97
Abdullah Muflahi, the store owner who had a surveillance video of the
Baton Rouge shooting of Alton Sterling by Police officers has told a
Baton Rouge District court in a lawsuit that police stole the
surveillance video from his store, took his cellphone and locked him in a
car for four hours.
Sterling, a 37-year-old
black father of five, was tackled and wrestled onto the hood of a car by two police officers around 12:35 a.m before cops fired five shots at Sterling, who was hit once in the chest and once in the back on July 5.
black father of five, was tackled and wrestled onto the hood of a car by two police officers around 12:35 a.m before cops fired five shots at Sterling, who was hit once in the chest and once in the back on July 5.
The
lawsuit is seeking damages for false arrest, false imprisonment, the
illegal taking and seizing of his security system and illegally
commandeering his business. Police officers Blane Salamoni, Howie Lake,
Robert Cook and Timothy Ballard, as well as the city of Baton Rouge and
Police Chief Carl Dabadi are all named in the suit.
lawsuit is seeking damages for false arrest, false imprisonment, the
illegal taking and seizing of his security system and illegally
commandeering his business. Police officers Blane Salamoni, Howie Lake,
Robert Cook and Timothy Ballard, as well as the city of Baton Rouge and
Police Chief Carl Dabadi are all named in the suit.
โI
felt like a criminal at the time, and there’s one of the detectives
that I knocked on the window and told him it was really hot and I asked
if I could sit outside by the car. And he just got really angry and
started saying โyou need to chill the f–k out until we get this because
we’re handling something right now,โโ Muflahi told the Daily News.
felt like a criminal at the time, and there’s one of the detectives
that I knocked on the window and told him it was really hot and I asked
if I could sit outside by the car. And he just got really angry and
started saying โyou need to chill the f–k out until we get this because
we’re handling something right now,โโ Muflahi told the Daily News.
โIt
wasn’t right and I shouldn’t have been treated like I was the one who
shot the guy. They didn’t handcuff me or read me any rights. They just
put me in the back of a car. The seat was really hot and it felt like I
was sitting on hot coals.โ
wasn’t right and I shouldn’t have been treated like I was the one who
shot the guy. They didn’t handcuff me or read me any rights. They just
put me in the back of a car. The seat was really hot and it felt like I
was sitting on hot coals.โ
โNot only did Sterling lose his life but my client lost his liberty,โ Joel Porter, Muflahiโs attorney, told the Daily News.
โThey act like this is a police state, like it’s North Korea, like they can do this without impunity.โ
โThis was done in order to intimidate my client, they did not want him to tell the truth.โ