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Man who collapsed during arrest after Celtics victory dies; DA to investigate

Boston Police report that David Woodman, 22, of Southwick, died today at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 11 days after he collapsed while being arrested on Brookline Avenue in the Fenway following the Celtics win:

Officers observed an individual, crossing the street with a group of four others, drinking from an open container of what was believed to be alcohol. Officers attempted to conduct a threshold inquiry when the suspect attempted to flee. He was soon subdued by officers. The suspect began struggling with the officers as they attempted to handcuff him.

At that time, officers realized that he was in medical distress; they immediately began to administer CPR and summonsed EMS to that location. An ambulance arrived on scene and took over emergency CPR. He was rushed to Beth Israel Medical Center.

The Suffolk County DA's office, Boston Police homicide unit and Boston Police internal-affairs unit are all investigating. Autopsy results are pending.

The Herald had previously reported that Woodman had a pre-existing cardiac condition.

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Officers observed an individual, crossing the street with a group of four others, drinking from an open container of what was believed to be alcohol. Officers attempted to conduct a threshold inquiry when the suspect attempted to flee. He was soon subdued by officers. The suspect began struggling with the officers as they attempted to handcuff him.

The suspect began struggling with the officers as they attempted to handcuff him.

No, he began struggling before they attempted to handcuff him. Something else happened as they attempted to handcuff him.

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What's a sports championship without a civilian death? At least this guy wasn't shot in the head with a rubber bullet.

Anybody remember how many millions of dollars were paid to the family to settle for the city's negligence in that case?

Keeping control of a mob is no easy matter but why escalate an open container problem? Have the guy dump it in the garbage and find out if he's driving or walking.

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If you read the report, they attempted to find out that information when he took off running.

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The police report is the prettiest looking lipstick that you can put on this pig.

We'll see what other have to say. Don't be surprised to hear the kid did not resist arrest and to hear the police used excessive force.

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For all we know, he started walking away. It’s the same as fleeing, and also can be considered resisting arrest. They got that on him when he was struggling.

Here’s a question. Is it really necessary to tackle a kid drinking a beer in public and walking away from you? I’m all for cops upholding the law, but what ever happened to making him pour it in the drain and telling him to get the frak outta there? Wouldn’t that have freed up time they could have used to, you know, stop the idiots who were vandalizing the law office windows?

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I was friends with Dave. He did not resist at all. I know the kids who were there. He died because of unnecessary brute force. He would still be laughing today if the cops who had attacked him listened to his friends who were screaming that he had a heart condition. Further more they didn't administer CPR right away. People should consider his family and loved ones before the automatically believe the cops.

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If this is true, you owe it to him to come forward and testify.

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Aren't you, anon?

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Officers observed an individual, crossing the street with a group of four others, drinking from an open container of what was believed to be alcohol.

individual was walking

Officers attempted to conduct a threshold inquiry when the suspect attempted to flee. He was soon subdued by officers. The suspect began struggling with the officers as they attempted to handcuff him. At that time, officers realized that he was in medical distress; they immediately began to administer CPR and summonsed EMS to that location.

the cardiac event happened after he was "subdued" and as he was being cuffed. i'm not saying the guy was not stupid to flee and drunk, i'm just saying maybe he didn't have to die.

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Officers attempted to an inquiry when he fleed? He didn't flee, he was complying with the officers and they beat him up for no reason at all. Not only that, but when one of the kids he was with tried to help him up to his feet, they shoved that kid. And then went back to beating on him. This is ridiculous and I hope those cops pay for what they did. If they don't in this life, they can be sure that they will in the next one.

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If there's a suit, I hope you stand up and testify. Otherwise, you're just kibbitzing.

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David Woodman, who had been a history major at Emmanuel College and planned to return in the fall after taking a semester off, was walking from a bar with friends after the game when they passed about 10 or 12 uniformed officers at the corner of the Fenway and Brookline Avenue, according to two friends who spoke on the condition they not be named.

According to one of the friends, as Woodman passed the officers, he said, "Wow, it seems like there's a lot of crime on this corner."

Officers grabbed Woodman, who was carrying a plastic cup of beer, and as they struggled to handcuff him pushed him face down onto the ground, according to Woodman's friend.

"He wasn't being a punk or anything like that," said the friend. "I don't understand why the officers used such brute force to arrest him."

Woodman's friends said an officer yelled at them to leave, saying they would be arrested if they didn't.

One of the friends said he returned a few minutes later but was ordered to leave or face arrest. "They were all just around him and he was on the ground and not moving," the friend said. "I didn't see them giving him CPR."
link

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"They were all just around him [eating donuts] and he was on the ground and not moving," the friend said. "I didn't see them giving him CPR."

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No, I wasn't there, but neither were you, I'm betting.

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everything I posted above was a direct quote from the globe article except for the joke about [donuts] so tell me how it is I'm prejudging, asshole. apparently the thin blue line runs right down the middle of Universal Hub.

instead of judging others, why don't you write what conclusions you think can be drawn from the two articles?

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The Globe never prints things that turn out to be wrong and parents in shock and grief over the death of their son never make statements that turn out not to be true, huh? I could get all Dog Day Afternoonish and start yelling "Charles Stuart! Charles Stuart! Charles Stuart!" but you probably wouldn't get either the reference to the movie or Stuart, so I won't.

I'm not saying the police account is right. I'm saying I have no clue what really happened that night, and that's why it makes sense for the DA's office to investigate. I am betting that you don't know any more than I do about what really happened, but that you seem to be the sort of person who believes police are always, automatically wrong.

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Wow, one straw dog after the next. First Charles Stuart and then grieving parents. I'm more likely to take notice of your grieving parents argument then your Charles Stuart argument but here's my point.

First, you criticized two postings that contain only excerpts from the globe articles and no opinion from me as being pre-judging. Why?

Second, there is information in both articles which one can read and form an opinion about. When you hear a person tell a story, sometimes their facts are out of place or just plain sound like bullshit. Re-read the police report with a modicum of skepticism and see what your brain tell you about what makes sense and what does not.

Next, read today's Globe article and do the same. Then compare the two stories and see what picture of the truth forms in your head.

Next, why post the stories if your criticize how people react to them? At the very least you ought to be willing to say what aspects of the stories you believe and what you do not. I mean, it doesn't take a newspaper man to realize either they began to give him CPR immediately or they didn't.

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People who bring up donuts in a discussion about cops and a dead kid don't always seem willing to listen to both sides before making a decision.

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Fair enough and I can certainly see why that donuts comment might have been provocative. I envisioned ten cops letting the guy lie face down and cuffed and chatting while they wait for the arrest van, none of them noticing he's stopped breathing. I'll wash my mouth out before I kiss mom and I'll try to keep it clean.

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Isn't "donut crack" redundant?

Mmmmm, donut crack....

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There is no finer thing in all Hollywood than Al Pacino throwing a full-on, eyes-bulging, balls-to-the-wall fit. No one throws a fit like that man.

I'd forgotten all about that bizarre, incredible movie. I think I'm gonna go rent it again.

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Maybe you're not the same anonymouse. I was hoping that the anonymouse who alleged that the cops beat up the guy's friend for trying to help the guy off the ground would give us more true details he witnessed. I think witnesses will probably be important in determining whether the police committed an offense.

Pasting text from the Globe is almost as easy as leaping to conclusions, though marginally more useful.

It does help us learn that the college dropout initiated the encounter by walking over and making wise-ass remarks to the cops.

It's a tragic loss that absolutely could have been prevented.

