Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Woman calls police for noise, they kill her.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts





  • In the moments before a yoga teacher was fatally shot by Minneapolis police, a woman slapped the officers’ patrol car while it drove through an alley, according to a search warrant application filed this week.

    Though the information in the warrant is vague, it could explain the “loud sound” that reportedly startled Officers Matthew Harrity, the cruiser’s driver, and Officer Mohamed Noor, who was in the front passenger seat, just before Noor shot 40-year-old Justine Damond. Harrity described the noise to investigators.

    [Timeline of Justine Damond shooting]

    The warrant to search the area near the incident, obtained by several local media outlets, does not specify whether the woman who reportedly slapped the car was also the shooting victim, 40-year-old Australian native Damond.

    Damond, who moved to Minneapolis in 2015 to be with her fiancee, was killed just before midnight on July 15 — an incident still shrouded in mystery because the investigating agency, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, has released few details and it was not captured on camera.

    “Upon police arrival, a female ‘slaps’ the back of the patrol squad,” according to the search warrant filed by the BCA, reported MPR News. “After that, it is unknown to BCA agents what exactly happened, but the female became deceased in the alley.”

    The two had responded to 911 calls from Damond at around 11:30 p.m. reporting a possible sexual assault in the alley behind the woman’s home in a nice Minneapolis neighborhood. Damond, according to the 911 transcripts, called when she heard a woman either having sex or being raped, The Washington Post previously reported.

    “I think she just yelled out ‘help,’ but it’s difficult,” Damond said, according to a police transcript of the call.

    Damond called again eight minutes later when authorities still hadn’t arrived, worried they had gone to the wrong address.

    [Australian woman fatally shot by Minneapolis police called 911 twice to report hearing a possible rape]

    It’s unclear what exactly happened next, but Harrity told BCA investigators that Damond approached his side of the vehicle right after the loud noise. Noor, sitting in the passenger seat, fired his gun across his partner’s body and through the driver’s side window, striking Damond in the abdomen.

    The officers attempted CPR, but 20 minutes after she called 911, Damond was dead.

    Authorities found no weapons at the scene.


    There has been international outcry in the weeks since, prompting rallies in Minnesota, beachside vigils from Damond’s family in Australia and the resignation of the Minneapolis police chief over concerns that her officers — including Noor and Harrity — had not been properly trained.

    Noor has declined to speak with BCA investigators, but an attorney for Harrity, Fred Bruno, hinted in an interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune last week that the officers may have believed they were being ambushed.

    “It’s certainly reasonable to assume that any police officer would be concerned about a possible ambush under these circumstances,” Bruno told the Star Tribune.


    A fake street sign is mounted on the same pole as legitimate ones at a Minneapolis intersection on July 23. (Erin Adler/Star Tribune via AP)
    Last weekend, several bright orange metal signs appeared in the Minneapolis region, bolted to already existing street signs with a message mocking Harrity’s “startled” comment: “WARNING: TWIN CITIES POLICE EASILY STARTLED.”

    The signs featured a cartoon police officer with guns in both hands, firing in opposite directions. The signs were later removed.

    The signs were just one of several acts of protest in the weeks since Damond’s death. The day after she died, hundreds of neighbors, community members, political candidates and police reform advocates gathered outside Damond’s home to celebrate her life and demand transparency from police.


    Officials, including Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges, were quick to condemn the lack of video evidence from the shooting. Both officers wore body cameras but never turned them on, and the dash camera on the patrol did not capture the incident.

    That fueled outrage from community members and groups like Black Lives Matter, which advocated for police body cameras to prevent the mystery that often accompanies officer-involved shootings with conflicting narratives. The Twin Cities region was already jarred by two other fatal police shootings of black men from the area, Philando Castile and Jamar Clark.

    In his first interview since Damond was killed, Don Damond, the man she was to marry in August, told the New York Times last week that he initially thought it was the alleged rapist who had shot her. Justine had called him that night when she heard the screams outside. From inside a casino in Las Vegas, he told her to call 911.

    Once police arrived, they hung up, Don Damond told the Times. He told her to call him back, but the rest of the night his texts went unanswered.


