified by the Daily Mail as Officer Jeronimo Yanez and his partner that was present at the time of the shooting was Officer Joseph Kauser. Both have been placed on paid leave while an investigation is underway.

    With the new dispatch recording seemingly backing up Reynolds account that the pair were not pulled over for a busted tail light but rather because they looked like two robbery suspects due to Castile’s “wide nose,” should the officers involved in the shooting also be charged with additional crimes for lying to the vehicle occupants about the reason for the traffic stop? Do you think the officer that shot Castile will be charged given that the victim’s girlfriend was able to capture the moments just after the shooting?

    #48452
    zn
    Moderator

    Philando Castile Stopped 52 times by police: Was it racial profiling?

    Associated Press Sat

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/stopped-52-times-police-racial-profiling-052139197.html

    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — When Philando Castile saw the flashing lights in his rearview mirror the night he got shot, it wasn’t unusual. He had been pulled over at least 52 times in recent years in and around the Twin Cities and given citations for minor offenses including speeding, driving without a muffler and not wearing a seat belt.

    He was assessed at least $6,588 in fines and fees, although more than half of the total 86 violations were dismissed, court records show.

    Was Castile an especially bad driver or just unlucky? Or was he targeted by officers who single out black motorists like him for such stops, as several of his family members have alleged?

    The answer may never be known, but Castile’s stop for a broken tail light Wednesday ended with him fatally shot by a suburban St. Paul police officer, and Castile’s girlfriend livestreaming the chilling aftermath.

    The shooting has added a new impetus to a national debate on racial profiling; a day after Castile died, a black Army veteran killed five officers in Dallas at a demonstration over Castile’s killing and another fatal police shooting, in Louisiana.

    The Castile video “is pretty horrific,” said Gavin Kearney, who in 2003 co-authored a report to the Minnesota Legislature on racial profiling in the state. “There are things we don’t know about it. But we know there are certain assumptions and biases — whether explicit or implicit — about black men that affect how police officers interpret their actions. And we know white drivers are less likely to be pulled over.”

    Court records dating to 2002 show Castile, a 32-year-old school cafeteria supervisor, averaged more than three traffic stops per year and received citations for misdemeanors or petty misdemeanors.

    Many charges were dismissed, but Castile pleaded guilty to some, mostly for driving after his license was revoked and driving with no proof of insurance. However, those two charges also were the most frequently dismissed, along with failing to wear a seat belt.

    The records show no convictions for more serious crimes.

    No recent information is available on the racial breakdown of drivers stopped or ticketed by police in Falcon Heights, the mostly white suburb where the shooting occurred, or in other Minnesota towns. Minnesota is not among the handful of states that require police to keep such data.

    But in 2001, the Legislature asked for a racial profiling study and it fell to Kearney, then at the Institute on Race & Poverty at the University of Minnesota Law School, to conduct it. His study, using information supplied voluntarily by 65 law enforcement jurisdictions in the state, found a strong likelihood that racial and ethnic bias played a role in traffic stop policies and practices. Overall, officers stopped minority drivers at greater rates than whites and searched them at greater rates, but found contraband in those searches at lower rates than whites.

    The analysis found the pattern was more pronounced in suburban areas. In Fridley, New Hope, Plymouth, Sauk Rapids and Savage combined, blacks were stopped about 310 percent more often than expected.

    The St. Anthony Police Department, which employs the officer who shot Castile, did not participate in the study. St. Anthony officials have not commented on Castile’s stop since shortly after the shooting.

    It was not immediately clear how much money governments in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area generate from traffic violations. A U.S. Department of Justice investigation following the 2014 police shooting death of Michael Brown, a black, unarmed 18-year-old, in Ferguson, Missouri, found law enforcement efforts were focused on generating revenue for that city. Most of the tickets and fines were going to blacks.

    Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, a passenger in the car, said the two officers who stopped them said the vehicle had a broken tail light. She said one of the officers shot him “for no apparent reason” after he reached for his ID.

    Valerie Castile said she thinks her son “was just black in the wrong place.” Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton said he did not believe it would have happened to a white motorist.

