Dysfunctional Justice System Delivers some Justice
Posted: August 5, 2011 Filed under: New Orleans | Tags: Danziger Bridge trial, justice, New Orleans, NOPD 16 CommentsOn August 30, 2008 I was sitting in a bar in the ninth ward of New Orleans waiting for Hurricane Gustav. It was unbelievably hot in my house. For some reason, Entergy couldn’t keep my electricity on but across the street at BJ’s bar, there was cool air and sweet relief. I was working on a paper and drinking beer off and on all day. I was back and forth depending on how much I could charge the laptop battery and cool myself down.
Later in the evening, a group of policemen entered the bar including one local guy that had a reputation for a mean temper when drunk and using the n word profusely. He had a group of rookies tagging along with him. We felt fairly safe back then because the National Guard was almost always first on crime scenes at that point in time and it kept the NOPD in check when they were watched by something other than citizens. Middle aged, white but with that ruddy red hue in the face indicating too much alcohol in the system, this guy has a substantial beer gut and one hell of a chip on his shoulder. He’s a case study in anger. He was always looking to prove something.
This officer later waved his badge from a lawn chair planted in the street to a patrolling National Guard Unit. Move on, move on! Nothing to see here! Believe me, the guy has a reputation around the neighborhood and I found out why shortly after as he rolled a local prostitutes for freebie blow jobs on the back of a black and white for all the rookies. She was a middle-aged, nice looking dirty blonde with a drug habit. I’d talked to her on many occasions. She mostly services the lonely old losers in the neighborhood. I had heard she was forced to service the officer, but had never seen evidence of it until that night. I left in disgust before the show really got on the road. This is the guy that later let a drug felon beat me up because I had the audacity to tell the felon that his girlfriend had been sleeping with the cop both before and after he was in the federal penitentiary. You remember, that’s the cop that had me arrested for fighting. Little old me with a broken rib in my back from being kicked while under a table. Yup, ask me. I believe that a good portion of the NOPD only exists to protect and serve its own.
It’s no secret that I don’t believe a word that any NOPD officer says given my experience with them two years ago. I said as much to a judge, two prosecutors and a public defender when I was called to jury duty 18 months ago. The Danziger Bridge shootings have nationally exposed the underbelly of the NOPD with its blue line fraternity boys culture often caught up in corruption. Will this actually lead to any change? I don’t know. I’m just glad a few people got a sense of justice, even though it’s hard bought with the deaths of two innocent people including one man that was mentally disabled.
A federal jury on Friday convicted five current or former police officers in the deadly shootings on a New Orleans bridge after Hurricane Katrina.
All five officers were convicted of charges stemming from the cover-up of the shootings. The four who had been charged with civil rights violations in the shootings were convicted on all counts.
However, the jury didn’t find that Brisette or Faulcon’s shootings amounted to murder.
Prosecutors contended during the five-week federal trial that officers shot unarmed people without justification and without warning, killing two and wounding four others on Sept. 4, 2005, then embarked on a cover-up involving made-up witnesses, falsified reports and a planted gun.
Defense attorneys countered that the officers were returning fire and reasonably believed their lives were in danger as they rushed to respond to another officer’s distress call less than a week after Katrina struck.
Again, the family of the shooting victims may never find peace despite the overwhelming verdict of guilty on most counts for the five officers. Ronald Madison was the 40 year old victim with diminished mental capacity that was shot in the back and unarmed.
The family of victim Ronald Madison greeted the verdict with solemn appreciation, thanking law enforcement and the media for keeping the story in the limelight.
“We will never be completely healed, because we will never have Ronald Madison back,” said Madison’s brother Lance, who was with him on the bridge and who was initially arrested after the shooting.
“They took the twinkle out of my eye and the song out of my heart,” said a visibly shaken Sherell Johnson, the mother of James Brissette, the young man shot and killed in a hail of gunfire on the bridge.
The verdicts begin to close one of the darkest sagas that came to light in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The five current and former New Orleans police officers were accused of wrongfully shooting six unarmed civilians, two fatally, on the Danziger Bridge several days after the storm blew through New Orleans and then staging an elaborate cover-up to justify the shootings.
In a 25-count indictment, the men in question – Bowen, Gisevius, Faulcon, Villavaso and Kaufman – were accused of turning on those citizens they had sworn to protect, especially in their most vulnerable hour when the city’s levees ruptured, flooding and crippling a majority of New Orleans as it descended into chaos. They faced a slew of charges, ranging from civil rights violations to murder charges to using a firearm in the commission of a crime to misleading investigators.
Bowen, Gisevius, Faulcon, Villavaso were accused of shooting the unarmed men and women, while Kaufman was accused of masterminding the cover-up, including the planting of a gun on the bridge and writing a bogus police report that would include phony witnesses.