Kids: don't walk up to cops and make wise-ass remarks while you're breaking the law. It will get you arrested. If you struggle while you're getting arrested, you will likely get hurt. If you are piss-drunk and have a heart condition, the exertion might kill you.

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There are significant inconsistencies between the police report and the eyewitness interviewed and quoted in today's Globe article. Either the deceased 'fled' or he didn't. Either they immediately began CPR or they didn't. Either they neglected him when he was under their control, arrested,or they didn't.

You say: "It's a tragic loss that absolutely could have been prevented" and then lay the blame on the feet of the kid because of his drinking, his comment (which was not hostile and certainly does not represent a threat) and his heart condition.

You assume when the police detained him physically, that the force they used was justified because (1) he fled or (2) he resisted arrest. Even if he did flee or resisted arrest, how do you know the force they used was justified?

Whether the force they used did or did not trigger a cardiac event, they still have an affirmative responsibility to not neglect him when he's under their control. It appears they may have left him face down and unobserved after the arrest for a period of about four minutes when his breathing stopped.

His mom knows the police report is not fully forthcoming about the events of that night and I tend to agree.

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If they left him face down and unobserved, knowing as they state that he was extremely inebriated, that was bad. Extremely inebriated people are a danger to themselves, even cuffed up. He could have rolled on his back, puked in his mouth, and suffocated. So I agree they had the obligation to keep an eye on them. I don't know whether they fulfilled it to a reasonable extent.

I don't think it's in doubt that they called an ambulance for him before any medical problem besides his inebriation was noted. The urgency of their request and the timing of their noticing he wasn't conscious are what's in doubt. The ambulance was there 11 minutes after they apprehended him. Is that unreasonably slow? Not normally.

It doesn't appear clear exactly how much force the police used. Enough to restrain him, certainly, but how much above that? We don't know. Perhaps an eyewitness would. The more a person struggles, the more force is required to restrain him. As you say, it is unclear whether he tried to run, and to what extent he struggled with the police arresting him.

We don't know whether they used excessive force. We don't know whether the force they used triggered the cardiac event, or if it was triggered by something else, such as the unusual and stressful position he was in (laying down with his hands cuffed behind him).

To find out all these things, I imagine we'll have to wait some still.

In terms of the blame I lay, I think it should be pretty clear to anybody that if you are in the process of breaking a law, walking up to a bunch of cops and making wise-ass remarks to them is likely to have negative repercussions for you. If you have an oustanding warrant and a heart condition, it's simply idiotic.

It was entirely appropriate of the police to arrest him. Exactly why that arrest played out the way it did remains to be seen. Assuming it's because the cops just beat him to death for no good reason, or sat around eating donuts and laughing at his heart attack, isn't going to get us any closer to the truth.

I hope there's a fair and open inquiry. If some officers are found to have acted inappropriately, I hope those officers are punished. I hope that if they haven't, that they are cleared. However, I don't think it's fair to skip the inquiry and go straight to condemnation.

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He wasn't a college drop-out, first off, and second off he may have made a wise-ass remark but he didn't flee, he didn't resist and he wasn't a drunk. He wasn't even drunk, he may have been drinking. Not only that, but his face was beaten to shit, he had brain damage from lack of oxygen, and he had to be put into a medically induced coma. He was killed by those cops. And that isn't just a conclusion, it's the truth. And so you know, I do know that for a fact, I was there. I saw it all, and I knew him personally.

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As I say to all the other anonymice who claim they were there and saw it all (for whatever event; this is not the first): testify. Otherwise you're just blowing smoke.

My bet is you made all this up. Unless you testify in public, I'll continue to believe that.

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This is the first post that has made any sense at all! It takes a really big person to pass judgement when they weren't in either persons shoes. I agree that it was tragic that the kid died. However, BPD has an enormously hard job and can't always tell the difference between who is harmless and who is not. Or who has a heart condition and who does not. Most in custody deaths happen because of pre-existing conditions (mainly cardiac conditions). I feel for the family and friends of both the officers and the kid. Put things into perspective before you go running your mouths.

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"According to one of the friends, as Woodman passed the officers, he said, "Wow, it seems like there's a lot of crime on this corner."

Wiseass remark. Strike one.

"Officers grabbed Woodman, who was carrying a plastic cup of beer"

Drinking in public. Strike two.

"Woodman was also wanted on a separate arrest warrant, which was issued after he failed to appear in Roxbury District Court in August for a charge of malicious destruction of property."

Previous arrest in Boston for being an idiot.Three strikes.

I dont think you get many chances when the cops are in riot gear and preparing for the worst.When I was growing up the cops had certain weekends when they arrested ANYONE drinking in public, no questions asked. Many weekends they might have told him to dump it out.Not this night.They were doing their jobs, clearing the corner, keeping the city under control. If Mr Woodman had not chosen to drink in public and make a smart remark to the 10-12 policemen on the corner we might not be having this conversation today.I am sorry the kid died but the cops were doing what they were supposed to do.

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I am sorry the kid died but the cops were doing what they were supposed to do.

If the Police(
(1)used excessive force, if they
(2)used excessive force which triggered a cardiac event, if
(3)he was restrained and in need of medical assistance and they neglected him,

the cops were not doing what they were supposed to do.

There are disputed claims between the police report and the assertions made by eye-witnesses in today's Globe. Those discrepancies are a red flag.

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daivd, speakign from knowing him personally was a good kid, you don't know him so please, don't say thses thigns acting liek you do, you weren't there you don't know. was i? no. but who do you think you are to get online and talk liek this about someone you don't know. i did and now everyday we have to live without him and it breaks my heart and others to wonder if it could have been prevented had the cops not been so eager to chase down a kid in the street with a beer, im sure they coudl have been taking care of far more imprtant things then going after a kid wallkign down the street with a beer. so from someone who KNEW david, i will miss him and why dont you see the bigger picture that a live is gone, his family is stuggling, he was a loved son, brother, and friend, and now, at 22 he's gone. so why don't you use your spare time you seem to have to write about someone you don't know and use it to say a prayer for his family and friends instead, rip david.

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Smart remarks? Drinking beer in public?

Even Leviticus wouldn't go that far with the smiting there Bostnkid!

Yikes! I didn't know that 9/11 changed everything our Patriot types in these parts fought so hard to change! When you think about what happened in Boston in the 1770s, wasn't arbitrary and excessive police authority and excessive force way at the top of the list of tyrranical practices?

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Obviously the Tories won a belated victory.

Fishing is a capital offense - someone died doing it!!!
Rafting is a capital offense.
Swimming is a capital offense.
Stealing motorcycles is a capital offense.
Diving is a capital offense.
So many capital offenses... Kayaking, sky-diving, wind-surfing, even pulling dogs from stump grinders.

On the brighter side, the X Games will make drunken assholery a new Extreme Sport for next year's Brawny Classic.

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...but if people doing all those things are dying at the hands of, or in the custody of, agents of the state, we truly do have a problem.

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How this guy wasn't in the custody of the police when he died?

Maybe we could at least wait for the autopsy before rounding up the lynch mob.

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There is a difference.

Next up: Gareth rationalizes why a bunch of supposedly highly trained and highly paid professionals in riot gear are completely neurologically - or is that endocrinologically - unable to resist going after a person making a stupid snark.

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Unfortunately, you don't seem to know what it is.

You can have a heart attack doing all kinds of things. Shoveling snow, rafting, getting married - or having yourself an exciting evening's arrest.

If the kid was beaten to death, now that would be being killed. But I haven't seen even the most irresponsible cop-haters here allege that. (Might be the facts stopping them). It could have happened on the b-ball court or in the middle of a healthy romp, but for some reason, the kid's bum heart seems to have picked that copful moment to give it up.