    “I have played this over in my head over and over,” Damond told the Times. “Why didn’t I stay on the phone with her?”
    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

    Comment


    • Originally posted by kingjason View Post
      Depends on what they are talking about. If you do Academy plus field training usually you are looking at 9 months or so in Texas for a newb, maybe a year. In Lancaster 17 weeks was a whole hell of a lot of training after the 5 month academy, current city, not so much. But you just can't keep everyone in training for years until they get some calls. I bet he is in a hopping city though so that should not have been an issue. Sometimes common sense is hard to beat into people.

      They could be closely monitored for signs, though. Given his history, they'd have let him go some time ago if they were actually doing a good job of choosing which cops should be dealing with the public. If they have slim pickings, offer significantly higher pay. That really shouldn't be a problem, given how much money the city wastes on stupid shit. I'd wager that there are a lot of good people out there that would feel a need to serve the public, but for one reason or another couldn't get by on a cop's salary.
      WH

      Comment


      • Latest update: Police have gotten and executed a search warrant for the woman's home to look for "bodily fluids, weapons and drugs and writings"



        July 25, 2017 06:18 PM

        Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension investigators were granted permission to search Justine Damond's home hours after she was shot and killed by a Minneapolis police officer, according to court records.

        A criminal law expert can't understand why.

        RELATED: Search Warrants in Damond Shooting Indicate Woman Slapped Patrol Car

        "I don't understand why they're looking for bodily fluids inside her home," said Joseph Daly, an emeritus professor at Mitchell Hamline School of Law, referring to one of two recently-released search warrant applications.

        "Whose bodily fluids are they looking for? Is she a suspect? I don't understand why they're looking for controlled substances inside her home. I don't understand why they're looking for writings inside her home. The warrant does not explain that to me."

        RELATED: Police Commander: Noor's File Contains No Red Flags

        "When I read that search warrant, I really cannot find probable cause to search her home," he continued.

        According to court documents, investigators applied for the warrant on the following grounds:

        The property or things above-described was used as a means of committing a crime
        The possession of the property or things above-described constitutes a crime.
        The property or things above-described is in the possession of a person with intent to use such property as a means of committing a crime, or the property or things so intended to be used are in the possession of another to whom they have been delivered for the purpose of concealing them or preventing their being discovered.
        The property or things above-described constitutes evidence which tends to show a crime has been committed, or tends to show that a particular person has committed a crime.
        Asked if that means the BCA considers Damond to be a suspect, spokesperson Jill Oliveira replied via email:


        "No, an individual involved in the incident."

        Daly, who said he has served as a visiting professor at the University of Queensland in Damond's native Australia, believes concerned members of the public in both countries will be outraged by the BCA's request to search the home.

        "It's going to cause an international incident," he said. "I mean the prime minister of Australia already talked about this case on international television, and I think Australians are going to go berserk if they think the focus is on this woman as a suspect."

        According to court documents, investigators did not end up taking any evidence from Damond's home.
        I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

        Comment


        • Wow...I fucking hate the police in this country.

          Comment


          • Thin blue line... I bet if they would have found contraband they would have spun this story so far from the truth.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Craizie View Post
              Thin blue line... I bet if they would have found contraband they would have spun this story so far from the truth.
              Oh they're trying. Looking for bodily fluids, writings to indicate a crime, anything to make her a threat to them so they could play it off as self defense. Currently? They're claiming she slapped the vehicle which resulted in the idiot shooting her later.
              I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

              Comment


              • Sounds right. Get ANY dirt on her by any means necessary so we can exonerate the dumb ninja cop and make it about her. Hell, call in the FBI because she's one of those deep undercover Aussie terrorists and definitely has all kinds of evil and stolen military tech plans on encrypted hard drives.
                sigpic

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Sgt Beavis View Post
                  Yea, I said it. Minnesota is just as racist at Louisiana.
                  Which is interesting, considering that Minneapolis has the highest, or at least one of the top highest concentrations of Somalis outside of Somalia.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by GE View Post
                    Which is interesting, considering that Minneapolis has the highest, or at least one of the top highest concentrations of Somalis outside of Somalia.
                    You have bought into the myth that whites are the raciest of the world.
                    Magnus, I am your father. You need to ask your mother about a man named Calvin Klein.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by svauto-erotic855 View Post
                      You have bought into the myth that whites are the raciest of the world.
                      Ding, ding, ding.... winner, winner, chicken dinner!

