Murder charges against seven NOPD officers dismissed by judge
On Sept. 4, 2005 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina two men were shot to death and four other people were wounded by NOPD Officers on the Danziger Bridge in New Orleans. Ronald Madison, a 40-year-old man who is described by his relatives as having the mental capacity of a child, and 19-year-old James Brissette were brutally and irresponsibly shot to death by New Orleans Police Officers responding to allegations of a shooting on the Danziger Bridge as many survivors of Hurricane Katrina listened on transistor radios. Four other people were severely wounded in the shooting.
Survivors of the shooting testified that they were unarmed and were abused by the officers, who without identifying themselves, jumped out of the back of a truck and started shooting without warning. Blacks in New Orleans have long endured this kind of treatment as the police department often responds to blacks more like terrorist rather than professional law enforcement officers.
The officers say that they were fired upon first as they responded to calls over their police radio about people shooting at rescue workers, but no weapons were ever found.
Murder and attempted murder charges against seven New Orleans police officers were dismissed by Criminal District Court Judge Raymond Bigelow. His reason: an Orleans Parish prosecutor tainted the secrecy of the grand jury process by showing a piece of testimony to another officer.
Indicted in the shootings and charged with first degree murder in the shooting of Madison were Sgt. Kenneth Bowen, Sgt. Robert Gisevius, officer Anthony Villavaso and former officer Robert Faulcon who quit the NOPD after the storm and also faces a first-degree murder charge in Brissette’s death. Officers Ignatius Hills, Robert Barrios and Michael Hunter were also indicted with attempted murder charges for wounding or shooting at the other victims on the bridge.
According to a 53-page report the police investigation into the incident conducted by the NOPD’s homicide unit was incomplete and questionable. No physical evidence was collected by the police immediately following the shooting. The officers went back to the scene seven weeks later to collect evidence and some of that evidence was discarded by the police department.
Innocent people died at the hands of gun wielding, badge wearing terrorist minded want to be police officers who think they are above the law and the New Orleans Criminal Justice system supports such behavior. For too long and too often blacks have been murdered at the hands of the NOPD and nothing, absolutely nothing is ever done about it. Where is the justice in the New Orleans Criminal Justice System?