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Today on Democracy Now! we air for the first time the
tape of an L.A. farm worker being interrogated after being shot five
times by police.
A piece in the L.A. Times describing the
incident, begins like this:
‘It was early evening on a November day five years ago
when Oliverio Martinez, 29, rode his bicycle down a path and across a
vacant lot toward a row of small homes.
Two officers, Andrew Salinas and Maria Pena, had stopped
to question a man they suspected, wrongly it turned out, of selling
drugs. When they heard a squeaky bike approach in the dark, they called
for the rider to stop.
Martinez dismounted and put his hands over his head. In
a leather sheath on a waist band, he carried a long knife that he used
to cut strawberries.
When the officer patted him down and grabbed for the
knife, Martinez tried to run. Salinas tackled him and tried to handcuff
him. As they struggled on the ground, the officer called out that the
man had a huge knife. Pena moved closer and fired.
One bullet struck Martinez near the left eye and exited
behind his right eye. A second hit his spine. Three more shots hit his
legs.
When patrol supervisor Sgt. Ben Chavez arrived, a
handcuffed Martinez lay bleeding on the ground. Once Martinez was loaded
into an ambulance, Chavez climbed in with a tape recorder in hand.
On and off for the next 45 minutes in the ambulance and
at the hospital, he repeatedly asked the gravely wounded man to admit he
had grabbed the officer's gun and provoked the struggle. In agony,
Martinez is heard screaming in pain and saying he is choking and dying.
"OK. You're dying. But tell me why you were
fighting with the police?" Chavez asks. "Did you want to kill
the police or what?" he continues. One officer had said Martinez
tried to grab his gun.
In the emergency room, Chavez continued to press
Martinez to tell him what happened.
"Why did you run from the police?" Chavez is
heard to say over the sounds of nurses and doctors.
"Did you get his gun? ... Did you to try to shoot
the police?"
Martinez in a low voice responds: "I don't know....
I don't know."
Lawyers for Martinez say he panicked when the officer
tried to tackle him, but they say he did not grab the officer's gun.
In the emergency room, he is heard asking Chavez several
times to leave him alone. "I don't want to say anything
anymore."
"No? You don't want to say what happened?" the
sergeant continues.
"It's hurting a lot. Please!" Martinez
implores, his words trailing off into agonized screams. Undaunted,
Chavez resumes. "Well, if you're going to die, tell me what
happened."
Silence came only when pain medication took hold, and
Martinez faded into unconsciousness.’
The Supreme Court has just ruled that the police
sergeant did not violate the 5th amendment right of Oliverio Martinez.
He is now paralyzed and blind.
Today, a Democracy Now! exclusive. We air for the first
time a recording of Sergeant Chavez interrogating Martinez while he
screams in excruciating pain. This tape has never been broadcast before.
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R. Samuel Paz, lawyer for Oliverio Martinez
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Sonia Mercado, Co-counsel for Oliverio
Martinez
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Alan Wisotsky, lawyer for Sergeant Ben Chavez