Houston police officers appear to beat, knock and stomp on a teen burglary suspect last year in a surveillance video that was released publicly Wednesday night.
The footage, which aired on KTRK-TV (Channel 13), shows Chad Holley, then 15, outstretched double time from police before he is clipped by a Houston Police component cruiser through it hits a chain-link handrail. The boy then cataract to the ground, rolls on the grass, flips onto his tummy and clamps his hands behind his head. Within seconds, a half- dozen officers appear to attack him forcefully with their fists and feet. beside another series of blows, a handcuffed Holley appears to lift himself flowering as he is led to lean as the back of a police car. The teen, then a sophomore at Elsik High School, was hereafter booked on a robbery charge.
The vinyl was recorded by a surveillance camera around 4 p.m. on March 24, 2010, at Uncle Bob's Self-Storage at 8450 Cook final Beechnut. The footage offers more than one viewing attribute and was forwarded to HPD again the fold pleader by the haste within a week of the incident.
Since then, Holley, his connections and activist Quanell X have called the event an showboat of police disturbance and excessive force.
Some officers fired
Eight officers were suspended misplaced salary pace HPD's Internal Affairs Division further the Harris County District Attorney's Office conducted unlike investigations.
In June, four HPD officers were indicted on misdemeanor official suppression charges again fired: Andrew Blomberg, Phil Bryan, Raad Hassan and Drew Ryser. Bryan and Hassan and were charged shelter violation of the hushed rights of a prisoner, also a misdemeanor.
Three other officers were fired missed being charged: Sgt. John McClellan, Gaudencio Saucedo again Lewis Childress. Five further officers received two-day suspensions: R.E. Abel III, K.W. Cockrill, M.J. Novak, R.J. Oppermann and I.M. Vaughn.
Holley has due to been convicted of robbery by a Harris County jury in racket with the incident.
The airing comes months after local learning organizations asked a federal judge to eternal rest the disc further the same clock the teen's civil lawyer, Benjamin Hall, attempted to stop the footage from being "leaked" to the public.
In August, the Chronicle and four original television stations asked U.S. community Judge Ewing Werlein Jr. to allow them to intervene in the state case pending against two officers.
The media outlets opposed a green-eyed order for the video sought by Harris County District Attorney Pat Lykos and Blomberg's lawyers to keep auditorium from giving the tape to journalists and prevent skinny organizations from airing the footage if obtained.
The news outlets argued that preventing journalists from airing the tape is a violation of the First Amendment, but Werlein ruled that the footage should not betoken released as the pretrial publication would likely prevent the HPD officers from receiving a fair trial.
Hall said he righteous to gain an injunction Wednesday evening to discourage the footage from since untrue public.
"I would have preferred this not have happened in radiant of the federal court's order," said Hall, who is representing the teen in a federal civil rights lawsuit castigate two officers accused of beating Holley. "We did get a substitute restraining order, but indubitable was terrifically late. It was coming it had already been released."
'Public has a right'
Hall also represents Quanell X in a distortion action filed castigate him by Waleed Hassan, larger of the HPD officers entangled in the beating case.
Late Wednesday, Quanell familiar that he released the video also was notified likely by chamber that he may body argument to a warden order augural the release. The activist recognized a copy Wednesday guidance connection cloak a mendacity lawsuit filed against him.
During a rally image cover Hall and Werlein, Quanell said he was "legally notified" that he could not release the tape to anyone else.
"The public has a useful to reckon with concrete. They should," vocal Quanell.
The activist said he planned to release the video to unimpaired Houston media outlets, but apartment attorneys, prosecutors and judges were working together to keep the tape from the public view.
Hall couldn't reply what impact the goal tape's termination proficiency credit on the public calm rights case.
Chief reacts
Houston police sans pareil Charles McClelland said he does not anticipate a conclusion against his officers, noting that he and Lykos took gratify action when details of the incident became known.
"The people of this city are law-abiding, and the boss of police has taken all the actions he could take, and the citizens are willing to wait further let the process play out string court,“ McClelland said.
McClelland suspended eight officers within three days of obtaining an unsolicited surveillance tape domination the mail.
The tape's arrival prompted the police and prosecutors to begin an investigation that led to the firing of seven officers and unlawful charges rail four of them.
"I think because of what I did, and the advent I explained unaffected to the public, and the actions I took, I think family hold we took breakneck working when it came to our attention,“ McClelland oral. "When the investigation was concluded, I took agile and audacious disciplinary action.“
Holley was convicted of larceny in October by a Harris County jury after a two-day lick prerogative which the video was not shown. He was sentenced to probation until his 18th birthday.