Now about things we're unable to resist... I have a hard time resisting a free lunch. If you're a cop, and some guy who is in the midst of breaking a law comes up to you and makes an asinine remark at a time when you are deployed for the specific purpose of arresting troublemakers... well, that's kinda like a free lunch. Furthermore, in arresting him, they did the right thing.

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Didn't you just say that he wasn't in custody?

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I've been arrested before, and I'm not in custody.

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as in "a few minutes" versus a "few years".

Nice try - you think a grand jury will buy that?

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Obviously, you've lost track of the timeline

Arrest: June 18
Death: June 29

So what happened in a few minutes again?

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But I suppose that oxygen wasn't in custody either?

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You must have more information than is in the Glob, which suggests he had a heart attack on 18 June, stopped breathing for several minutes, and indicates the cause of death on 29 June, after he had awoken and spoke coherently to his parents, is still unknown. Do share. Or, even better, use your MIT-fu to speculate!

Wait a sec! He was at the hospital when he died! Are you going to accuse the nurses of murdering him now?

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That would be the Law and Order twist, wouldn't it? Dude survives a brutal cop beating, delay in receiving medical treatment, a latent heart condition, relapses and returns to the hospital where he's done in by a homicidal serial killer posing as a nurse who breaks down under cross-examination and confesses on the witness stand!

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...making a stupid snark...

AND walking around with an open container of alcohol.

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He was of age and not driving. In less parochial places that wouldn't be a problem - perfectly legal.

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in a less parochial place it would not be a problem? perfecetly legal? ok, but the problem is that we are in boston and its not legal.enough with this.

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One of the most alcohol-permissive states, perhaps only behind Nevada and Louisiana:

No open container law.[3]

No blue laws.

No state public intoxication law.

No prohibition on absinthe.

Liquor control law[4] covers all beverages containing more than .05% alcohol, without further particularities based on percentage.[5]

Cities and counties are prohibited from banning off-premises alcohol sales.[6]

No dry jurisdictions.

State preemption of local alcohol laws which do not follow state law.

Certain bars in Kansas City and St. Louis grandfathered into the ability to double as liquor stores.

Special licenses available for bars and nightclubs which allow selling alcohol until 3:00am

Grocery stores, drug stores, and even gas stations may sell liquor without limitation other than hours.[12]

No prohibition on consumption by minors, though possession,[13] purchase,[14] and intoxication[15] by minors is prohibited.

Patrons allowed to take open containers out of bars

Parents and guardians may furnish alcohol to their children.[17]

Missourians over 21 may manufacture up to 100 gallons of any liquor per year for personal use, without any further state limitation, state taxation, or state license.[18]

(Obtaining a permit from the Federal Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau and meeting other requirements under federal law probably still is required for private citizens to manufacture distilled alcohol - but not wine or beer - for personal use.[19][20][21][22][23])

www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_laws_of_the_United_...

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i grew up in boston. i was arrested twice in my life, both times in boston. the first time i asked the cop why he was arresting me. he punched me in the face and i paid a hundred dollar fine.the second time i kept my mouth shut and only had to pay the hundred dollar fine.the third time never happened.im not saying cops should hit kids but i know that they do.not in this case.this is a case of a kid pushing all the limits the police had set for that night.a heart attack killed him, not the police.

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Abuse is abuse is abuse. Just because you were abused, that doesn't make it 1) effective 2)right 3)legal or 4)professional.

We all hear about how highly trained these people are when the shit hits the fan or the precious details are endangered. Pity they don't seem to remember that when the circumstances call for professional behavior and restraint.

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All he said was, must be a lot of crime. Making a light joke about things. And he didn't have outstanding warrants, he took care of those. The cops didn't have to beat him up, they didn't have to use any kind of force, and he wasn't even being wild or anything. He was trying to go home. And he wasn't the only one drinking in public that night. The cops just wanted a reason to be assholes. But according to you, murder is alright as long as there is no open containers on the streets. Nice.

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The Globe talks to them.

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So, whats the tally?

Cops: 2
Masshole Driver: 1
Drunk "Riot-ers": 0

That's pretty telling right there.

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Cops: 10-12
Dead History Major was carrying beer in public: 1
Drunk "Riot-ers": 0
Donuts: two dozen

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You'd change Drunk Rioters to 1, because don't forget the guy who got run over before Snelgrove during the Patriots "celebration" a few months earlier by the guy who was trying to escape a drunken mob.

So what we have is: Police don't react enough, so a guy gets run over and people get outraged that the police didn't do enough and then the police overreact and a poor woman gets shot in the eye by a cop and dies and people get outraged that the police did too much and now we're left with the fact that maybe, just maybe, if drunken "fans" would stop smashing windows and knocking over giant concrete planters, we wouldn't have to be having this conversation to begin with.

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Like I said,

Masshole Driver: 1

He wasn't drunk, or a part of the "riot-ers" from what I remember. He wasn't even being provoked or attacked by the "riot-ers".

They were in the road, and he was sick of waiting, so he floored it thinking everyone would let his privileged ass through. Unfortunately some kid couldn't jump away in time and ended up under his ride.

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Isn't it cute when the anons act like you can tell them apart?

"Like I said"...heh.

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If the site appended the IP address for anonymous logins. As in "Anon at 216.27.61.137."

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Good idea.

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It was drunk rioters that prompted the Masshole driver to speed backward in reverse, hitting Jamie Grabowski.

It was drunk rioters that prompted a Boston Police officer to fire the FN-303 pellet that hit Victoria Snelgrove.

It's two-tenths of a mile from the corner of Fenway and Brookline Ave to Beth Israel. According to the Globe article, it took a Cataldo ambulance 13 minutes to drive that distance. Who on earth could have caused such traffic congestion at 1:00 on a Thursday morning?

Drunk rioters: 3

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Not a strong believer in personal responsibility, eh?

The guy who hit Grabowski did it of his own volition while drunk. That's his fault not the rest of the city being crazy.

The cop that shot Snelgrove in the face was suspended without pay for over a month and other cops were hammered by the department for their actions that night. You don't get punished if you were doing your job and it was the drunk rioters' fault.

The 13 minutes wasn't just driving. That's from the time of their arrival on the scene, including treatment on location, to the time they arrived at the hospital. Nevermind the fact that there were 6 minutes between the first call for an ambulance and the time when they realized he stopped breathing. Now, he's just down the street from Beth Israel but instead of busing him the 3 blocks there themselves, they waited another 5 minutes before flagging down an uninvolved private ambulance. Oh, and there weren't any drunk rioters in Longwood to get in the way, but hey, you go with your bad self.

So, you're incorrect on pretty much every one of your comments.

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Kaz wins on the merit.

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anon4564564848 agrees.

This anon has said it before, and will say it again. These "riots" are nothing more then some drunk fans celebrating their team, a very few of them hoping to see someone else do something stupid, and a handful of them looking to cause trouble.

Wouldn't it be more effective to use small groups of police to cut off the head of the snake, and let the others wither and die away since there's nothing left to take interest into?

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Is figuring out which part is the head.

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Now, he's just down the street from Beth Israel but instead of busing him the 3 blocks there themselves, they waited another 5 minutes before flagging down an uninvolved private ambulance.

Boston EMS contracts out to numerous ambulance companies. Cataldo was most likely the unit responding, not good Samaritans.

I guess another question is- if they were not dispatched by Boston EMS, where the hell *was* Boston EMS?

Isn't it also interesting that the cops a week ago ferried that baby themselves, but when it comes to a drunk guy they've smacked around, they can't be bothered?