    The officer who shot Castile, Jeronimo Yanez, is Latino. His lawyer, Thomas Kelly, said Saturday that his client reacted to the fact that Castile had a gun, not his race, though Kelly would not discuss what led Yanez to initiate the traffic stop.

    “Police understand the concerns about choices made about who gets stopped and what happens when they get stopped,” said Darrel Stephens, executive director of the Major Cities Chiefs Association.

    But the statistics can’t simply be attributed to racial bias among police.

    “When people call the police, they provide a description of somebody engaged in a crime. The police respond to those descriptions,” said Stephens, a former Charlotte, North Carolina, police chief. “That counts for part of the disproportionality that we see in those numbers.”

    Last year, the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing recommended police departments collect and analyze demographic data on all stops, searches and seizures.

    Nationally, 13 percent of black drivers were pulled over at least once in 2011, compared with 10 percent of the white drivers, according to a survey by the U.S. Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics.

    The survey shows 68 percent of black drivers considered the stops legitimate compared with 84 percent of white drivers.

    The precise reasons why certain motorists are pulled over more than others are difficult to identify, said Lorie Fridell, an associate professor of criminology at the University of South Florida, who trains police departments through a program called Fair and Impartial Policing.

    “Our implicit biases are most likely to impact us when we’re facing ambiguous situations,” Fridell said. “A person reaching into a pocket is ambiguous. If I, as a white, middle-aged woman, reach into my pocket most people aren’t going to experience fear. For a black male with dreadlocks, that ambiguous action would produce fear in many people.”

    #48721
    zn
    Moderator

    How Castile Told Officer About Gun in Final Moments

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/castile-told-officer-gun-key-part-final-moments-40566343

    The final moments before Philando Castile was killed by a police officer during a traffic stop in suburban St. Paul revolved around a gun he was licensed to carry, trained to use safely and instructed to tell authorities about when stopped.

    But just how he informed the officer — and whether the officer followed his own training — gets to the heart of the investigation into Castile’s death last week.

    Castile, who was black, was fatally shot July 6 after he was pulled over by St. Anthony police officer Jeronimo Yanez, who is Latino. Castile’s girlfriend streamed the aftermath live on Facebook and said Castile was shot while reaching for his ID after telling the officer he had a gun permit and was armed.

    Yanez’s attorney has said the officer reacted after seeing a gun, and that one of the reasons he pulled Castile over was because he thought he looked like a “possible match” for an armed robbery suspect. Castile’s family says he was profiled because of his race. They were among more than 1,500 mourners who filled the Cathedral of Saint Paul for his funeral Thursday.

    A letter from the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office confirms Castile, 32, got his permit last year. The letter, dated June 4, 2015, says Castile’s permit is enclosed. It also says that he must have his permit card and photo identification when carrying a pistol, and must display those items “upon lawful demand by a peace officer.”

    Allysza Castile said she and her brother took a required gun safety class together last year.

    Dan Wellman, owner of Total Defense in Ramsey, confirmed the Castiles came to class in May 2015. Wellman doesn’t remember the pair. He said he wasn’t teaching the class that day.

    But each class is told repeatedly how to handle a traffic stop or any encounter with law enforcement, he said. Students are taught to comply with every demand, hand over their permits to carry with their driver’s licenses and calmly answer follow-up questions about licensed firearms, including where they are.

    “We make several jokes about it during class: ‘I have a gun’ is not the way to say you have a gun on you,” Wellman said.

    Race never comes up as course participants are told how to handle traffic stops, Wellman said.

    Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, who was a passenger in the car along with her 4-year-old daughter, stressed in her video that Castile complied with Yanez’s requests before the encounter turned fatal. But when talking to reporters the day after his death, she shed light on possible confusion stemming from Castile’s final words to the officer.

    “As he’s reaching for his back pocket wallet, he lets the officer know: ‘Officer, I have a firearm on me,” she said. “I begin to yell, ‘But he’s licensed to carry.’ After that, (the officer) began to take off shots.”

    St. Anthony police training documents outline how an officer should respond to traffic stops. According to the documents, if an officer believes it’s a high-risk stop — as one involving an armed robbery suspect would likely be — he should have the driver and others exit the car before approaching the vehicle, while officers take cover and draw their weapons.

