
Apr 26, 2008 7:55 am US/Pacific
NYC Groom's Fiancee: 'Still Praying For Justice'
Acquitted Officers Could Still Face NYPD Charges
The fiancee of an unarmed man killed by police on his wedding day says "the justice system let me down" after the detectives were acquitted of all charges in his killing.
"April 25, 2008: They killed Sean all over again," Nicole Paultre Bell said to hundreds of people gathered at Rev. Al Sharpton's National Action Network offices Saturday. "That's what if felt like to us."
Paultre Bell said she was let down by the Queens judge's ruling Friday clearing the NYPD detectives in the shooting death of Sean Bell, 23, and wounding of his two friends.
But "I'm still praying for justice," she says, "because it's not over."
Earlier, the Rev. Al Sharpton lambasted the judge who acquitted three police officers in the 50-shot killing of an unarmed man on his wedding day, saying a jury should have been seated to decide guilt or innocence.
"If people are on the public payroll, doing their public duty, they should be required to face a public jury," Sharpton said to cheers and applause at his National Action Network headquarters.
The officers had opted to have the judge instead of a jury decide the case.
Relatives of the groom-to-be Sean Bell, 23, and two men wounded in the 2006 shooting sat in rows behind him. Sharpton said the victims were wrongly portrayed as dishonest.
"These three families have had to endure and have had to abide through the most, in my judgment, scandalous denigration of victims that I've seen in my lifetime," he said.
Sharpton made his proclamation hours after the three undercover detectives were acquitted of all charges from the shootings outside a strip club in 2006.
In announcing his verdict Friday, Justice Arthur Cooperman said that the inconsistent testimony, courtroom demeanor and rap sheets of the prosecution witnesses - mainly Bell's friends - "had the effect of eviscerating" their credibility.
"At times, the testimony just didn't make sense," the judge said.
The verdict elicited gasps as well as tears of joy and sorrow.
"I expected at least somebody pay for what they did, someone. But no one did," William Bell told CBS station WCBS-TV in New York after the verdict was announced Friday. "They just slapped me in the face, like my son's death didn't matter."
Detective Michael Oliver, who fired 31 of the shots, wept at the defense table, while Bell's mother cried in the packed courtroom. Shouts of "Murderers! Murderers!" and "KKK!" rang out outside the courthouse.
On Friday, Sharpton said he planned to organize "economic withdrawal" and "civil disobedience" that could involve going to jail, marching on Wall Street, and at police headquarters.
"We are going to close the city down in a nonviolent, effective way. We're going to hit the pocketbooks," he said.
While the officers were acquitted, they still could face federal and civil action.
The Justice Department is still considering whether to bring a federal case against the officers, and a civil lawsuit still looms. And civil rights leaders have no intention of letting interest in the case fizzle.
Oliver and Gescard Isnora were acquitted of charges that included manslaughter, assault and reckless endangerment. The third officer, Marc Cooper, faced lesser charges.
The officers later appeared at a news conference with the leader of their union, offering brief statements and taking no questions. "I'd like to say sorry to the Bell family for the tragedy," an emotional Cooper said.
Bell's fiancee did not comment after the verdict. Trent Benefield, a friend of Bell's who was wounded in the shooting, tearfully denounced the judge's decision as unfair.
"They should have gotten what they deserve," he told the Daily News.
Bell, who was black, was killed outside the club as he was leaving his bachelor party. The officers - undercover detectives who were investigating reports of prostitution at the club - said they thought one of the men man had a gun.
The slaying heightened tensions in the city and stoked long-standing allegations of racism and excessive use of force on the part of New York City's police, even though two of the officers charged are black.
Police had assigned extra officers to the courthouse and had helicopters in the air to help deal with any unrest. But within an hour, the angry, weeping crowd of about 200 people had scattered, and no arrests were made.
Protests followed later in the day, and police said two demonstrators were arrested Friday night near the site of the shooting. One on a disorderly conduct charge, the other on a charge of obstructing governmental administration, they said.
The officers had complained that pretrial publicity had unfairly painted them as cold-blooded killers.
After the verdict, the U.S. attorney's office said it would look into the case and "take appropriate action if the evidence indicates a prosecutable violation of federal criminal civil rights statutes."
In addition, the victims' relatives have sued the city, and those cases carry the potential for multimillion-dollar payouts. Also, the officers, who had been on paid leave, still face possible departmental charges that could result in their firing.
Sharpton, an advocate for Bell's family, demanded a federal investigation.
The case brought back painful memories of other New York police shootings, such as the 1999 killing of Amadou Diallo, an African immigrant who was gunned down in a barrage of 41 bullets by police officers who mistook his wallet for a gun. The acquittal of the officers in that case led to days of protests, with hundreds arrested.
"An ugly pattern is emerging in New York," the Rev. Jesse Jackson said after the verdict was announced in the Bell case. "This was a massacre. This was not a shootout. And the U.S. attorney general must give America the assurance that we all have equal protection under the law."
The nearly two-month trial was marked by deeply divergent accounts of the night.
The defense painted the victims as drunken thugs who the officers believed were armed and dangerous. Prosecutors sought to convince the judge that the victims had been minding their own business, and that the officers were inept, trigger-happy cowboys.
Bell's companions - Benefield and Joseph Guzman - were both wounded; Guzman still has four bullets lodged in his body. Both testified. Guzman, a burly ex-convict, grew combative during cross-examination and said of Isnora: "This dude is shooting like he's crazy, like he's out of his mind."
None of the officers took the stand. Instead, the judge heard transcripts of the officers telling a grand jury that they believed they had good reason to use deadly force.
The officers said that as the club closed around 4 a.m., they heard Guzman say, "Yo, go get my gun" - something Bell's friends denied.
Isnora claimed that after he warned the men to halt, Bell pulled away in his car, bumped him and rammed an unmarked police van that converged on the scene. The detective also said Guzman made a sudden move as if he were reaching for a gun.
Benefield and Guzman testified that there were no orders from the police.
With tires screeching, glass breaking and bullets flying, the officers said they believed they were the ones under fire. Oliver responded by emptying his semiautomatic pistol, reloading, and emptying it again. Isnora fired 11 rounds, and Cooper four. Two other officers who fired weren't charged.
When the smoke had cleared, there was no weapon inside Bell's blood-splattered car.