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The articles described Cataldo as being flagged down by the cops and that Boston EMS was not able to respond fast enough. There *was* something of a riot going on around Canal Street that night. I don't think Boston EMS can be everywhere at once. I'm not blaming Boston EMS, just saying that I could understand why they weren't the first ones on scene (given that this happened on the edge of Longwood and all, I doubt Cataldo was even the first ambo that passed by, just the first one to pass once the cops started getting nervous).

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For many years, some cities have used Bicycle EMS Units to get EMTs and gear to people when regular ambulance support is difficult - like when streets or a road-free public area are crowded by a big festival, protest, etc.

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There were plenty of EMS folks on bikes at the Puerto Rican parade yesterday and at Boston Pride a few weeks ago.

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It was Saddam Hussein that prompted George Bush and Dick Cheney to drum up fraudulent intelligence to make their argument for a preemptive war, an invasion of, Iraq.

Saddam Hussein: 1

Then again maybe Saddam didn't MAKE George Bush do it, maybe George Bush did it on his own, using Saddam Hussein as his excuse.

Saddam Hussein: 0

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WTF?

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a new form of Godwinning a thread?

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I predict the DA will find (1) the police filed a misleading police report. The cops have exposure for (2) excessive force, the claim about (3) resisting arrest will demonstrated to have been manufactured and they (4) were negligent because they did not notice the perpetrator was in physical distress.

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I predict:

1)The DA in the "joint" investigation will not find anything wrong 2)The cops involved will not even get so much as a verbal reprimand 3)Boston PD will be sued and 4)fight the lawsuit tooth and nail for a decade, thus 5)running up several million dollars in legal expenses 6)that will go straight into the pockets of lawyers who were former City Hall 'residents' (it's happened before.)

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The police made two fatal mistakes. They smashed this kid to the ground so hard he stopped breathing and they didn't notice he stopped breathing until it was too late.

Then to compound the problem, they asserted in writing:
1. the perp tried to flee
2. the cops used justifiable force to detain him
3. as soon as they cuffed him they noticed he was having trouble breathing and they uncuffed him immediately and they tried to resuscitate him immediately

To the contrary;
a. there is an eyewitness who says he did not flee. the eyewitness says they grabbed they kid, smashed him up against fence and dropped him on the ground face first.

That is likely when he stopped breathing.

a2. when they first called for an ambulance, they didn't know he needed resuscitation but the say they noticed he stopped breathing as son as he was cuffed. So which was it?

a3. when they called a second time for the ambulance, they did know he needed resuscitation. this is six minutes later. (Now we know, they didn't notice right away that he had stopped breathing. But how long did he lie face down in danger of brain damage and death, and in need of resuscitation?)

a4. He sustained brain damage because he stopped breathing and was not resuscitated within four minutes. When he is cuffed and in police custody, they are responsible for his well-being.

a5. The police department was not forthcoming in answering questions the parents had about the events.

a6. All of the officers went to stress counseling... what was the stress a result of? Certainly not because a poor kid with a heart condition and a outstanding warrant happened to die in their presence though no fault of their own. Maybe they had stress because some of some of the actions they took, and some of the actions they should have taken butdid not.

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To my knowledge, no eyewitness has come forward to say this. Do you have a link?

I've seen a few anonymous blog postings, but those don't really count. I could post anonymously that I'd seen Dick Cheney doing the Mambo on the kid's face.

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I'm still trying to locate the source eyewitness statement that said he did not flee but this is relevant:

David Woodman, who had been a history major at Emmanuel College and planned to return in the fall after taking a semester off, was walking from a bar with friends after the game when they passed about 10 or 12 uniformed officers at the corner of the Fenway and Brookline Avenue, according to two friends who spoke on the condition they not be named.

According to one of the friends, as Woodman passed the officers, he said, "Wow, it seems like there's a lot of crime on this corner."
Officers grabbed Woodman, who was carrying a plastic cup of beer, and as they struggled to handcuff him pushed him face down onto the ground, according to Woodman's friend.

"He wasn't being a punk or anything like that," said the friend. "I don't understand why the officers used such brute force to arrest him."
Woodman's friends said an officer yelled at them to leave, saying they would be arrested if they didn't.

One of the friends said he returned a few minutes later but was ordered to leave or face arrest. "They were all just around him and he was on the ground and not moving," the friend said. "I didn't see them giving him CPR."

A Boston police report given to the family's lawyer says that Woodman "began struggling with the officers as they attempted to handcuff him. Officers immediately realized that David Woodman was not breathing and they began to give CPR and summoned EMS to that location."

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Many things can be learned from this text. First, he was arrested because he approached the cops with an open container of beer and made a wise-ass remark. Second, he struggled with the cops. So far, that corroborates the cops' story.

As for "he wasn't being a punk..." I think the threshhold of punkitude has raised since I was a kid. What did his friend mean, that he wasn't grooming his hair in a faux-hawk?

I'm sure there were eyewitnesses. That friend sounds like one. And if there are, I hope they'll come forward, speak to the press on record, and later testify. Whatever the truth is, it should be known. What makes me a bit disgusted is someone logging onto a blog as anonymous and claiming he was there and saw it all and that's not what happened. Until they go on record, it's just a rumor, not evidence.

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Yes, it is rumor, much like everything else being printed. Of course there were witnesses....at least 4 of them were walking with him. Why haven't they talked to the press? Because, unlike the police department who is trying at all costs to paint a picture that will discredit the kid as being a valued member of society (therefore he deserved it), they are working with investigators.

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The friend who returned to the scene is the person who said woodman did not flee. The globe takes old versions of the story offline when they publish updated ones, which is why I cannot find the quote.

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Here.

... As a father, I can't imagine the grief his family is suffering and express my deepest sympathy to them. ... While our investigation is still preliminary, it appears, from the evidence we have reviewed thus far, that officers did not use excessive force. That is based upon interviews conducted with officers and witnesses. We know that no OC spray or batons were used. ...

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From Suffolk County DA Dan Conley:

My office will continue its investigation into the injuries and, ultimately, the recent death of David Woodman. This step is in accordance with our policy and practice in all cases involving a death of unclear cause.

While our investigation will be conducted in coordination with the Boston Police Department, our judgment will be exercised independently and objectively. We will be – we must be – neutral, impartial, and beholden only to the facts.

I have assigned a senior homicide prosecutor to lead that investigation. Of all the units within my office, members of the Homicide Unit have the knowledge, skills, and experience to evaluate the totality of evidence related to any unnatural or unattended death.

I would also like to extend my sympathies to the Woodman family in their time of grief and loss.

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Davis - No 'excessive force' used (quotes in original headline).

Do I detect a subtle editorial comment from the Glob here?

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I disagree with her saying Davis should not back his men, but she points out all the unknowns at this point and concludes it was too early for Davis to say no brutality was involved.

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Is it too early for Davis to say "While our investigation is still preliminary, it appears from the evidence that we have reviewed thus far that officers did not use excessive force?" I'm not so sure. Is it too early for an objective observer to agree with him? Yes, I think so.

Davis isn't an objective observer, nor do I think he has to be. He's the Police Commissioner, and if there are sides to an issue with the police on one, that's the side he's on, and I don't think there's anything wrong with that. It's not a conspiracy, or a cover-up. It's preliminary, and it's biased, and it's not the end of the world or the end of the story.

The investigation continues, and I hope all the people who know something come forth to testify.

The fact that the cops didn't use batons or spray is a start, but it doesn't prove they didn't use excessive force. It's quite possible to do that without batons or spray. Just ask Thomas Junta.