    Albert Goins, an attorney who assisted the Castile family after the shooting but is not representing anyone in the case, has said if Yanez and the other officer involved, Joseph Kauser, believed they could be stopping the robbery suspect, they should have done a “felony stop.” He described a procedure similar to what is outlined in the police training documents.

    Documents provided by the St. Anthony Police Department also show Yanez attended a training seminar in 2014 called “Bulletproof Warrior,” a two-day course hosted by an Illinois company that teaches students how to “utilize their ‘Warrior Spirit’ in a practical way so they can WIN hostile confrontations on the street,” according to promotional materials for the seminar.

    Yanez also received two hours of de-escalation training this spring — the only record of such training since he joined the force in late 2011. His attorney and the St. Anthony police chief did not return messages for comment Wednesday.

    Court and driver records show Castile was pulled over or ticketed at least 52 times in Minnesota since 2002, with 86 total misdemeanor or petty misdemeanor counts. More than half of the 86 violations were dismissed, court records show. He had no serious criminal record.

    He was stopped at least two times since he received his permit to carry. Records do not indicate whether he had his gun with him on those stops.

    Allysza Castile said she usually leaves her gun at home. But if she does have it with her while driving, she said she puts it in her glove compartment in a holster with the safety on.

    “Most of the time, he did the same,” the 23-year-old woman said of her brother. “There’s never a time I saw him driving in the car with his weapon on his person.”

    Reynolds, however, has said his gun was in its holster when they were stopped.

    Allysza Castile said when she is pulled over and has her gun, she tells officers she has a firearm and gun permit, which is a wallet-size card that she shows with her license and registration.

    “That’s usually how it’s supposed to go, but they didn’t give him a chance,” she said of the fatal stop.

    Valerie Castile stressed that her son got his permit because he had a right to carry a weapon — not because he felt his life was in danger.

    “My son was profiled and he was executed. There’s just no two ways around that,” she said.

    #48726
    bnw
    Blocked

    “Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, who was a passenger in the car along with her 4-year-old daughter, stressed in her video that Castile complied with Yanez’s requests before the encounter turned fatal. But when talking to reporters the day after his death, she shed light on possible confusion stemming from Castile’s final words to the officer.

    “As he’s reaching for his back pocket wallet, he lets the officer know: ‘Officer, I have a firearm on me,” she said. “I begin to yell, ‘But he’s licensed to carry.’ After that, (the officer) began to take off shots.””

    How sad. Her yelling set off the policeman. No good excuse for the policeman but that is what happened. Regardless of what the policeman was thinking Castile should have informed him from the beginning that he has a carry permit and a firearm and where both are on him. I would have gone so far as to keep both my hands in plain sight asking him where do you want my hands? Certainly not a fail safe guarantee but the last thing you do is escalate the situation which was what she did by yelling.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #48730
    Billy_T
    Participant

    Certainly not a fail safe guarantee but the last thing you do is escalate the situation which was what she did by yelling.

    That’s a lot of speculation, regarding the effects of her yelling. Regardless, the only person who escalated the matter was the cop. That’s what they do all too often, especially when they’re dealing with black and brown people. They choose to escalate, instantly, instead of deescalate and defuse.

    And no American citizen should have to jump through so many hoops just to survive a police encounter. That’s basically saying we are at their mercy, and if we don’t comply, we die.

    Sorry, but fuck that shit.

    #48731
    bnw
    Blocked

    Certainly not a fail safe guarantee but the last thing you do is escalate the situation which was what she did by yelling.

    That’s a lot of speculation, regarding the effects of her yelling. Regardless, the only person who escalated the matter was the cop. That’s what they do all too often, especially when they’re dealing with black and brown people. They choose to escalate, instantly, instead of deescalate and defuse.

    And no American citizen should have to jump through so many hoops just to survive a police encounter. That’s basically saying we are at their mercy, and if we don’t comply, we die.

    Sorry, but fuck that shit.

    It has always been that way. And always will.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #48733
    Billy_T
    Participant

    It has always been that way. And always will.

    That’s what people said about slavery, child labor, women not having the vote, Jim Crow laws, etc. etc.

    If we want it to change, it will change.

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