Zone1 Tacoma Officers Cleared in Black Man’s Death Will Get $500,000 Each to Resign

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This is an example of the types of things that make many Black people feel that things have not changed as much as some members of society would like everyone to believe. This feels too much like when the slave owners were paid reparations for the "loss of their property" yet none of the slaves or their descendants have been paid reparations or any form of recompense for the damage done to their lives both before and after the 13th amendment was ratified, and almost 100 years later when Jim Crow was finally rendered null & void by the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.​


And if you don't understand what I'm referring to, if feels as if these three police officers are being paid half a million dollars BECAUSE they're unable to continue their careers as police officers with the Tacoma PD so the money is to what? Help them make a new start? Compensate for the next few years of loss income? To assuage their hurt feelings? What exactly, or is it just severance after they caused a man to lose his life?

Tacoma Officers Cleared in Black Man’s Death Will Get $500,000 Each to Resign
Tacoma Officers Cleared in Black Man’s Death Will Get $500,000 Each to Resign​

The three police officers were found not guilty last month in the death of Manuel Ellis, who died in custody in 2020 after pleading that he could not breathe.​
Three Tacoma police officers, all wearing suits, file out of a courtroom.
Christopher Burbank, Matthew Collins and Timothy Rankine leaving the Pierce County Superior Court in Tacoma, Wash., last month.Credit...Pool photo by Ellen M. Banner
Three Tacoma police officers, all wearing suits, file out of a courtroom.
Jan. 16, 2024​
Three Tacoma police officers who were acquitted in the death of Manuel Ellis, a Black man who died in police custody in 2020 after pleading that he could not breathe, will each receive $500,000 for resigning from the Tacoma Police Department, according to documents released by the city on Tuesday.​
Two of the officers, Christopher Burbank, 38 and Matthew Collins, 40, both white, were acquitted last month on charges of second-degree murder. The third officer, Timothy Rankine, 35, who is Asian, was acquitted of first-degree manslaughter. Prosecutors had accused the men of punching, squeezing and placing a hood over Mr. Ellis, 33, known as Manny, who was unarmed on the night of his arrest and, according to audio recordings, told the police that he could not breathe.​
On Tuesday, Chief Avery L. Moore of the Tacoma Police Department said in a statement that the three officers had “voluntarily agreed” to resign from their positions. Though Mr. Collins violated the department’s 2020 policy on courtesy, all three men had otherwise been cleared of departmental violations based on policies at the time, Chief Moore said.​
A spokeswoman for the city said Tuesday that the men had already resigned.​
The “Use of Force” policy in place at the time of Mr. Ellis’s arrest “failed to serve the best interests of the police department or the community,” Chief Moore added, and has since been revised as part of an overhaul of more than two dozen police policies. “I acknowledge the detrimental impact of policing on Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) communities, extending both a personal and collective apology,” he said.​
The officers resigned in “good standing,” according to copies of the officers’ resignation agreements that were posted online, which note that in addition to the $500,000 payments, the three will receive any other standard payouts and benefits as required by law. “These agreements support a responsible, constructive path forward for our community and the Tacoma Police Department,” Elizabeth Pauli, the city manager, said in a statement on Tuesday.​

Law Enforcement and Policing in America​

Matthew Ericksen, a lawyer for Mr. Ellis's family, said in a statement that the agreements with the three men were “perverse.” The former officers have already been paid about $1.5 million in total while being on leave for nearly four years, he said. “Everyone in the community should be upset by this.”​
Anne Bremner, a lawyer for Mr. Rankine, said in a statement on Tuesday that her client had decided to resign “after careful consideration,” and she stressed that the payout from the city should not be considered a settlement. “The city of Tacoma could not assure his safety in his position,” she added, “and Officer Rankine worries about potential threats to other officers in the department if he stayed.”​
A lawyer for Mr. Burbank, Brett Purtzer, declined to comment on the agreement. Lawyers for Mr. Collins could not be immediately reached for comment on Tuesday evening.​
Mr. Ellis’s family previously described him as the father of an 11-year-old son and an 18-month-old daughter. A musician at his church, he had played drums with the worship band earlier on March 3, 2020, the night he was killed, according to prosecutors.​

