US police taped torturing suspect

A post tonight on indymedia is certainly a shocking story. Here’s their perspective (click on the link to their site to hear the actual recording of the torture):

When Lester exercised his constitutional right not to sign a consent to search his house, [Tennessee law enforcement officials] spent the next two hours torturing him. They beat him with bats and guns, held loaded guns to his head, threatened to shoot him, dunked his head in the toilet, burned him with lighters, attached his testicles to a battery charger, threatened to cut off his fingers, and threatened to “go get” his wife and take his child away from him. Then they arrested him for “evading arrest”.

A search for “Lester Siler” brings up local news stories like Knoxville’s WVLT, that verify the gravity of the situation:

The Silers were at the center of a controversy when five Campbell County lawmen allegedly beat and tortured Lester Siler, attempting to force him to sign a confession. An audio recording made by Jenny Siler became a key piece of evidence in a criminal case against the four deputies. Those five officers later all plead guilty to violating Siler’s civil rights

And here is the Knoxville WATE report :

Attorney Farley says the deputies came to Siler’s home on White Oak Road to serve a warrant for a violation of probation. Farley says they asked Siler to sign a consent form to search his home.

“When Mr. Siler wouldn’t sign the form, the officers began to torture and beat Mr. Siler in an attempt to make him sign this form. The beating lasted for almost two hours with the officers striking and hitting Mr. Siler several times about his face and body,” Farley said.

The Knoxville News Sentinel sheds some more light on whether this was an isolated incident:

It was Jenny Siler who secretly stashed a tape recorder in the kitchen when the five lawmen showed up at her house on July 8 to arrest her husband on a violation of probation warrant.

Before she was ordered to leave with her 8-year-old son, she turned on the recorder. Anderson has said there had been “other visits” by Campbell County deputies that prompted Jenny Siler to turn on the recorder. Anderson did not elaborate, other than to say that the Silers already had complained about mistreatment before the July attack.

“They were told they needed proof,” Anderson said. “You have to go to the same people that are involved to report it. You don’t expect them to believe you.”

[…]

[narcotics chief David] Webber has admitted in his plea agreement that he was the ringleader of the torture and beating of Siler. Unlike the other four former lawmen, Webber’s plea agreement contains an immunity clause and suggests Webber has admitted to the FBI and federal prosecutors other misdeeds.

Campbell County District Attorney General Paul Phillips has said he asked the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation to probe Webber’s removal of $4,000 from the Sheriff’s Department drug fund last year. Webber has failed to provide any documentation to show what he did with the money, which is supposed to be used only for drug investigations.

Not good news, for sure, and not much outside of Knoxville. I wonder how long before the irony of this police brutality reaches the national or even international consciouness and America’s national security is further weakened?

Hearts and minds, folks, hearts and minds…

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