• Attorney: Negro paralyzed by deputy shooting dies in hospital

    From 13% = 6x the crimes!@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 5 10:56:20 2021
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, sac.politics, miami.general
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    MIAMI (AP) — A Black man who received a multimillion dollar
    settlement after being shot and paralyzed by a Florida deputy in
    2013 has died, his attorney said Thursday.

    Attorney Jack Scarola told the Palm Beach Post that Dontrell
    Stephens died Sunday from complications associated with his
    paralysis. Scarola represented the 28-year-old man in his civil
    suit against the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office.

    Stephens had been hospitalized for three weeks before his death,
    dealing with bed sores and other issues, Scarola said. He had
    been left paralyzed from the waist down from the 2013 shooting.

    “Dontrell had a very sad and difficult life,” Scarola said. “I
    hope that as a consequence of the resolution of his case that he
    had some relief. But whatever relief he had was very short-
    lived.”

    A federal civil jury in 2016 had awarded Stephens $22 million
    after he sued, an amount Palm Beach Sheriff Ric Bradshaw refused
    to pay. After years of negotiations, Bradshaw had offered
    Stephens $4.5 million, but the state Legislature went $1.5
    million above that in 2020 and awarded a $6 million payment,
    which was approved by the governor.

    Deputy Adams Lin pursued Stephens, then 20, in his patrol car
    after Stephens rode his bicycle across a busy road through
    traffic. Videotape from Lin’s dashboard camera showed that when
    Stephens saw Lin behind him as he rode into a duplex’s parking
    lot, he slowed his bike and hopped off.

    Lin, an Asian American, testified at the 2016 trial that he
    thought Stephens was trying to run away and jumped out of his
    car to cut him off. The video shows that after Stephens hopped
    off his bike, he walked toward Lin. The deputy is out of sight
    of the dash cam and Stephens is mostly out of sight when Lin
    opens fire four seconds after Stephens jumped off the bike.
    Stephens falls back into view with Lin close behind, still
    firing.

    Lin testified at the 2016 civil trial that Stephens put his left
    hand behind his back and flashed a dark object that he thought
    was a gun. The dash cam video, however, showed Stephens had his
    phone in his right hand and that his left hand was empty.

    Stephens’ attorneys argued that Lin must have pulled his gun
    almost immediately after leaving his car as he could not have
    opened fire so quickly otherwise.

    The jury took 3 and 1/2 hours to side with Stephens, ruling that
    Lin had violated Stephens’ civil rights.

    Prosecutors cleared Lin of criminal wrongdoing and he remained
    employed by the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office.

    https://apnews.com/article/shootings-
    7ebf4640272716bd860ed617f581342d

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