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Miami Judge: I Saw Police Commit Felonies

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Judge: I Saw Police Commit Felonies

A judge who said he witnessed some of the anti-free trade protests complains in open court about how police handled the demonstrations.

by Amy Driscoll

Miami Herald

December 20, 2003

A judge presiding over the cases of free trade protesters said in court that he saw ''no less than 20 felonies committed by police officers'' during the November demonstrations, adding to a chorus of complaints about police conduct.

Judge Richard Margolius, 60, made the remarks in open court last week, saying he was taken aback by what he witnessed while attending the protests.

''Pretty disgraceful what I saw with my own eyes. And I have always supported the police during my entire career,'' he said, according to a court transcript. ``This was a real eye-opener. A disgrace for the community.''

In the transcript, he also said he may have to remove himself from any additional cases involving arrests made during the Free Trade Area of the Americas summit.

''I probably would have been arrested myself if it had not been for a police officer who recognized me,'' said the judge, who wears his hair in a graying ponytail.

CIRCUIT JUDGE

Margolius, appointed to the bench in 1982, retired as a circuit judge in 2001 but said he still hears cases 15 to 20 weeks a year when courts are overburdened.

On Friday, he chose not to elaborate on the remarks he made from the bench Dec. 11.

''I can't comment on pending cases,'' he said. ``It was inappropriate for me to make the comments I made. A reasonable person could question my neutrality because of statements I made in open court.''

The judge did not single out a police department. More than three dozen agencies were part of the FTAA security effort. The Miami Police Department coordinated most police operations.

Angel Calzadilla, executive assistant to Miami Police Chief John Timoney, said: ``The chief's not going to comment on something this vague. If the judge would like to file a complaint with the CIP [Citizens Investigative Panel] he can do that like any other citizen.''

Nelda Fonticiella, a spokeswoman for the Miami-Dade Police Department, which had a large presence during the protests, also said the judge can file a complaint. ''It would be our hope and expectation that if this is how he feels, that he would recuse himself from those cases,'' she said.

Margolius had been hearing the cases of Joseph Diamond and Danielle Kilroy, both arrested during the FTAA protests. Diamond had been charged with aggravated assault on a police officer, a felony; the charges were dropped by the state at the Dec. 11 hearing.

RESISTING ARREST

Kilroy also faced felony charges -- battery on a police officer and resisting arrest with violence. Her charges were reduced to a single misdemeanor, resisting arrest without violence, according to members of the Miami Activist Defense, a legal group monitoring the court hearings.

During the Dec. 11 hearings, the judge asked an assistant state attorney, ``How many police officers have been charged by the State Attorney so far for what happened out there during the FTAA?''

None, the prosecutor replied.

''None?'' asked the judge. ``Pretty sad commentary. At least from what I saw.''

The judge also wondered aloud how much the ''whole episode'' had cost taxpayers.

''I know one thing. There were police officers from every agency -- I couldn't believe the sheer numbers,'' he said.

Laurel Ripple, a protester who was arrested and is working with MAD, said she was in the courtroom during Margolius' remarks.

''I'm really glad he saw for himself what was happening . . . I'm really glad he was out there,'' she said. ``As a lifelong Miami resident and victim of the police during the FTAA, it was really supportive to hear that kind of affirmation from Judge Margolius.''

The FTAA summit, Nov. 20 and 21, sparked marches and protests in downtown Miami and resulted in 231 arrests. Since then, at least 27 misdemeanors have been dropped, according to prosecutors' records last updated Dec. 2. Additional cases have been dropped or the charges reduced, according to MAD members.

Two citizens' panels plan to hold a joint meeting Jan. 15 to hear comments and complaints about police conduct during the FTAA, and both Miami-Dade and Miami police are conducting internal reviews. Amnesty International, the AFL-CIO and the United Steelworkers of America all have called for independent probes.

A Miami police spokeswoman said officers were instructed to make arrests only as necessary.

MIAMI POLICE

''We were told to deal with situations that were serious but we were always told to be very patient with people,'' said Herminia ''Amy'' Salas-Jacobson, a Miami police spokeswoman.

``In the training sessions we were told to be professional, be patient and to do everything right. There was one thing that was stressed at every meeting: Always be professional.''

