Robert Brooks was lynched by New York State Correctional Officers. |
Warning the contents are graphic.
Take discretion.
All individuals involved in the incidents involving Robert Brooks aren't criminally charged yet. The New York Attorney General's office has ordered a formal investigation through the New York State Police and the U.S. Justice Department is involved.
The individual involved in the murder of Ohio correctional guard Andrew Lansing will be formalized and he will stand trial.
The suspect is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Police and correctional officers who engage in brutality are often escaping criminal charges. Usually if they are committing acts that involve murder, it may take not only state but federal authorities to investigate.
President Joe Biden faced a backlash from police unions and border patrol unions because of the perception that he was weak on crime.
The Republicans often exploit crime for short term election games. Often retail theft, illegal immigration, Black on whatever crime, auto thefts, Hunter Biden's legal woes and denying the incoming president's illegal actions motivate Republicans to the polls.
Did you know a correctional guard was beaten to death at an iron college in Ohio?
In the spirit of fairness, I will discuss it briefly.
Ohio correction guard went to work on Christmas and got attacked by an inmate. He died soon after. The suspect is facing murder charges. |
The incident happened on Christmas morning at the Ross Correctional Institution. Officials said Lansing died following an "inmate assault" at the high-security prison in Ross County.
Andrew Lansing, a veteran of the Ross Correctional Institution who volunteered to work on Christmas to relieve his co-workers. The suspect Rashawn Cannon who was serving a six year bid plotted revenge after he caught Lansing off guard as he was doing his routine checks on the facility. Cannon who was a medium risk intern was immediately transfered to the Lucasville's Southern Ohio Correctional Institute facility and it expected to be held in custody on murder charges which carry LIFE or the DEATH card.
The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction said Lansing died “following an inmate assault.”
“The inmate suspect has been transferred to the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility,” the department said.
Lansing was described as “a longtime, well-respected employee” at the prison who “was loved by his colleagues.”
“He was a friendly, outgoing officer who treated everyone with respect and was always a professional,” the department said.
Gov. Mike DeWine will lower flags in honor of Lansing.
Ohio inmate brutally assaults a correction guard. He plotted a revenge after he received a discipline punishment. |
President-elect Donald J. Trump will eventually be pressured to pardon corrupt police officers and military officials. He will also be pressured to pardon Americans who served in the Israeli Defence Forces.
The New York State Police are tasked to investigate a brutal beating of a man while in their custody. The U.S. Justice Department is also involved.
The office of New York’s attorney general released body camera footage Friday showing the fatal beating of a state prisoner this month by correctional officers who punched and kicked him repeatedly while he was handcuffed on an infirmary bed.
The incident, which has drawn outrage from political leaders and was condemned by the officers’ union as “incomprehensible,” is being investigated by state Attorney General Letitia James. The inmate, Robert Brooks, 43, died in the hospital a day after the Dec. 9 attack.
“I do not take lightly the release of this video, especially in the middle of the holiday season,” James said at a virtual news conference.
“These videos are shocking and disturbing,” she added.
Brooks can be seen in the videos with his hands cuffed behind his back. In one video, he is sitting up as an officer presses his foot down on him. He is then punched by two officers.
At another point, he is forcefully yanked from the bed by his shirt collar and held up above the ground, his face visibly bloodied.
Bloody and swollen will be the last images of Robert Brooks. |
Last week, Gov. Kathy Hochul ordered the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision to begin the process of firing 14 workers at the Marcy Correctional Facility in Oneida County, where the incident occurred. They include correctional officers, sergeants and a prison nurse. In the interim, all have been suspended without pay, except for one officer, who already resigned.
In a statement following the release of the videos, Daniel Martuscello, the commissioner of the state corrections department, said his office has launched its own investigation in an effort to bring “institutional change.”
“Watching the video evidence of Robert Brooks’ life being taken left me feeling deeply repulsed and nauseated,” Martuscello said. “There is no excuse and no rationalization for a vulgar, inhumane act that senselessly took a life. This type of behavior cannot be normalized, and I will not allow it to be within DOCCS.”
James said the officers had not activated their body cameras, but they were still on and recorded in standby mode. As a result, she added, they did not capture audio and only recorded for 30 minutes.
Her office released the entirety of the four officers’ videos, which included some blurring.
On Dec. 9, James said, Brooks was being transferred from the Mohawk Correctional Facility, also in Oneida County, to Marcy Correctional Facility. The events unfolded in a medical exam room before 9:30 p.m. Brooks was carried into the room hanging upside down with his hands handcuffed behind his back, one video shows.
Without audio, it’s unclear what words were exchanged between Brooks and the officers. While he does not appear to physically retaliate in the footage, the videos present different angles, and at times it’s unclear what is happening to Brooks as officers move and stand around the room.
After the officers yank Brooks from the bed, he is brought to a corner. Later, he is seen on the bed wearing only his underwear and being tended to by the nurse.
Brooks was taken to the hospital and died the following day. An autopsy was conducted, and “preliminary findings show concern for asphyxia due to compression of the neck as the cause of death, as well as the death being due to actions of another,” according to a state corrections office investigative report obtained by NBC affiliate WKTV in Utica.
In the wake of the initial media reports, James said her Office of Special Investigation would conduct a review and make the video public after Brooks’ family viewed it first.
Brooks had been imprisoned since 2017 on a 12-year sentence for first-degree assault involving a longtime girlfriend. State corrections officials declined to detail what led Brooks to be transferred to the Marcy Correctional Facility, a medium-security prison, that night.
The New York State Correctional Officers and Police Benevolent Association did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday, but the union has previously said it viewed parts of the videos.
“What we witnessed is incomprehensible to say the least and is certainly not reflective of the great work that the vast majority of our membership conducts every day,” the union said in a statement this week, adding what transpired is the “opposite of everything NYSCOPBA and its membership stand for.”
Hochul said in a statement that the “vast majority” of correctional officers “do extraordinary work under difficult circumstances,” but “we have no tolerance for individuals who cross the line, break the law and engage in unnecessary violence or targeted abuse.”
The corrections guard gave Brooks a toe jam sandwich while handcuffed. |
Martuscello said the agency has expanded its body camera policy effective immediately, requiring all corrections officers to have their cameras activated any time they are engaging directly with inmates.
The Correctional Association of New York, an independent prison oversight group, released a report last year after monitoring the Marcy Correctional Facility in October 2022. The report noted complaints of “rampant” physical abuse by staff members, with 80% of incarcerated people reporting having witnessed or experienced abuse and nearly 70% reporting racial discrimination or bias.
Brooks’ family thanked Hochul in a statement this week for taking action “to hold officers accountable.”
“We cannot understand how this could have happened in the first place,” the family said. “No one should have to lose a family member this way.”
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