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#1
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12-01-2013, 08:07 AM
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Beating of College Student in Atlantic City
Atlantic City, New Jersey (CNN) -- The visible wounds on David Connor Castellani's head and neck are healing, but the scars remain from the night he was arrested and beaten by five Atlantic City Police officers and bitten by a police dog in an incident captured on video. |
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#2
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12-01-2013, 09:19 AM
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Re: Beating of College Student in Atlantic City
He tries to trespass into a casino when the signs clearly state he's not allowed. The police respond, treat him with respect and send him on his way. He then decides to mouth off and make unspecified threats, which prompts a response. The officers attempt to subdue him, he physically resists, and then got a well deserved beating. I salute those officers for showing great redtraint . |
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#5
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12-22-2013, 01:16 PM
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Re: Beating of College Student in Atlantic City
What is wrong with you people? You can't just beat someone for running their mouth regardless if you are LEO or not. http://photographyisnotacrime.com/20...uspect-abused/ |
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#6
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12-22-2013, 01:40 PM
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Re: Beating of College Student in Atlantic City
The cop is none other than Sterling Wheaton of the Atlantic City Police Department, whom we became familiar with back in September when he drove up to a group of five fellow officers beating on a suspect and sicced his dog on him in an incident caught on surveillance video. Then we later learned that Wheaton was already named a defendant in three unrelated lawsuits alleging abuse over the five previous years, including one where he is accused of ripping the phone out of the hands of woman recording him, only for her never to see the phone again. Now we are learning that another of those three lawsuits involved him beating up a prosecutor from the state attorney’s office nonetheless, which is probably the last person you want to beat up if you’re one of these ******* cops like Wheaton who think they can do whatever they want. A jury awarded Michael Troso $500,000, half which the city must pay, the other half which Wheaton must pay, who incredulously, is still employed by the Atlantic City Police Department, despite the liability he has proven to be. A jury awarded a man a half-million dollars this week after finding that Atlantic City police Officer Sterling Wheaten used excessive force in a 2008 arrest and that the city did not properly train him. Wheaten must pay half of the award, or $250,000 in compensatory damages. The jury found he did not owe punitive damages, which are assessed to punish a defendant. The city is responsible for the other half. A separate suit pending against Wheaten in federal court will include opening up the full Internal Affairs reports against him and another officer accused of excessive force in an incident at Caesars Dusk nightclub in 2010. That suit revealed Wheaten had 26 complaints filed against him from Sept. 19, 2008, to April 26, 2012. One was marked “administratively closed,” while he was cleared of the rest. That does not include a videotaped apprehension Wheaten made of Connor Castellani this summer shortly after joining the K-9 Unit. A lawsuit by the family alleges the dog was put on Castellani after he was already under control by several officers and that Wheaten also punched the man. No outcome of an Internal Affairs investigation into that case has been released. |
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#7
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01-02-2014, 05:26 PM
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Re: Beating of College Student in Atlantic City
yeah, those cops went WAY overboard and it's blatant. especially the k9 officer. they had him pretty much restrained when he sicked his dog on him. i hope this kid gets bou cou duckets!
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