During Margolius' informal speech, he noted that he couldn't recognize officers because ``everybody had riot gear on.''

''I hope the state has the good, common sense to deal with these cases in an appropriate manner, with an eye on justice,'' he added.

Herald staff writer Charles Rabin contributed to this report.

(c)2003 Miami Herald

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Miami Judge: I Saw Police Commit Felonies | 9 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
comment by walking revolution
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 20 2003 @ 03:26 PM CST
sounds like a nice judge to me
comment by stupid puma
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 20 2003 @ 05:39 PM CST
it\'s good to see a legal shit storm is brewing around the jackboots down in miami for how they acted. of course legal is only one front in the many faceted struggle for global justice. a more grass roots approach taken by some activists is a campaign to demilitarize the police...this phenomenon of militarization, by no means hyperbole at this point, is a concentrated top-down effort to make the police into a paramilitary style outfit working at the beck & call of the same folks eager for corporate globalization.
check out:
http://demilitarizethepolice.netfirms.com
for some critical analysis of the emerging police state. also, just started reading a book by christian parenti, yeah the sun of micheal p., callled \'lockdown america,\' seems to be working up to a good, broad historical introduction into the militarization of the police & the prision/industrial complex phenomenon.
comment by mj
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 20 2003 @ 05:40 PM CST
It would be a pity if he recused himself from this process. If he does, I hope he makes up for it by putting in a strong public effort to publicize the cop violence.
comment by be
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 20 2003 @ 08:52 PM CST
I don\'t think it\'s a choice for him at this point. I think he would be removed if he didn\'t do it himself.
comment by when truth and law collide
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 20 2003 @ 09:09 PM CST
I agree it probally is no longer a legal choice for the judge as you are correct be (i think so/ mind i hav limited legal knowledge)

But for him to recuse himself would be a shame, as many other judges are more than likely biased in favor of the police without being witness to the events.
This judge himself even expressed that he was ussualy supportive of the police apparatus.
comment by u-turn
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 21 2003 @ 11:58 AM CST
legally and ethically (their version of that but that\'s the rules he\'s playing with) he would have to recuse himself but if he recuses himself he can make official complaints with the CIP which would carry a lot of weight coming from him.
comment by Al Mangan
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 21 2003 @ 10:26 PM CST
If Judge Richard Margolius saw 20 felonies committed, it appears he has a duty to file a formal report on what he saw. The difficulty, as he notes, would be in identifying police officers
who committed the felonies, since they were all in riot gear and from a variety of jurisdictions.
One route might be for Judge Margolius to
draw up a statement, have it notarized and send it
to Gov. Jeb Bush. The governor may not act upon it, but would be officially notified of the mis-
conduct committed against peaceful citizens exercising their constitutional rights.
From my perspective, having organized and taken part in a number of demonstrations, including WTO in Seattle, that police units seem
to be more concerned about the exercise of First
Amendment rights than they are about crime.
comment by G. Williams
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, January 16 2004 @ 10:34 AM CST
you know as a 33 year old black man its tough, so I decided to take my 7th grade education ass back to school and get my ged, and I did.
Now I have a associate degree as a paralegal. I went back to recieve my B.A. in paralegal also, in 2005 I start law school.
My point is that I am tired of being harrassed police for nothing so I decided to stop whining and do something. Here\'s the plan black people,get yoursel and a group of black people together get educated on the law become lawyers or judges and get into congress, get into the legislator make new laws, change the old ones and put every white raciest cop behind bars. black people we got to vote for ourselves but every black man in office. This is someting that should have been done a long time ago. White people do it to us because we allow them to do it to us. We are afriad to speak up because we now have been in the penatentary or jail.So what! tell the people why if they ask, then move on. they will forever talk about it but while they are still talking about your pass you will be changing the future of history.I made a promise to myself to fight for black people even if means that it will cause a new civil war or even my own death.
My biggest fear is to die by the hands of a black man that looks just like me.
God knows people that we must change our way of thinking
comment by G.Williams
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, January 16 2004 @ 10:42 AM CST
To find out who was behind the mask with the riot gear on, you soepena the paperwork tha has all the names of the officers that day and time.
They have to be acounted for.