Cop Digs Mentally Ill Man's Eyeball Out and Calls Him N*****

jchambers

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Officer Digs Mentally Ill Man’s Eye Out of His Socket, Calls Him “N****r”



FLORIDA — A deeply unsettling report has been leaked according to which an officer used his finger to rip out a citizen’s eyeball.

The citizen, Kelly Bradley, was in a jail cell at the time, hiding underneath a blanket.

He was not trying to fight with the five officers who barged into the cell for an inmate extraction.

The officers piled onto his body and held him facedown on the ground.

Officer William Hamilton Wilson then did the unthinkable.

He brought his index finger to the Kelly’s eye and begin pushing it in.

As he pushed his finger into Kelly’s, he began curling it outwards in a digging motion.
As Officer Wilson continued digging deep into Kelly’s eye socket, the other officers restrained Kelly’s wrists and ankles with cuffs.
Officer William did not stop digging until Kelly’s eyeball was completely ripped out and dangling onto his cheek.

Captain Scott Anderson saw what happened to Kelly and asked the officers to explain it, but all of them were silent — as if they didn’t know.

Scott Anderson then had the blood cleaned out of the cell.

Officer Pisciotta was part of the five officers who extracted Kelly from his cell.

Kelly was a victim of mental illness and suffered from schizophrenia.

“This inmate was cowering under a blanket in the corner of his cell,” said Pisciotta in a testimony.

“He was an older man, very frail and mentally ill. He wasn’t trying to fight anybody. He was just scared. He was no threat to anyone,” Pisciotta added.

Pisciotta then remarked about the fact that none of the officers explained to the Captain what actually happened, and covered for each other.

“I knew that it was morally wrong. They wanted us toprepare statements and not say anything. I told them I just couldn’t go along with it,” said Pisciotta.

After testifying against Officer Wilson for digging the eye out, Officer Pisciotta was of course fired, and he has lost nearly everything he once had.


“I knew once I did the right thing, and I stepped forward…my career would be over. It’s something you don’t do. You don’t go against other officers. Because my life has been a living hell ever since,” he said.

Officer Wilson was eventually charged and served a mere five years — he has since been released.

The other officers mostly received promotions.

Pisciotta testified that Officer Wilson kept “digging and digging” into Kelly’s eye socket.

Some of the officers then conspired to tell medical staff that Kelly had gouged his own eye out.

Later, as the officers were washing blood off their costumes, Pisciotta told Officer Wilson that he “wasn’t going along with it.”

He said that Wilson responded with racism:

“Come on, he’s just a ******* ******! What do you care?” said Officer Wilson after having ripped the man’s eye out, according to Pisciotta’s testimony.

“He thought it was funny,” said Pisciotta.

After testifying against Officer Wilson, Pisciotta’s home was spray painted with “COWARD” in black paint. Wires in his car were cut to sabotage him.

Kelly has since been fitted with a prosthetic eye.

Officer Wilson is now a free man.

Can you imagine how it would feel to have five officers pinning your body down, and then feeling one of them literally dig his finger into your eye until it pops out?

http://filmingcops.com/officer-digs-mentally-ill-mans-eye-out-of-his-socket-calls-him-nr/



Here''s the cop:



View media item 1642418

He has obviously never used any illegal drugs. :rolleyes
 
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:smh:
 
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LOL. It's really just a few bad apples. :rolleyes



The funny thing is, if they applied the same RICO, Organized Crime and CCE standards to these cases as they do to other offenders, you could prosecute every police force in this country as a gang or criminal organization.
 
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 Captain Scott Anderson saw what happened to Kelly and asked the officers to explain it, but all of them were silent — as if they didn’t know.
man **** all of them honestly. Ones who didn't say nothing are just as bad as that roided up scumbag.
 
