A Brooklyn judge has found New York City liable for the police beating of a man at a gay house party, which could potentially allow him to obtain a large judgment in his civil suit against the city.
State Supreme Court Judge Reginald Boddie handed down an order finding the city liable for false arrest, battery, and malicious prosecution. As a result, the jury in the civil lawsuit will only consider how much money 36-year-old Jabbar Campbell is entitled to receive, reports the New York Daily News.
Boddie said one of the reasons for his ruling was the city was lax about filing motions in a timely fashion, waiting until Aug. 8 to file papers that were supposed to be submitted on June 2.
“The city defendants have demonstrated a repeated history of noncompliance with court orders,” he wrote.
Campbell claims to have suffered severe neck injuries after police beat him into unconsciousness when they raided his house in Crown Heights, where he was hosting 80 friends as part of a gay house party in January 2013.
His injuries required over a dozen surgeries, and he still remains in pain to this day. Campbell also accused cops of mocking him with anti-gay slurs while they searched his house.
The charges police had filed against Campbell, including resisting arrest and disorderly conduct, were dismissed by the criminal court.
Campbell’s lawsuit received a boost when it was discovered that the cops who responded to the scene for a noise complaint contradicted their initial account of what happened.
Originally, police had said Campbell was arrested for shoving a sergeant and resisting arrest, and that they used necessary force to subdue him. Police later claimed they had been told a man was being held captive inside the house. Video footage from a security camera showed one of the police officers turning the camera away from the building’s entrance before police entered the house.
Campbell called the judge’s decision “good news,” but said there was still a long way to go before trust could be restored between the community and police.
“There was always that doubt in my mind that justice wouldn’t come to me, due to the color of my skin and due to the justice system and how it deals with black people,” Campbell said.
Twelve students at Salisbury University in Maryland face hate crime charges for allegedly targeting a gay man on Grindr and luring him to an apartment where they viciously assaulted him.
Seven students associated with the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and five others are accused of creating a fake profile on Grindr to lure the man -- whose age, name, and other identifying information is not being revealed at this time -- to an off-campus apartment.
The students reportedly posed as a 16-year-old boy -- the age of consent in Maryland -- and sought to arrange a meeting under "false pretenses," according to a press release posted to Facebook by the Salisbury Police Department.
D.C. police released surveillance camera images of seven people believed to have taken part in an attack against a gay man at a local McDonald's.
Sebastian Thomas Robles Lascarro, 22, was beaten up by a group of people on October 27 around 1 a.m. inside the fast-food restaurant at 14th and U Streets NW.
As reported by WTOP, Lascarro, a Colombia-born male model, had stopped by the burger joint to get something to eat after frequenting local gay nightclubs. But after waiting in lne for the self-help kiosk, he ultimately decided to leave because off the long lines.
A lynch mob in Cameroon's capital city of Yaoundé set upon a gay couple for having sex inside a car that was visible to the public and killed the two men.
On September 22, shortly before nightfall, two men, each about 40, went to have a drink at a local snack bar in Yaoundé's Ekounou neighborhood. They retired to a car belonging to one of them that was parked near the road and began engaging in sex.
Initially, passersby believed that the two men were discussing a matter in private. But soon witnesses saw the vehicle shaking, prompting them to come closer to get a better look at what was occurring inside the car.
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