2005-04-12 Videos Challenge Arrests – NY Times

Videos Challenge Hundreds of Convention Arrests


http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/12/nyregion/12video.html?pagewanted=all

New York Times

April 12th, 2005

By Jim Dwyer

Dennis Kyne put up such a fight at a political protest last
summer, the arresting officer recalled, it took four police
officers to haul him down the steps of the New York Public
Library and across Fifth Avenue.

“We picked him up and we carried him while he squirmed and
screamed,” the officer, Matthew Wohl, testified in December.
“I had one of his legs because he was kicking and refusing to
walk on his own.”

Accused of inciting a riot and resisting arrest, Mr. Kyne was the
first of the 1,806 people arrested in New York last summer during the
Republican National Convention to take his case to a jury. But one day
after Officer Wohl testified, and before the defense called a single
witness, the prosecutor abruptly dropped all charges.

During a recess, the defense had brought new information to the
prosecutor. A videotape shot by a documentary filmmaker showed
Mr. Kyne agitated but plainly walking under his own power down the
library steps, contradicting the vivid account of Officer Wohl, who
was nowhere to be seen in the pictures. Nor was the officer seen
taking part in the arrests of four other people at the library
against whom he signed complaints.

A sprawling body of visual evidence, made possible by inexpensive,
lightweight cameras in the hands of private citizens, volunteer
observers and the police themselves, has shifted the debate over
precisely what happened on the streets during the week of the
convention.

For Mr. Kyne and 400 others arrested that week, video recordings
provided evidence that they had not committed a crime or that the
charges against them could not be proved, according to defense lawyers
and prosecutors.

Among them was Alexander Dunlop, who said he was arrested while
going to pick up sushi.

Last week, he discovered that there were two versions of the same
police tape: the one that was to be used as evidence in his trial had
been edited at two spots, removing images that showed Mr. Dunlop
behaving peacefully. When a volunteer film archivist found a more
complete version of the tape and gave it to Mr. Dunlop’s lawyer,
prosecutors immediately dropped the charges and said that a technician
had cut the material by mistake.

Seven months after the convention at Madison Square Garden,
criminal charges have fallen against all but a handful of people
arrested that week. Of the 1,670 cases that have run their full
course, 91 percent ended with the charges dismissed or with a
verdict of not guilty after trial. Many were dropped without any
finding of wrongdoing, but also without any serious inquiry into
the circumstances of the arrests, with the Manhattan district
attorney’s office agreeing that the cases should be “adjourned
in contemplation of dismissal.”

So far, 162 defendants have either pleaded guilty or were convicted
after trial, and videotapes that bolstered the prosecution’s case
played a role in at least some of those cases, although prosecutors
could not provide details.

Besides offering little support or actually undercutting the
prosecution of most of the people arrested, the videotapes also
highlight another substantial piece of the historical record: the
Police Department’s tactics in controlling the demonstrations, parades
and rallies of hundreds of thousands of people were largely free of
explicit violence.

Throughout the convention week and afterward, Mayor Michael R.
Bloomberg said that the police issued clear warnings about blocking
streets or sidewalks, and that officers moved to arrest only those who
defied them. In the view of many activists — and of many people who
maintain that they were passers-by and were swept into dragnets
indiscriminately thrown over large groups — the police strategy
appeared to be designed to sweep them off the streets on technical
grounds as a show of force.

“The police develop a narrative, the defendant has a different
story, and the question becomes, how do you resolve it?” said Eileen
Clancy, a member of I-Witness Video, a project that assembled hundreds
of videotapes shot during the convention by volunteers for use by
defense lawyers.

Paul J. Browne, a police spokesman, said that videotapes often
do not show the full sequence of events, and that the public should
not rush to criticize officers simply because their recollections of
events are not consistent with a single videotape. The Manhattan
district attorney’s office is reviewing the testimony of Officer Wohl
at the request of Lewis B. Oliver Jr., the lawyer who represented
Mr. Kyne in his arrest at the library.

The Police Department maintains that much of the videotape that
has surfaced since the convention captured what Mr. Browne called
the department’s professional handling of the protests and parades.
“My guess is that people who saw the police restraint admired it,”
he said.

Video is a useful source of evidence, but not an easy one to
manage, because of the difficulties in finding a fleeting image in
hundreds of hours of tape. Moreover, many of the tapes lack index and
time markings, so cuts in the tape are not immediately apparent.

That was a problem in the case of Mr. Dunlop, who learned that his
tape had been altered only after Ms. Clancy found another version of
the same tape. Mr. Dunlop had been accused of pushing his bicycle into
a line of police officers on the Lower East Side and of resisting
arrest, but the deleted parts of the tape show him calmly approaching
the police line, and later submitting to arrest without apparent
incident.

A spokeswoman for the district attorney, Barbara Thompson, said
the material had been cut by a technician in the prosecutor’s
office. “It was our mistake,” she said. “The assistant district
attorney wanted to include that portion” because she initially
believed that it supported the charges against Mr. Dunlop. Later,
however, the arresting officer, who does not appear on the video,
was no longer sure of the specifics in the complaint against
Mr. Dunlop.

In what appeared to be the most violent incident at the convention
protests, video shot by news reporters captured the beating of a man
on a motorcycle — a police officer in plainclothes – and led to the
arrest of one of those involved, Jamal Holiday. After eight months in
jail, he pleaded guilty last month to attempted assault, a low-level
felony that will be further reduced if he completes probation. His
lawyer, Elsie Chandler of the Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem,
said that videos had led to his arrest, but also provided support for
his claim that he did not realize the man on the motorcycle was a
police officer, reducing the severity of the offense.

Mr. Browne, the police spokesman, said that despite many civilians
with cameras who were nearby when the officer was attacked, none
of the material was turned over to police trying to identify the
assailants. Footage from a freelance journalist led police to
Mr. Holiday, he said.

In the bulk of the 400 cases that were dismissed based on
videotapes, most involved arrests at three places — 16th Street near
Union Square, 17th Street near Union Square and on Fulton Street —
where police officers and civilians taped the gatherings, said Martin
R. Stolar, the president of the New York City chapter of the National
Lawyers Guild. Those tapes showed that the demonstrators had followed
the instructions of senior officers to walk down those streets, only
to have another official order their arrests.

Ms. Thompson of the district attorney’s office said, “We looked at
videos from a variety of sources, and in a number of cases, we have
moved to dismiss.”

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

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