Later, Mr. Ellis was walking home after getting a late-night snack at a 7-Eleven when he came upon Mr. Burbank and Mr. Collins sitting in their police car, prosecutors said. Mr. Ellis stopped and spoke briefly to the officers in an encounter that witnesses described as peaceful and respectful, prosecutors said. Mr. Ellis then began to walk away, they said.​
According to witnesses, Mr. Burbank swung open the passenger door, hitting Mr. Ellis from behind and knocking him to his knees. The two officers then got out of the vehicle, slammed Mr. Ellis down, and repeatedly struck him in the face, prosecutors said. Mr. Collins then placed Mr. Ellis in a chokehold, and Mr. Burbank pointed a Taser at his chest, prosecutors said. Though Mr. Ellis put up his hands in attempt to surrender, the officers “continued to escalate the incident,” prosecutors said. Mr. Burbank then fired the Taser at Mr. Ellis three times, they said.​
Mr. Rankine, who was among a group of officers who responded as backup, joined the other two officers in restraining Mr. Ellis, who, according to prosecutors, was pinned to the ground, not resisting, and by this stage, was struggling to breathe. On a nearby doorbell camera, Mr. Ellis is heard saying: “Can’t breathe, sir. Can’t breathe!” As the officers continued to pin Mr. Ellis to the ground, they hogtied him and placed a hood over his head, prosecutors said. He remained in that position for six to nine minutes until the Fire Department arrived, and he was pronounced dead at the scene, prosecutors said.​
The Pierce County medical examiner ruled Mr. Ellis’s death a homicide, caused by oxygen starvation because of to physical restraint, with methamphetamine intoxication and a heart condition as contributing factors. Defense lawyers argued that the latter two factors had caused Mr. Ellis’s death.​
The Ellis family last year settled a federal wrongful-death lawsuit against Pierce County, which is home to Tacoma, for $4 million, according Mr. Ericksen. A wrongful-death lawsuit against the city of Tacoma and the officers is still pending, he added.​
 

"Police killed at least 1,243 people in 2023. Black people were 27% of those killed by police in 2023 despite being only 13% of the population."

 

This is an example of the types of things that make many Black people feel that things have not changed as much as some members of society would like everyone to believe. This feels too much like when the slave owners were paid reparations for the "loss of their property" yet none of the slaves or their descendants have been paid reparations or any form of recompense for the damage done to their lives both before and after the 13th amendment was ratified, and almost 100 years later when Jim Crow was finally rendered null & void by the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.​


And if you don't understand what I'm referring to, if feels as if these three police officers are being paid half a million dollars BECAUSE they're unable to continue their careers as police officers with the Tacoma PD so the money is to what? Help them make a new start? Compensate for the next few years of loss income? To assuage their hurt feelings? What exactly, or is it just severance after they caused a man to lose his life?

Tacoma Officers Cleared in Black Man’s Death Will Get $500,000 Each to Resign​

The three police officers were found not guilty last month in the death of Manuel Ellis, who died in custody in 2020 after pleading that he could not breathe.​
Three Tacoma police officers, all wearing suits, file out of a courtroom.
Christopher Burbank, Matthew Collins and Timothy Rankine leaving the Pierce County Superior Court in Tacoma, Wash., last month.Credit...Pool photo by Ellen M. Banner
Three Tacoma police officers, all wearing suits, file out of a courtroom.
Jan. 16, 2024​
Three Tacoma police officers who were acquitted in the death of Manuel Ellis, a Black man who died in police custody in 2020 after pleading that he could not breathe, will each receive $500,000 for resigning from the Tacoma Police Department, according to documents released by the city on Tuesday.​
Two of the officers, Christopher Burbank, 38 and Matthew Collins, 40, both white, were acquitted last month on charges of second-degree murder. The third officer, Timothy Rankine, 35, who is Asian, was acquitted of first-degree manslaughter. Prosecutors had accused the men of punching, squeezing and placing a hood over Mr. Ellis, 33, known as Manny, who was unarmed on the night of his arrest and, according to audio recordings, told the police that he could not breathe.​
On Tuesday, Chief Avery L. Moore of the Tacoma Police Department said in a statement that the three officers had “voluntarily agreed” to resign from their positions. Though Mr. Collins violated the department’s 2020 policy on courtesy, all three men had otherwise been cleared of departmental violations based on policies at the time, Chief Moore said.​
A spokeswoman for the city said Tuesday that the men had already resigned.​
The “Use of Force” policy in place at the time of Mr. Ellis’s arrest “failed to serve the best interests of the police department or the community,” Chief Moore added, and has since been revised as part of an overhaul of more than two dozen police policies. “I acknowledge the detrimental impact of policing on Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) communities, extending both a personal and collective apology,” he said.​
The officers resigned in “good standing,” according to copies of the officers’ resignation agreements that were posted online, which note that in addition to the $500,000 payments, the three will receive any other standard payouts and benefits as required by law. “These agreements support a responsible, constructive path forward for our community and the Tacoma Police Department,” Elizabeth Pauli, the city manager, said in a statement on Tuesday.​