I know from personal experience that it is possible to knock someone out by slamming him into the ground, or to break six of a guy's ribs, and I have no trouble believing you could stop someone's heart that way. Time will tell if that's what happened.

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I think the main point is that the facts, important facts, key facts, are disputed and therefore not necessarily facts.

Secondly, the commissioner is not just the top supervisor of the police, he also is responsible for the trustworthiness and credibility of the department. He should support his guys but mostly he should support a truthful process. He's gotten ahead of the facts here. His support should not have advanced into disputed issues.

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From the Globe:

A lawyer representing the family of David Woodman questioned yesterday why all nine Boston police officers who were present when the 22-year-old was arrested and stopped breathing while in custody during the Celtics title celebration immediately went to the hospital for stress, leaving a superior who arrived at the scene later to write the incident report.

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leaving a superior who arrived at the scene later to write the incident report.

this is a problem. the guy who documents the course of events and timing was not even there when the events occured.

this thing smells, worse by the day.

can someone explain why all nine police officers were suffering from stress when, according to all accounts, Kenmore was dead as a doornail, except for four college boys, one of whom had a smart mouth and an open container, but he was taken care of pronto

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"I shot a man just to watch him die" isn't reality, unless you're thinking all cops are sociopaths.

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The cops that dropped him, cuffed him and didn't notice he stopped breathing probably have some stress but that doesn't take 9 cops, it takes three or four at the most. Half the guys were uninvolved except as spectators. (I know you're not that gullible so why are you arguing devil's advocate?)

At the very least, they went ALL went in to counseling for cover. Stress is a mental condition that gives them some cover. And it also allows someone else to file the report, someone who was not an eyewitness.

Read the the story about the 2AM incident and tell me you think these cops are behaving in a reasonable manner. the 2AM incident is telling because it sounds like the same procedure (MO) as the "procedure" that killed Woodson.

The cops are overreacting and using excessive force. Explain why its OK for a cop to punch a person in the face twice and kick them when they're down.

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In the other incident, which occurred just after 2 a.m., Reed told the Globe that he and a friend had just left Remington's on Boylston Street and were only 4 feet from where he had parked his grandfather's car when police officers ordered them to turn around and walk in the other direction.

Reed said he told an officer, "The car's right in front of us; we're just going to get in and leave," and was told: "I don't care. You have to walk around the block to get to your car."

Reed said when he again asked if he could just get in his car, officers attacked him.

"They tried to throw me down, and I kind of caught myself, but then two more officers came in, so now I've got three on me, and they got me down," Reed said. "While I'm going down, I'm getting punched on the right side of my face, and I can remember I got punched twice. My lip was busted on that side. Basically they throw me down, punch me in the face, and grind my face into the street."

Reed said he was kicked by an officer while on the ground and later went to the hospital for a CAT scan, which was negative.

He said he had recently taken the police exam, scoring a 96, and would never resist arrest. His case is pending in Boston Municipal Court.

A report filed by police alleges officers believed that Reed and his friend "were being disorderly and attempting to incite the surrounding crowd by their actions" and that "officers were forced to use open-handed tactics to subdue the suspects."

NOTE: "SUBDUE THE SUSPECTS" - THEY WEREN'T CRIMINAL SUSPECTS, THEY JUST WANTED TO DISCUSS THE ORDER TO WALK AROUND THE BLOCK

"In a situation where officers are trying to maintain a peaceful environment with thousands of individuals, it's imperative that individuals do as they are asked," Driscoll said, when told of Reed's allegations. "In this particular situation, it seems clear that Mr. Reed did not do so."

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They're using overwhelming force as a deterrent for mob behaviour. The problem is that the citizens are not a threat that justifies overwhelming force.

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POLICE COMMISSIONER ED DAVIS REQUESTS FORMER US ATTORNEY DONALD K. STERN TO CONDUCT AN EXTERNAL REVIEW INTO THE DEATH OF DAVID WOODMAN

Police Commissioner Ed Davis has requested that Donald K. Stern, the former US Attorney and now a partner at Cooley Godward Kronish, review the facts and circumstances surround the death of David Woodman. The Suffolk County District Attorney’s office in conjunction with The Boston Police Homicide Unit has already begun a thorough and exhaustive investigation into David’s death. The Boston Police Internal Affairs Division is also conducting an investigation.

Commissioner Davis stated, “I have complete confidence that the investigation into the death of Mr. Woodman will be fair and thorough. In the interest of public trust and transparency, I see great value in having an outside, independent, and broader review of the circumstances into this incident, to determine if there are any changes in policies or training which the Department should consider. Obviously, this must be accomplished in a way which does not compromise the District Attorney's effort. I have assured Mr. Stern that he will have whatever support and assistance he needs from the Department."

David is asking for a review of department procedure, not for oversight by or investigation by the US Attorney's office.

At the least, the is political cover. I mean, he chose a lawyer in private practice who used to be the US Attorney. At most, he's aware of procedure that is problematic - like maybe slamming citizens to the ground when they're being arrested, punching them n the face and kicking them while they're down. What if that's policy!

Still, Woodman's parents don't trust the DA who is working with the Police and internal investigation. I don't blame them. The police have been circling the wagons from the word go and you don't need the Woodman's to tell you that to know its true.

LINK

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BOSTON—Boston's police commissioner is asking for an independent review into the death of a man who stopped breathing after his arrest during the Boston Celtics NBA championship celebrations last month.

Commissioner Edward Davis said Wednesday night he's asking former U.S. Attorney Donald Stern to conduct the outside investigation. Stern led an independent investigation into the death of Victoria Snelgrove, who was struck by a police pepper pellet during the Boston Red Sox 2004 American League Championship Series victory celebration.

Twenty-two-old David Woodman died Sunday, 11 days after his arrest. His parents, Jeffrey and Cathy Woodman of Southwick, have questioned police handling of their son.

The Woodmans lawyer says two of the nine officers involved in the case have previously faced disciplinary action.

LINK

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Police had faced discipline before
By Shelley Murphy and Maria Cramer
Globe Staff / July 3, 2008

STORY

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The kid - criminal justice major - that was apprehended at 2AM for trying to walk to his car from Remington's was supposed to have his arraignment today in Boston Municipal Court.

He said the police punched him in the face twice when they dropped him and pushed his face onto the ground. He also said one of the cops kicked him when he was down and cuffed.

I'm asking because I'm curious if this is standard procedure for police working crowd control. It's seem like excessive force to me. If I were walking to my car and a policeman asked me to walk around the block, I think I could try to discuss the request before I deserved to be arrested and beaten.

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IMAGE(http://i279.photobucket.com/albums/kk143/nfsagan/brutal-cope-are-not-heroes.jpg)

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Commissioner Davis worries me. He thinks his own detectives would be the best investigators to determine if there was a crime committed. Why risk a poor investigation or pit uniform cops against detectives? He could handed this over to the FBI with an understanding that nothing would be leaked unless charges were brought, and that a factual report would be delivered to the commissioner but no, we've put the FBI on the tail end of this relying on the quality of the work by department insiders.

FBI to probe death of fan
At issue is use of excessive force
By Shelley Murphy, Globe Staff / July 8, 2008

The FBI announced yesterday that it will look into whether Boston police officers used excessive force while arresting David Woodman, but not until after police and Suffolk County prosecutors finish their investigation into the death of the 22-year-old former Emmanuel College student who was arrested during the Celtics championship celebration and stopped breathing while in custody.