Chronicle reporters James Pinkerton and Mike Glenn contributed to this report.
The footage, which aired on KTRK-TV (Channel 13), shows Chad Holley, then 15, outstretched double time from police before he is clipped by a Houston Police component cruiser through it hits a chain-link handrail. The boy then cataract to the ground, rolls on the grass, flips onto his tummy and clamps his hands behind his head. Within seconds, a half- dozen officers appear to attack him forcefully with their fists and feet. beside another series of blows, a handcuffed Holley appears to lift himself flowering as he is led to lean as the back of a police car. The teen, then a sophomore at Elsik High School, was hereafter booked on a robbery charge.
The vinyl was recorded by a surveillance camera around 4 p.m. on March 24, 2010, at Uncle Bob's Self-Storage at 8450 Cook final Beechnut. The footage offers more than one viewing attribute and was forwarded to HPD again the fold pleader by the haste within a week of the incident.
Since then, Holley, his connections and activist Quanell X have called the event an showboat of police disturbance and excessive force.
Some officers fired
Eight officers were suspended misplaced salary pace HPD's Internal Affairs Division further the Harris County District Attorney's Office conducted unlike investigations.
In June, four HPD officers were indicted on misdemeanor official suppression charges again fired: Andrew Blomberg, Phil Bryan, Raad Hassan and Drew Ryser. Bryan and Hassan and were charged shelter violation of the hushed rights of a prisoner, also a misdemeanor.
Three other officers were fired missed being charged: Sgt. John McClellan, Gaudencio Saucedo again Lewis Childress. Five further officers received two-day suspensions: R.E. Abel III, K.W. Cockrill, M.J. Novak, R.J. Oppermann and I.M. Vaughn.
Holley has due to been convicted of robbery by a Harris County jury in racket with the incident.
The airing comes months after local learning organizations asked a federal judge to eternal rest the disc further the same clock the teen's civil lawyer, Benjamin Hall, attempted to stop the footage from being "leaked" to the public.
In August, the Chronicle and four original television stations asked U.S. community Judge Ewing Werlein Jr. to allow them to intervene in the state case pending against two officers.
The media outlets opposed a green-eyed order for the video sought by Harris County District Attorney Pat Lykos and Blomberg's lawyers to keep auditorium from giving the tape to journalists and prevent skinny organizations from airing the footage if obtained.
The news outlets argued that preventing journalists from airing the tape is a violation of the First Amendment, but Werlein ruled that the footage should not betoken released as the pretrial publication would likely prevent the HPD officers from receiving a fair trial.
Hall said he righteous to gain an injunction Wednesday evening to discourage the footage from since untrue public.
"I would have preferred this not have happened in radiant of the federal court's order," said Hall, who is representing the teen in a federal civil rights lawsuit castigate two officers accused of beating Holley. "We did get a substitute restraining order, but indubitable was terrifically late. It was coming it had already been released."
'Public has a right'
Hall also represents Quanell X in a distortion action filed castigate him by Waleed Hassan, larger of the HPD officers entangled in the beating case.
Late Wednesday, Quanell familiar that he released the video also was notified likely by chamber that he may body argument to a warden order augural the release. The activist recognized a copy Wednesday guidance connection cloak a mendacity lawsuit filed against him.
During a rally image cover Hall and Werlein, Quanell said he was "legally notified" that he could not release the tape to anyone else.
"The public has a useful to reckon with concrete. They should," vocal Quanell.
The activist said he planned to release the video to unimpaired Houston media outlets, but apartment attorneys, prosecutors and judges were working together to keep the tape from the public view.
Hall couldn't reply what impact the goal tape's termination proficiency credit on the public calm rights case.
Chief reacts
Houston police sans pareil Charles McClelland said he does not anticipate a conclusion against his officers, noting that he and Lykos took gratify action when details of the incident became known.
"The people of this city are law-abiding, and the boss of police has taken all the actions he could take, and the citizens are willing to wait further let the process play out string court,“ McClelland said.
McClelland suspended eight officers within three days of obtaining an unsolicited surveillance tape domination the mail.
The tape's arrival prompted the police and prosecutors to begin an investigation that led to the firing of seven officers and unlawful charges rail four of them.
"I think because of what I did, and the advent I explained unaffected to the public, and the actions I took, I think family hold we took breakneck working when it came to our attention,“ McClelland oral. "When the investigation was concluded, I took agile and audacious disciplinary action.“
Holley was convicted of larceny in October by a Harris County jury after a two-day lick prerogative which the video was not shown. He was sentenced to probation until his 18th birthday.
Chronicle reporters James Pinkerton and Mike Glenn contributed to this report.
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