The NOPD has never had a stellar record as an efficient police department. I’ve spent my 16 years here reading about bad cop after bad cop. It’s obviously a systemic problem. I’ll never forget the look on those rookies faces on their initiation night. I’ll never forget the way that a badge can wave off people that may actually be there to help. I’ve seen that happen twice now. I’ll never forget the carnival scene that also happened when a friend of mine was killed when a woman driving her boyfriend’s wife’s truck slammed him into a cast iron gate. He’s never gotten his justice to this date. The cops spent most of the time standing around with ice cream cones in their hands. They had blocked off all traffic but let the ice cream truck through to park and do business. Children on bikes were allowed to buzz my friend’s lifeless body. That’s another story too and there’s more. I’ve only been here 16 years and I’ve got plenty of them. Just imagine what a NOLA lifer can come up with. There’s a lot to love about this city. Best food, music, and people in the world. The NOPD is not one of the reasons.






I’m speechless. I can’t imagine the trauma of your experiences.
It’s good to know that some of the bad cops were brought to justice but, as you know better than most others, it’s only the tip of the iceberg.
This cop was arrested a year ago by the St. Bernard Parish sheriff’s office for spitting on a deputy when the deputy answering to a domestic abuse phone call from said cop’s girl friend. He was sloppy drunk at the time then. I told internal affairs 2 years ago that this guy was a bomb that would eventually go off some where.
I realize that this particular cop should never hold a position of authority, but I think that the almost limitless power that police officers have would eventually corrupt even the most virtuous among them. That’s why I think that all police departments should require that every cop spend one month a year with no badge, no gun, and no arrest powers, but remain on the payroll serving the community in some other capacity. I know it would involve hiring more police officers which costs money, so it will never happen, but I think it would benefit the police officers, their families, and the community. Police need to understand what it feels like on the other side of that badge.
That’s an interesting suggestion. What I’ve noticed down here is the automatic assumption that you are an ‘enemy’ some how. I think that they’ve tried to step up some community policing but I still think it’s very much an us vs. them mentality. Police feel above the community. There has to be a way of putting an end to that.
Yeah, the enemy business. I noticed that in the kid-cop interactions in the Bronx when I was growing up. It irks me no end.
There are other “enemy” interactions too, such as teachers, therapists, etc. who assume one is trying to “get away with” something.
I’m glad there was some justice for these victims at least. I have an awful feeling it is only because the Danziger Bridge shootings were national news and the verdicts in the trial are reported nationally.
Thank you for this powerful, moving post. Thank goodness those cops were convicted. It’s a good thing they charged them in federal court or they might have gotten off. It’s a shame they weren’t convicted of murder, but at least they went down. I hope they will be going away for a very long time.
My god Dak, this is something. Wow, what an experience. And you are far from the usual profile of people that are targeted and treated with police brutality.
Yup. You wouldn’t believe the number of ‘black while’ crimes there are plugging up the system. The latino and black communities have incredible problems with police here.
I wrote a post about this but I didn’t put it up here and it was purged along with all of my other posts. I suppose I might find it via the wayback machine.
Speechless – to happen to you….please do retrieve your earlier posts and preserve them. You wrote some while at your favorite haunts. When one is open minded, curious, and a seeker of justice(not to mention attractive and intelligent) – you will take a beating. Wish that it was different and not so difficult, but it is because of people like you that there is a chance to get some justice. It does not come from the upper level as it should but the man on the street. In a way, I wish you would move from there, but, there is no safe place anymore.
Wow, DAk,
My brother was there during Katrina and I think I mentioned how at the airport the people were upset, tired and yelling. His men were having trouble and called to him…he went over quickly, with a booming voice (very tall) and addressed them (people waiting to be evacuated) as ladies and gentlemen and Sir and Mam and they listened. He asked what they needed, explained the process and they all cooperated. His men, just looked amazed, as they were armed with weapons and they (the tired people) didn’t listen… when it comes down to it, it is all about respect and dignity and that you convey that you are there to help, serve and see them as human beings.
I think the people responded because they saw that he was seeing them, their issues and that he told the men to lower their weapons, and the people must have been happy that someone was able to see them…it is comforting to know that the law (he was with the Army) sees you, really sees you and listens.
I wish police departments would go back to community policing, under Bill Clinton as that model is the model that works, it really does and the community benefits and so do the officers. In addition, training in communication and conflict resolution can go a long way too.
This is excellent news. Dak, I hope you get justice too – I can’t imagine the sheer terror and fury you must have experienced.
All charges were dropped against me. The internal police department investigation stated the officer did no wrong which is hardly surprising in this town. My hope is that the external police investigation that’s been taken on into my situation. They’ve decided to audit the case. I think the fact that he was later arrested showed this guy is not as pure as the driven snow. He’s also no longer connected to the drug felon. I heard they had a huge row so they’re no longer backing each other up. I’ve toyed with filing a civil suit but the city/parish really don’t have much of a record of paying their obligations in these matters so it might be more costly than anything.
That they’ve decided to audit the case is a good sign, no? Clearly this guy’s credibility has been destroyed.
Yup. I haven’t heard anything back yet, however. Guess the wheels turn slow down here.
WWLTV WWL-TV
At least 10 NOPD officers guilty in crimes over past two years http://bit.ly/oFHWyf