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NEWS > 23 March 2008

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Chicago officer convicted of b
A judge has found a suspended Chicago police officer guilty of aggravated battery in the videotaped beating of a bartender after she refused to serve him more drinks. Anthony Abbate testified Tuesday that he threw, punched and kicked the woman who was half his size because he felt he was in danger.

He acknowledged he was drunk when the beating happened in February 2007. But he says Karolina Obrycka pushed him first as she tried to remove him from behind the bar.

Abbate faces from probation to up to five years in prison when he's sentenced June 23. Judge John Fleming denied a ... Read more

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Newsday - Long Island,NY,USA
23 March 2008
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NY suburban cops face manslaug

Manslaughter, rape, assault. A recent spate of allegations against police officers on the outskirts of New York City has raised fears that a big-city problem has invaded the suburbs.

The cluster of incidents over the past year in Westchester County may be an aberration, but even a partial list seems shocking in this relatively affluent and quiet New York City suburb:

A Mount Kisco officer was charged with manslaughter in the death of a homeless, drunken immigrant who had suffered a blow to his abdomen. Officer George Bubaris has since resigned and is fighting the charge, but the case has already raised tensions about immigration and revealed a practice of police departments "dumping" their undesirables in the neighboring town.

New Rochelle Sgt. David Rodriguez, husband of local TV anchorwoman Darlene Rodriguez, has been charged with forcibly raping a 17-year-old girl.

The Justice Department is investigating allegations of brutality in Yonkers and in Sleepy Hollow, where officers used a stun gun on a 16-year-old suspected of stealing a bicycle.

County police officers shot and killed an armed, off-duty Mount Vernon cop who was trying to make an arrest in White Plains. A grand jury cleared the officers, who apparently did not know Officer Christopher Ridley was a policeman, but some black leaders are claiming he might not have been shot if he were white.

Two off-duty New York City officers were accused of assaulting a man outside a Yonkers bar, and two of their colleagues were accused of attempting a cover-up.

The list has dismayed some Westchester residents.

"The police have become too cocky and careless," said Edward Volcker, 60, a retiree from Greenburgh. "They need to be in better touch with the people." He said he grew up in the Bronx and had family still there "and they can't believe what's happening up here."

Alicia Barnes of White Plains, the mother of 2-year-old twins, said, "You don't want this to go on anywhere but you certainly don't expect it in the suburbs."

James McCabe, who retired from the NYPD as an inspector and now teaches criminal justice at Sacred Heart University, said the litany of cases "certainly sounds alarming, but we don't know enough to say if this is a trend." Serious police crimes are very rare exceptions, he said.

Experts agreed, however, that the suburbs are not immune.

"Law enforcement in the suburbs is only as good as the patchwork of police departments that exists in each county," said Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.

"It takes proper oversight and accountability to insure that the police are our friends, our protectors, and not bullies who think they are above the law."

Lieberman wondered if training was at fault.

But McCabe, who lectures at Westchester's police academy, said training in ethics, cultural sensitivity and use of force have all been kept at a high level under the county police commissioner, Thomas Belfiore.

New Rochelle's police commissioner, Patrick Carroll, said his recruits go through psychological screening, interviews and background checks. After they're on the job, officers are continually retrained on ethics and integrity.

"We have a very thorough vetting process," the commissioner said. "Unfortunately, sometimes there are cracks that people fall into."

At the Westchester academy, which is used by all the county's police departments, recruits now spend two days on ethical behavior. They also have a day devoted to cultural awareness, covering race, ethnicity and religion, and visit the New York Tolerance Center in Manhattan. Newly promoted sergeants and lieutenants can also take further ethical and cultural training.

Michael White, who teaches at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan, said recruiting has been a problem recently, even in suburbs that pay better than New York City.

"If you have open positions that absolutely have to be filled, there is a tendency to lower your standards a bit," he said.

But he believes that some incidents are just a matter of statistics.

"The more police officers you have and the more citizens there are, the more encounters you have and the greater the opportunity for something bad to happen," he said.

That would explain why people think of cop violence as something more common in big cities, he said _ that and the publicity that attended recent cases where the NYPD fired 50 and 41 times at unarmed suspects.

Westchester, with a population of just under 1 million, has between 2,500 and 3,000 law enforcement officers.

McCabe believes that police crime, like other crime, is on the decline.

"As crime comes down around the United States, there's less violence, there's less danger for the police, there's safer communities," he said. "That gives the police the chance to build bridges."
 

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