The officer arrived in Brooklyn Supreme Court on Wednesday after the jury issued a six counts indictment against him. The charge included second-degree manslaughter, second-degree assault and criminally negligent homicide, a misdemeanor count of reckless endangerment and two counts of official misconduct. The defendant faces up to 15 years of imprisonment if found guilty.
Here is the full list of charges Liang faces in the death of Akai Gurley. Story soon via@Brooklyn_Paper pic.twitter.com/e3tcRL6uWWPeter Liang pleaded not guilty to all the indictments. He has not testified before the jury yet.
โ Noah Hurowitz (@NoahHurowitz) 11 ัะตะฒัะฐะปั 2015
"This is the first step in justice," Kimberly Ballinger, Gurley's child's mother, said. "Now all we need is a conviction, which I have faith that we will get."
Liang's victim Akai Gurley, 28, was killed last November 20 when he and his girlfriend Melissa Butler were entering a staircase on the seventh floor in Pink House project in Brooklyn late in the evening. Two policemen, Peter Liang and his partner Shaun Landau came down from the eighth floor as they were doing a top-to-bottom patrol. Liang, a rookie policeman, fired a shot in Gurley's chest without a warning, according to Butler.
The policemen did not try to help the victim but continued arguing what to do. They also did not report the event at once.
The main charge is second-degree manslaughter, as prosecutors must prove that Liang consciously ignored the risk of using the gun. According to Liang, he fired accidentally. During the procedure, the prosecutor alleged that Liang had not passed the compulsory special training, which disciplines an officer not to place their finger on the trigger unless faced with a threat.
The indictment follows mass protests against police brutality and previous grand jury decisions involving police officers including the cases of Michael Brown in Missouri and Eric Garner in New York when no indictments were handed down.
Protestors outside #DowntownBrooklyn courthouse awaiting #NYPD officer Peter Liang's indictment #AkaiGurley pic.twitter.com/tutvd9GjBd"The only thing we know for sure is there was a human tragedy involving Mr. Gurley," New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said. "He's gone. I spent time with his domestic partner and his child. They've lost a loved one. That's a fact. That's a tragedy. But everything else has to be determined through a judicial process."
โ Crystal Walker (@CWalkerNews12) 11 ัะตะฒัะฐะปั 2015
.......the civil verdicts in these cases, the voters/taxpayers do. And THAT'S the problem.
Personal liability that is non-dischrageable in bankruptcy would put police under pressure to be a bit more cautious in their dealings with the public, and THAT is EXACTLY what the PTB does NOT want.
The PTB wants a police force that instills FEAR and OBEDIENCE among the sheeples.
A police force that shoots first and invariably gets exonerated later is just the ticket for widespread public compliance with anything the government wants or requires. Fear of death is a great motivator, as I always say.
And from the looks of things in the USA today, the PTB are well on their way towards achieving that odious objective.
Of course, it is good to see a cop prosecuted for murder in these circumstances, but let's just wait for the verdict, shall we?
Recall that the Rodney King video was pretty damned good evidence of police abuse, but a jury of twelve 'good and true' IDIOTS in ultra cop-friendly Simi Valley, California (or is that "Seamy Valley"?) quickly and easily found a way to ignore it.
Where there's an authoritarian follower will, there's a way.......