"We will take a look at all of the facts once they are available; then we will decide what further steps, if any, need to be taken," said Gail Marcinkiewicz, a spokeswoman for the FBI in Boston, adding that the agency is also awaiting Woodman's autopsy results, which are not completed.
WHOLE STORY

IMAGE(http://cache.boston.com/resize/bonzai-fba/Globe_Photo/2008/07/07/1215486588_6070/300h.jpg)

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.

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What's your point?

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My point is put a period on it. Repeatedly editing the same post so that it will pop up again and again on the recent comments list is asinine.

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David Woodman's parents lawyer on NECN video link here. This is a good review of the information the lawyer has been able to obtain..

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Two new victims of "Boston's finest"

July 8, 2008

AS IN just about every city in the country, the police in Boston are flooding into neighborhoods and increasing surveillance, all in the name of cracking down on violence. The summer began, though, with two incidents that displayed the Boston cops' own violent tactics.

On May 27, in the Black neighborhood of Roxbury, police hit 20-year-old Nathaniel Rivers with their cruiser and then beat him.

According to Rivers, he found a gun in a park where his family was having a cookout. The mayor and the cops have been promoting a program that pays people to turn in guns, so Nathaniel got on his bike to take the gun to the police station. He didn't get far though before police knocked him off his bike when they rammed him with their car.

The cops then beat Nathaniel so severely that he needed an EMT's attention afterward. His cousin, Stephen Lewis, intervened to protect Nathaniel when he saw that the cops were unrelenting. "They just kept beating him and beating him and beating him," Lewis told the Boston Globe. "I only stepped in when he said 'I can't breathe!'" The cops responded by beating Lewis, too.

Freda Rivers, Nathaniel's mother, lamented the cops' actions as her son was arraigned for unlawful possession of a firearm the next day, his face bruised from the night before. "Mayor Thomas Menino is telling these kids to pick up guns and turn them in," she said. "Is this what's going to happen to them?"

Less than a month later, on June 18, the Boston Celtics beat the Los Angeles Lakers, winning the NBA Championship.

After weeks of anticipation, the city erupted in celebration at the longstanding underdogs' win. In a city so divided by racism, it was amazing to see Black and white people from different neighborhoods converge downtown in a spirit of celebration and togetherness. The cops had other plans, though.

For weeks, they had been boasting of a huge presence downtown during the final games, and they out were in full force with riot gear during game six, when the Celtics won. The cops arrested 24 people that night, wielding clubs all the way.

In press conferences the next day, police and city spokespeople commended the cops on a job well done in keeping the streets safe. Eleven days later though, 22-year-old arrestee David Woodman died in a hospital from injuries suffered at the hands of the police.

According to police, Woodman had an open container on the night of the game, and he ran when the cops started chasing him. Because he "struggled," the police "were required to use force." The fact that Woodman had to be rushed to the hospital, where he went into a coma, speaks to the kind of force the cops used.

Nathaniel Rivers and David Woodman come from different places. Rivers is from the beleaguered Black neighborhood of Roxbury in Boston, and Woodman lived in the affluent, white suburb of Brookline. Tragically, both suffered at the hands of "Boston's finest," both were victims of police repression in the name of law and order, and both victims have been portrayed as the aggressors.

Whatever the pretexts for the repression, we should have no illusions that the cops will protect and serve us.
Khury Petersen-Smith,, Boston
LINK

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Many people greeted Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis’ assertion that the department could launch a fair investigation into the death of David Woodman with skepticism. How can officers investigate their own without some kind of bias?

link: Boston Magazine >> Daily Blog

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Boston Magazine >> Boston Daily Blog

Woodman’s death will be another test of his leadership. The young man’s friends have told the media that officers were unnecessarily rough when they arrested him, and his parents are calling for a federal investigation.

Davis has resisted those efforts and is instead calling for an internal review, along with the Suffolk DA’s investigation.

The account given by Woodman’s friends and Boston Police are very contradictory.

[snip]

One of the friends said he returned a few minutes later but was ordered to leave or face arrest. “They were all just around him and he was on the ground and not moving,” the friend said. “I didn’t see them giving him CPR.”

For their part, officers say they started CPR when they realized Woodman was in trouble.

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New York Times
By PAM BELLUCK

BOSTON —The death of a 22-year-old man who had been taken into custody on the night the Boston Celtics won the N.B.A. championship has prompted an official investigation.

The family of the man, David Woodman of Brookline, is questioning whether the actions of the police in subduing him or seeking medical attention for him after he had stopped breathing may have contributed to his death.

More

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to start your own blog these days.

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That were pointless and had absolutely nothing to do with the death of Mr. Woodman.

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SIMSBURY, Conn. - David J. Woodman was remembered this morning as young man who loved life, always spoke his mind, and was steadfast in his faith. MORE HERE

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An attorney for the family of a Southwick man who died last week says they are happy things are moving in the right direction, hoping an investigation by the FBI will shed some light onto whether or not Boston Police officers used excessive force in the arrest that may have led to their son's death.

"We asked for the FBI to investigate, so we're glad that they're doing that," said Howard Friedman, a civil rights attorney representing the family of David Woodman.

[snip]

Police have denied any wrongdoing but Friedman says he is concerned about how the investigation into Woodman's death will be handled.

"I'm worried because Boston police officers will be investigating Boston police officers. All 9 officers claimed to have stress so they were unable to be interviewed initially, and we know the officers at the scene forced all of the civilians out of the area under threat of arrest, so that raises our suspicion," Friedman said by telephone Tuesday.

link to source

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Stern appoints 2 to investigative team
July 10, 2008

BOSTON—The former U.S. attorney leading the independent investigation into the death of a Celtics fan has appointed a former FBI bureau chief and a former U.S. Marshal to his team.

Donald Stern said Wednesday that Barry Mawn and Nancy McGillivray will help him probe accusations of excessive force by police during the arrest of 22-year-old David Woodman.

Mawn led the FBI's Boston office from 1997 to 2000. McGillivray was a supervisor with the U.S. Marshal's service in Boston from 1994 to 2002. more

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US attorney: Police role key in death probe
One officer faced prior suit; independent panel in place
By Shelley Murphy and Jeannie M. Nuss,
Globe July 10, 2008

US Attorney Michael J. Sullivan [not former US Attorney Stern] pledged yesterday to find out whether Boston police officers used excessive force against David Woodman, a 22-year-old former Emmanuel College student who stopped breathing after his arrest during the Celtics championship celebration last month and died 11 days later in the hospital.

At the same time, a lawyer [former US Attorney Stern] who was tapped by the police commissioner to conduct an independent review of the circumstances surrounding Woodman's death said he has recruited two high-profile security consultants to help determine whether officers followed regulations.

The Globe has also learned that one of the nine officers involved in Woodman's arrest was accused of beating a man with a flashlight during a 2003 arrest, according to a lawsuit. The case was settled for $1,000, and an internal investigation cleared the officer, according to officials.

It is unclear what caused Woodman's death on June 29. Officials said they are awaiting autopsy results.

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CLOSE RANKS
Protect self interest, not the public interest.
By Joan Vennochi, July 10, 2008

The Boston Firefighters' Union is once again flaunting its me-first culture and resistance to change.

Four months ago, Boston Fire Commissioner Roderick Fraser demanded that a department board reopen its investigation and examine autopsy reports of two firefighters who died last year in a restaurant fire. The board - composed entirely of union members - did nothing. As reported by the Globe's Donovan Slack, board members refused to examine autopsy reports that indicate that one firefighter had cocaine in his system and the second had a blood alcohol level of 0.27, more than three times the legal limit to drive in Massachusetts.

[snip]

The "culture problem" at the Boston Fire Department is the big problem.