Reading that makes me want to load up some **** right now man what the ****
 
Lol come on man, where's a reputable source for this? Article is written like **** as well :lol:
 
Lol come on man, where's a reputable source for this? Article is written like **** as well
laugh.gif
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/state/florida/article27738046.html
[h1]Whistleblower prison guard paid the price for reporting abuse[/h1]
Kelly Bradley crouched in the corner of his cell, cowering under a blanket, as five officers clad in riot gear barreled inside and jumped on him, pinning him face-down.

As they cuffed Bradley’s wrists and ankles, one of the officers, William Hamilton Wilson, reached toward Bradley’s face and dug his index finger into the inmate’s eye — several times —until he ripped out Bradley’s right eyeball. It happened swiftly, almost as if it was routine.

Afterward, the extraction team at Charlotte Correctional Institution was summoned to the commander’s office. Capt. Scott Anderson, a 23-year veteran of the Florida Department of Corrections, asked the officers what happened.

No one saw anything. No one heard anything. No one could explain how Bradley’s eyeball ended up on his cheek, dangling by a thread.

Anderson later testified he didn’t think there was anything odd about it. He told the officers to write up only what they individually did, leaving out the injury, then ordered the cell cleaned up to make room for the next inmate. The officers’ gloves were discarded, and the gear was washed of blood.

The brutal encounter, focal point of a civil lawsuit settled by the DOC last month, was eerily similar to another cell extraction at Charlotte in 2014, except that it ended in the death of an inmate, Matthew Walker. Last week, a Charlotte County grand jury said there wasn’t enough evidence to bring criminal charges against the officers involved in Walker’s fatal beating, largely because the officers discarded the evidence and — as in the Bradley case — told their bosses that they had no idea how Walker’s larynx was crushed or how his head was bashed with such force that there were imprints in his skull.

Bradley’s case likely would have ended similarly — with no one knowing what happened and no one arrested — had it not been for one officer, John Pisciotta.

Pisciotta, then 34 and with 31/2 years on the job, was part of the extraction team that morning in May 2008 when Bradley, who suffered from schizophrenia, barricaded himself in by placing his mattress up against the door of his cell in Charlotte’s psych ward.

“This inmate was cowering under a blanket in the corner of his cell,” Pisciotta recalled in an interview this week. “He was an older man, very frail and mentally ill. He wasn’t trying to fight anybody. He was just scared. He was no threat to anyone.”

He saw everything that happened, and wrestled with what to do.

“I knew that it was morally wrong. They wanted us to prepare statements and not say anything. I told them I just couldn’t go along with it,” said Pisciotta, 41.

Pisciotta told the truth, and Wilson was arrested. After testifying against Wilson, Pisciotta was fired and lost almost everything: his home, his friends, his pension and his career.

“I knew once I did the right thing, and I stepped forward...my career would be over,” Pisciotta told a jury during Wilson’s 2009 federal criminal trial. “It’s something you don’t do. You don’t go against other officers. Because my life has been a living hell ever since.’’

Wilson, now 32, the only person criminally charged, was convicted of civil rights violations, served five years in federal prison and was released in December. Other than Pisciotta, no one came forward; no one else was disciplined. Six other officers were involved in the episode and four of them, including Anderson, were promoted. Two are still at Charlotte.

Bradley, 54, who was serving a six-year sentence for burglary and grand theft, was fitted with a prosthetic eye and released in 2009.

Pisciotta said after the trial Bradley’s mother called him to thank him.

“I just couldn’t live with myself if I didn’t tell the truth,” Pisciotta said.
Not sure why OP picked such a bad source
 
Only did 5 for ripping a mentally ill prisoners eye out.

**** is wrong with America. Dudes really out here thinking they can't be touched cuz of a ******* uniform.... SMH to the fullest.
 
was christopher dorner that bad?
I've been saying he wasn't.

I can only imagine the **** he had to have seen, put up with, and potentially forced to do.. Enough to make him go ballistic.

These people are ******* disgusting.
 
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