Law Enforcement and Policing in America​

Matthew Ericksen, a lawyer for Mr. Ellis's family, said in a statement that the agreements with the three men were “perverse.” The former officers have already been paid about $1.5 million in total while being on leave for nearly four years, he said. “Everyone in the community should be upset by this.”​
Anne Bremner, a lawyer for Mr. Rankine, said in a statement on Tuesday that her client had decided to resign “after careful consideration,” and she stressed that the payout from the city should not be considered a settlement. “The city of Tacoma could not assure his safety in his position,” she added, “and Officer Rankine worries about potential threats to other officers in the department if he stayed.”​
A lawyer for Mr. Burbank, Brett Purtzer, declined to comment on the agreement. Lawyers for Mr. Collins could not be immediately reached for comment on Tuesday evening.​
Mr. Ellis’s family previously described him as the father of an 11-year-old son and an 18-month-old daughter. A musician at his church, he had played drums with the worship band earlier on March 3, 2020, the night he was killed, according to prosecutors.​

Later, Mr. Ellis was walking home after getting a late-night snack at a 7-Eleven when he came upon Mr. Burbank and Mr. Collins sitting in their police car, prosecutors said. Mr. Ellis stopped and spoke briefly to the officers in an encounter that witnesses described as peaceful and respectful, prosecutors said. Mr. Ellis then began to walk away, they said.​
According to witnesses, Mr. Burbank swung open the passenger door, hitting Mr. Ellis from behind and knocking him to his knees. The two officers then got out of the vehicle, slammed Mr. Ellis down, and repeatedly struck him in the face, prosecutors said. Mr. Collins then placed Mr. Ellis in a chokehold, and Mr. Burbank pointed a Taser at his chest, prosecutors said. Though Mr. Ellis put up his hands in attempt to surrender, the officers “continued to escalate the incident,” prosecutors said. Mr. Burbank then fired the Taser at Mr. Ellis three times, they said.​
Mr. Rankine, who was among a group of officers who responded as backup, joined the other two officers in restraining Mr. Ellis, who, according to prosecutors, was pinned to the ground, not resisting, and by this stage, was struggling to breathe. On a nearby doorbell camera, Mr. Ellis is heard saying: “Can’t breathe, sir. Can’t breathe!” As the officers continued to pin Mr. Ellis to the ground, they hogtied him and placed a hood over his head, prosecutors said. He remained in that position for six to nine minutes until the Fire Department arrived, and he was pronounced dead at the scene, prosecutors said.​
The Pierce County medical examiner ruled Mr. Ellis’s death a homicide, caused by oxygen starvation because of to physical restraint, with methamphetamine intoxication and a heart condition as contributing factors. Defense lawyers argued that the latter two factors had caused Mr. Ellis’s death.​
The Ellis family last year settled a federal wrongful-death lawsuit against Pierce County, which is home to Tacoma, for $4 million, according Mr. Ericksen. A wrongful-death lawsuit against the city of Tacoma and the officers is still pending, he added.​
.

Cool.

Time for a new career.

.
 
I was wondering why this case didn't get the attention that Geo. Floyd and others got.

Here's what the article leaves out.