The Boston Firefighters Union continues to play the role of rebel with only one cause, self-protection. Union president Ed Kelly recently told Boston Magazine that the scandals of the past 11 months have been twisted to serve a single purpose: "to bully us into an inferior contract," so the city can save money. "The only time you read about alleged abuse and gaming of the system is when they're trying to attack us, to put pressure on us at the bargaining table," said Kelly in the magazine's July edition.

A me-first mentality is not unusual for public employee unions. You can see another example after the death of David Woodman, 22, who stopped breathing while in police custody after his arrest during the June 18 Boston Celtics NBA championship celebration.

The first reaction of police officers involved in the incident was to coordinate their stories to protect each other. Thomas J. Nee, president of the Boston Police Patrolmen's Association, responded with immediate certainty that "nothing those officers did that night caused his death." Nee's certainty was backed up by Police Commissioner Edward F. Davis, who also declared, "While our investigation is still preliminary, it appears from the evidence that we have reviewed thus far that officers did not use excessive force." The FBI is now investigating the matter.

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Seriously, stop. First, you are doing nothing but adding tons of copyright violations. This site isn't for aggregation of every news article and this discussion isn't for posting every single thing that has David Woodman's name in it. You add nothing of interest to what you post, you just copy and paste someone else's work. Sure, you link back to its origin, but if you're going to do that then there's NO POINT in copying the entire thing here too.

Stop spamming this story every time someone somewhere says "David Woodman". Hell, some of your additions here aren't even related to Woodman.

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What the fuck. Why are posting this shit about David Woodman death? He's dead man. Give it a rest.

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It's sucks an effin waste of effin fucking time.

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I may be mistaken but I don't think it's up to you to decide what this thread is for. How about this? You post on the threads you want to post on, I'll do the same, and if Adam wants me to do it differently I'll comply, negotiate or leave.

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By all means discuss David Woodman. But rather than reprinting whole sections of every single column on the case, you could do something like "Joan Vennocchi today raises more questions about the case, saying X, Y and Z. Here's a link."

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Will do, Adam.

Kaz, you post as you choose and I'll do as I choose. What makes you think there's a certain way to do it and it's your job to tell other people? I'd call you a presumptuous a-hole but Adam frowns on that.

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why should anyone listen to what you are saying? Get a login handle if you want people to take you seriously.

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Anonymous is their logged-in moniker. That's the name they gave their user account.

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It's entirely up to you Ron if you want to agree or disagree or ignore my posts. Beside, as Kaz pointed out, I do actually exist, in both senses.

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A globe columnist call it a cover-up

The first reaction of police officers involved in the incident was to coordinate their stories to protect each other.

I thought it was weird when all nine officers at the scene went immediately to the hospital for stress therapy. And I thought it was weird when none of the officers involved including the lead officer, wrote the incident report. Instead it was written by someone who was not there when the incident happened.

This incident has a certain stench to it. The bottom line is, at worst, a smart-mouthed kid carting an open beer opened his mouth, not to say something hostile, just to say something smart-mouthed. Arresting him is perfectly normal. On the other hand, they could have even told him to dump the beer and left it at that but they didn't.

Even if they didn't use excessive force but they did neglect him after they arrested him, and his brain damage was a result of the neglect, its manslaughter at a minimun.

If they did use excessive force and lied about him fleeing, then we have the indication that they knew exactly what they had done.

If it was the cop who had been sued for beating a suspect with his flashlight, then the BPD is in trouble for putting him back on the street.

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Officers attempted to conduct a threshold inquiry when the suspect attempted to flee. He was soon subdued by officers. The suspect began struggling with the officers as they attempted to handcuff him.

"Subdued" is interesting choice of words. He was subdued with overwhelming force. The question is "Was it necessary or did one or two of these cops have a hair across their ass?"

Did he "began struggling...as they attempted to handcuff him" or did he began struggling as they "attempted to conduct a threshold inquiry" because according to this report, he started struggling right off the bat.

When exactly did they smash him on the ground and not notice he had stopped breathing?

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How drunk would a person have to be to try and outrun 9 cops in riot gear who were close enough to him to hear him say "there must be a lot of crime on this corner"?

Any word on whether the police dropped the charges of drinking in public and resisting arrest?

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Here is an interesting account of the incident. It does not include any description that resembles David Woodmen's alleged attempt to flee, which is the only justification for handling him so forcefully. Without the attempt to flee, it is clearly excessive force. In other words, if he cooperated, they can't smash him into a fence and then smash him face first on the ground.

Here's another thing to consider: If you walked close enough to 9 cops to be heard saying "Wow, it seems like there's a lot of crime on this corner" would you run if they told you to stop?

David, a well-liked 22-year-old Emmanuel College student who had moved from San Jose to Massachusetts before high school, was carrying a beer as he walked home with four buddies from a Kenmore Square bar. At Fenway and Brookline Avenue, they passed a group of cops. "," Woodman said sarcastically.

Police encounter

His buddies say the cops slammed Woodman against a fence and shoved him to the pavement. Then they warned the friends to get lost.

Sometime in the next few minutes - maybe just then - Woodman's heart stopped. As an infant, he had suffered from a heart condition that required open-chest surgery, leaving him with a huge scar and a shorter grip on life.

Between his handcuffing and the time police summoned an urgent, or "push" ambulance, six minutes elapsed. CPR by the cops failed to bring Woodman back. His family says his brain was deprived of oxygen.

Though he revived in the hospital long enough to greet his mother, Woodman was never the same. On June 29, he died. Investigators are awaiting autopsy results.

[snip]

My friends in Boston say the investigation called by the U.S. attorney may have legs, in part because the nine officers who surrounded Woodman went to the hospital immediately for stress treatment - an unusual move that postponed questioning.

http://www.mercurynews.com/columns/ci_9906056

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Unanswered questions about who started the encounter with Woodman
Why have the police and the commissioner not been able to answer questions about which of the nine officers started the encounter with David Woodman?

Howard Friedman, who represents the parents of David Woodman, said there are unanswered questions about who started the encounter with Woodman. link


Not a long struggle: at least two officers had contact maybe as many as six

Commissioner Davis said in a telephone interview:

"There was a violent resistance to an arrest, and the incident was over very, very quickly"

Commissioner Davis in a press conference:

Officers attempted to conduct an inquiry when the suspect attempted to flee. He was quickly stopped by the officers. The suspect began struggling as I handcuffed him. At some point, officers realized he was in medical distress. They released him from handcuffs and immediately began to administer CPR, while summonsing EMS to the location

Why does Commissioner Davis assert there was a "violent resistance" in the phone interview and make no mention of it in the press conference?

Note the passive construction, which is frequently an attempt to conceal known facts, with or without malicious intent.

Presumably the press conference is to clear the air about what actually happened. Don't you think it's important for people to know the suspect "violently resisted" arrest and it was that resistance that caused the police to reasonably increase the force they used to arrest the boy carrying an open beer?


Two officers previously disciplined: relevant or not?

A lawyer for David Woodman's family voiced outrage yesterday after learning that two of the nine officers who were with the 22-year-old Brookline man when he stopped breathing … had previously been disciplined, one for domestic violence and the other for a lack of judgment in dealing with a shooting suspect.
[snip]
Boston Police Commissioner Edward F. Davis said that neither of the two officers initiated Woodman's arrest, and that one had no physical contact with him, while the other helped push Woodman's arm behind his back while he was resisting arrest.


Globe forces Boston Police to release names of officers at the scene

[On July 2] …Boston police released the names of the eight officers and one sergeant involved in arresting Woodman, along with their department histories, in response to a request from the Globe under the Freedom of Information Act.

