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NEWS > 24 March 2006

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Salem’s lawyers tell ‘torture’
Mumbai, Nov. 25: A Tada court judge today ordered that Abu Salem be produced in court on November 29 in the light of allegations that he is being tortured in police custody. It had earlier been ordered that he be produced on December 2.

Salem’s lawyers said he had spoken of the torture this morning. “Advocate M.R. Ansari, one of the lawyers, met Salem from 8 am to 8.30 am when Salem told Ansari that he was being tortured,” said the don’s lawyer Ashok Sarogi. “Salem said that if he were in police custody for two or three more days, he would be killed.”

But Sarogi added tha... Read more

 Article sourced from

WBAY - Green Bay,WI,USA
24 March 2006
This article appeared in the above title/site.
To view it in its entirity click this link.


Detective Dringoli Reacts to R

The Winnebago County district attorney refiled criminal charges Thursday against Neenah police detective Daniel Dringoli.

Dringoli is due in court in two weeks to be formally charged. He told Action 2 News he is the victim in this situation.

"I went to work as a police officer day in and day out for 14 years, and basically because of my ethics and because of the fact that I challenged some decisions, I find myself on the end of a criminal investigation and having to be here today," Dringoli said, "and I'm not really happy about it."

Dringoli was in court trying to get back some of the personal belongings that police seized in a search warrant, but the judge said he couldn't release that property now that new charges have been filed.

"I find the irony that it's being filed the hour before I try to get my property back. I think it speaks volumes to what's going on here."

He also noted it "happens to be right before the election that he [the district attorney] is up against. I just find the timing of the whole situation a little bit more than ironic."

Dringoli and his attorney, Rob Bellin, say they're upset about the new charges. Bellin said, "I'm outraged that they've been filed again. I stand by my earlier assertions: I think they're meritless; I question whether some of these charges are even crimes at all."

Dringoli says he thinks this case against him is about retaliation from his bosses at the Neenah Police Department, "because I asked for an independent review of the management back in 2001, and now we find ourselves in a situation where I'm being charged with alleged crimes."

He's done nothing wrong, he says. "I'm hoping that the truth will come out, and I want to get this stuff aired out and overwith, and I don't want to be in this political arena any more."
 

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