The officers said that when they came across Ellis, he was standing in the middle of the intersection at 96th Street South and Ainsworth Avenue South, where he attempted to open the door of a slowly moving car, but failed (of note, the driver of this car was never found by investigators).[24] The officers said that Ellis approached them while they were in their car, and that he was sweating despite the cold weather.[24] Burbank quoted Ellis saying something similar to: "I'm having a bad day, I need some help and I have warrants".[24] The officers said Ellis threatened to punch Burbank, who then closed the car window, leading to Ellis punching the car window.[24] Collins left the car and Ellis assumed a "fighting stance" towards Collins, so Burbank said that he used his car's "door to actually door check him and hit him with the door to draw his attention away from" Collins, which was supposedly the first instance of physical contact between the men.[24] Collins alleged that Ellis used "superhuman strength" to lift him, throwing Collins into the ground and starting a "wild" fight.[14][24] According to The Seattle Times, the most significant difference between Burbank and Collins's accounts to sheriff's investigators was that "Burbank did not witness Ellis hoist and throw Collins".[27]

On June 2, 2020, the Pierce County medical examiner's office ruled that Ellis's death was a homicide.[46] The death was certified as being caused by "hypoxia due to physical restraint", and with "contributing conditions of methamphetamine intoxication and a dilated heart".



Two of the officers — Matthew Collins, 40, and Christopher Burbank, 38 — had been charged with second-degree murder and manslaughter, while Timothy Rankine, 34, was charged with manslaughter. Their attorneys argued that Ellis died from a lethal amount of methamphetamine that was in his system as well as a preexisting heart condition, not from the officers’ actions, and the jury found the three not guilty on all counts.

“The biggest reason why I personally think this jury found reasonable doubt is because the defense was essentially allowed to put Manny Ellis on trial,” Ericksen said via email. “The defense attorneys were allowed to dredge up Manny’s past and repeat to the jury again and again Manny’s prior arrests in 2015 and 2019. That unfairly prejudiced jurors against Manny.”
 
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Curious if the OP has the same question on why Ruby Freeman and her mom were awarded millions. These guys getting $500,000 seems cheep.
 
Curious if the OP has the same question on why Ruby Freeman and her mom were awarded millions. These guys getting $500,000 seems cheep.

Here's the problem. They were acquitted and the Police Department ruled they hadn't violated any procedures. But they can't put these guys back out on the street, either.

So this is a wrongful termination settlement, really.
 
Actually, the big story is since 2020, the Police have stopped reporting the race of people they are shooting. So "race unknown" jumped from 10% to 40%.
And?

Do you have a point?


Georgia Charges 'Cop City' Protesters Under RICO Law Used To Indict Trump​

Among the indicted are a Southern Poverty Law Center attorney acting as a legal observer and three people who run a bail fund.​

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". . . Instead of relying on a modicum of government structure, anarchy relies on human association instead of government to fulfill all human needs," it continues. "Anarchists often point to law enforcement as one of the chief violent actors, and they accuse the government of using law enforcement to oppress societal change, and they view the structure of government as inherently oppressive and violent."

In this case, activists cite one incident in particular: the January shooting death of Manuel "Tortuguita" Paez Terán, a protester, by law enforcement. At the time, state officials claimed the protester had shot a state trooper and was killed when other officers returned fire. But the official autopsy found no gunpowder residue on Paez Terán's hands.

To say that the indictment paints with a broad brush is an understatement. Prosecutors speak about "militant anarchists" and their tactics but also spend a considerable amount of time describing conduct that is clearly protected speech. "Defend the Atlanta Forest anarchists target and recruit individuals with a certain personal profile," the filing alleges. "Once these individuals have been recruited, members of Defend the Atlanta Forest also promote anarchist ideas through written documents and word of mouth;" such documents "decry capitalism in any form, condemn government, and cast all law enforcement as violent murderers." (All protected speech. . . )

Cop City Protesters Indicted Using SAME RICO Statute They Used Against Trump!​



01-cops-meme-then-vs-now-1200x630.jpg
 
And?

Do you have a point?
Yes. Instead of retraining cops to NOT use excessive force, the cops are instead trying to fudge the data by not providing details about the people they kill.

The rest of your rant is just odd and I'm not sure what you are trying to get at? Are cops good or bad in your view.

I think most cops are good guys, but they have too much of a tendency to protect the bad apples.
 

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