Commissioner Davis said Parker, Blake, and Morse had no physical contact with Woodman.

- Henderson Parker, 41, [who joined in 1994], was suspended for 30 days in 2002 following "a physical confrontation of a domestic nature that resulted in injuries," according to a police record. The record did not provide any more details, but Davis said the confrontation did not happen while Parker was at work.

- Sergeant James Blake, 42, who joined the department in 2001;

- Brian Morse, 28, who joined in 2007

1. Steven Collette, 26, who joined the department in 2006;

2. Michael Condon, 30, who joined in 2006;

3. Carina Acosta, 31, who joined in 2005;

4. Dowayne Lewis, 34, [who joined in 2001], was suspended two days in October 2005 for acting unprofessionally during an arrest. In that case, a man who shot a gun outside Lewis's house was arrested and placed in the back of a cruiser. Lewis, who was not on duty, approached the cruiser to identify the suspect and opened the door, in violation of department rules. The suspect tried to hit Lewis, who shoved back, Davis said

5. Michael McManus, 30, who joined in 2007

6. Officer Steven Borne, [who joined in 2007, is] a 24-year-old former emergency medical technician … was the officer who administered CPR when Woodman stopped breathing, Davis said. Borne is the subject of a pending internal affairs investigation spurred by a motorist's complaint that he was disrespectful while issuing her a ticket last month, Davis said.

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let the kid RIP.

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How could anyone rest in peace after being brutalized to death by 9 cops in riot gear just for saying what's on your mind? What kind of country do we live in? The United States used to be the home of the free- now it's the home of the cops everywhere. They are tazing people to death everyday, too. Scarey. Don't breath wrong.

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i agree.

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Cullen finds a season ticket holder who saw it coming.

How many others have to die before the Boston police figure out that maybe, just maybe, they are helping to create the very conditions they seek to control with storm trooper tactics?
Asking for trouble
By Kevin Cullen
July 21, 2008

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I don't know if you heard this but David Woodman's parents hired a lawyer because they think it might have been wrongful death. The Boston Police Department was less than forthcoming answering their questions about what happened.

On top of that, not one of the nine police officers at the scene filed a report on the incident. Instead, they all went off for stress counseling. The Woodman's lawyer said that is unprecedented in Boston. He thinks they may have done to get their stories straight.

Do you know what David Woodman's last words were?

What happened?

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Stop adding misinformation. He said that after waking up from the coma on the 23rd. He died a few hours into the 29th. He was alive, awake, and talking that whole week.

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If you happened to be a civilian coming home that night from the game maybe with your kids in the car and Dave Woodman or someone of his ilk decided to jump on your car at a red light and kick in your windshield (which happened elsewhere that night), you'd be damn glad that 9 police officers were there to grab him.

It's called personal responsibility. Woodman was drunk in the street, acting up, and was arrested. Blame God or bad genes for his preexisting condition.

BPD does an excellent job in very tough conditions.

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Yet, at the same time, this:

"It's called personal responsibility. Woodman was drunk in the street, acting up, and was arrested. Blame God or bad genes for his preexisting condition."

does not excuse the BPD cops having used excessive force that resulted in Woodman's death.

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If I happened to be going home from the game and Dave Woodman was an alien scared by the loud noises who was about to eat me to calm his stomach but he was vulnerable to police-issued pepper spray, then I'd have been damn glad that 9 cops were there to douse him in the stuff.

I like this game; what else can we pretend happened?

BPD shot Victoria Snelgrove in the eye. Their "excellent job" when it comes to near-riot/riot conditions is very much in question.

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David Woodman's last words were, "What happened?" He spoke them after he woke from a medically induced comma. He was talking to his mother. He died shortly after.

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Don't add misinformation to an already contentious situation. His last words weren't "What happened?". He woke from the coma on June 23rd, a Monday. He was alive, awake, and talking in the hospital until early morning on Sunday, June 29. He even discussed wanting to go home on Saturday the 28th. He died SIX DAYS after being woken from the coma.

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What's the timeline of events from when he left the bar, was forcibly detained, cuffed and placed face down, released from cuffs, two ambulance calls, woke up in the hospital, died?

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early June 18, just after the game: he leaves the bar to walk home
around 12:30A-12:47A: officers cuff him and call for an ambulance for a drunk
sometime between 12:47A-12:53A: police begin CPR and call at 12:53 for a second time for ambulance this time asking "please push"
12:58: Cataldo ambulance flagged by hand and begin working
1:11A: Cataldo deliver him to hospital

June 23rd: wakes from medically induced coma and asks "What happened?"

June 23-28: meets Globe reporter on that Thursday, talks with parents, seems confused at times

June 28th: asks to go home

2:30 AM, June 29th: dies in hospital

All of that taken from this Globe article.

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How the fuck do you know? You're a pig. You're the one planting yourself here in order to contaminate the truth with misinformation.

You'd like to see ONE person doused with NINE cans of pepper spray. You're a pig, indeed. No other person on this planet is as PORKLY and PIGGISH.

He awoke from the coma only briefly while on life support because let's face it, he was dead before the pigs even called in for medical support. Even then, the Boston Pigs were disparaging an innocent man. "Some drunk guy, nonresponsive on the street" ...

INNOCENT UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY. You pigs don't decide guilt. You may only allege. YOU ALLEGE he was drinking in public. YOU ALLEGE he resisted arrest yet ONE FACT WILL FOREVER REMAIN TRUE. ONE MAN is dead after being jumped by NINE PIGS.

Dead.

So, not only does the Boston Police believe they are able to find guilt or innocence but these renegade pigs now believe they've been entrusted with blindly laying down death sentences in immediate response to an ALLEGATION of drinking in public.

"Don't run, bitch! Don't resist! Lay there and let the nine of us kill you!" That is the state we live in. Renegade pigs everywhere we turn. Ripping faces off with cement, making young people eat curb because you don't like their sarcasm, electrocuting citizens, throwing bombs at seven year old children, repeatedly raping the foster children they adopt.* That is what you pigs do and you have a nerve to come online and plead a case?

"We don't call them bombs. We call them "bangs" ... that is our word. We give you our word. Now accept it!"

Your word is not worth shit and the citizens of this commonwealth are fed up.

*See:
www.sexcriminals.com/forums/101/13529/153430.html - 143k

www.janedoe.org/about/about_news_05_23_05.htm

Oh. But wait ... there's more!!

www.sexcriminals.com/forums/101/13529/140370.html

http://www.prisoners.com/lukantkj.html

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4TSHB_enU...

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4TSHB_enU...

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4TSHB_enU...

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4TSHB_enU...

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4TSHB_enU...

What is that now? MILLIONS of hits leading to stories about a pig cop and his criminal activity? Rape, Murder, Brutality, Theft?!

History is prognostic, Mother Fucker.

What are you going to do when the citizens arrest you? Resist?

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Really, you should try to work out your problems with a counselor instead of taking a big verbal crap on the internet.

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Man who collapsed during arrest after Celtics victory dies.

I'm not sure its true that David Woodman collapsed. I think he was subdued by police and already face down on the ground when he stopped breathing. We don't know if he stopped breathing as a result of the physical encounter or subsequently. Doctors told his parents that the brain damage he suffered was a result of no oxygen to the brain for four minutes. CPR administered immediately mitigates because even though the heart is not working, the CPR action causes blood flow and oxygenation. I've been meaning to ask you to correct the title if that's ok.

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Any word from the Suffolk County DA or BPD Commissioner Davis regarding their progress on this investigation?

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