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by svauto-erotic855 View Post
                        You have bought into the myth that whites are the raciest of the world.
                        Yes, it is just as much of a problem with every other race. The sooner we ALL get around to accepting that, the sooner we can move past it and maybe, just maybe, make some progress.

                        Comment


                        • Noor’s attorney, Tom Plunkett, also gave a statement Thursday, saying that Noor has no plans to talk with investigators.

                          However, he could be forced to give a statement if there’s a garrity – where an employee can be ordered to give a statement.

                          Plunkett also wants a coroner’s report with an outside lab, saying “it would be nice to know if there were some Ambien in [Damond’s] system.”

                          On that, he didn’t elaborate.

                          I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

                          Comment


                          • The search warrant is just part of the finger pointing that they usually do. They'll try to do everything they can to figure out a reason to blame her. It would be nice if they showed half as much of that scrutiny toward the dipshit who fired a shot in front of his partner's face.
                            Originally posted by racrguy
                            What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
                            Originally posted by racrguy
                            Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

                            Comment


                            • I am kind of curious about the 911 call itself. Been doing this a while and that right there is an odd call boys, so that other stuff does not surprise me. Also, I need to google the neighborhood and surroundings, just out of curiosity.

                              Sometimes you think it's an automatic cop defense mechanism. No, good bad or indifferent we kind of question things when they sound off. I can't remember where it was, maybe Houston, but the Officer that shot himself after calling it in there was someone in his yard or something. The first night that came out, I was like man that sounds like the other deal, hope he didn't shoot himself. Well, he shot himself.

                              There is also another deal that dropped recently I am waiting to see how it pans out. Something doesn't add up with a guys story about being ambushed.

                              It is not always thin blue line boys. We are just curious people in general. You pay us for that. Damn sure not defending this guy, I wasn't there, and have no idea what went down.
                              Whos your Daddy?

                              Comment


                              • 911 call at 1102 p.m.
                                Operator: 911, what's the address of the emergency?
                                Caller: Hi, I'm, I can hear someone out the back and I, I'm not sure if she's having sex or being raped.
                                Operator: Give me the address.
                                Caller: (Redacted address) Washburn Avenue South.
                                Operator: Washburn Avenue South. You said it's behind (inaudible)?
                                Caller: And there's a (inaudible) out the back, yup, yup. And I think she just yelled out "help," but it's difficult. The sound has been going on for a while, but I think, I don't think she's enjoying it. I think it's, I don't know.
                                Operator: OK, well I already got a call started and help on the way. Uh, you can't see anything, you're just hearing a female screaming then, is that what you're saying?
                                Caller: Yeah. It sounds like sex noises, but it's been going on for a while and I think she tried to say help and it sounds distressed.
                                Operator: OK, I've already got an officer on the way. What is your name?
                                Caller: JUSTINE.
                                Operator: JUSTINE, what's your last name?
                                Caller: JUSTINE.
                                Operator: JUSTINE.
                                Caller: Yeah.
                                Operator: And a phone number?
                                Caller: (Redacted)
                                Operator: OK, we've already got help on the way. If anything changes before we get there just give us a call right back, but officers should be there soon.
                                Caller: Thanks.
                                Operator: OK, not a problem.


                                Operator: 911, what is the address of the emergency?
                                Caller: Hi, I just reported one, but no one's here and was wondering if they got the address wrong.
                                Operator: What's the address?
                                Caller: (Redacted) Washburn Avenue South. It's supposed to be Washburn Avenue South.
                                Operator: Are you JUSTINE?
                                Caller: Yeah, (inaudible).
                                Operator: You're hearing a female screaming?
                                Caller: Yes, along behind the house.
                                Operator: Yup, officers are on the way there.
                                Caller: Thank you.


                                Still odd, but not near as suspect as the first articles.

                                Not sure where it went down exactly but looks like a nice area. Nice houses, but little lots, and all with detached garages .

                                Last edited by kingjason; 07-31-2017, 09:20 PM.
                                Whos your Daddy?

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X