this post was submitted on 21 Apr 2024
33 points (97.1% liked)

Spokane

101 readers
4 users here now

Community for the city of Spokane, Washington!

Shamelessly lifted rules from Reddit:

Rule 1: Be civil. No personal attacks. No hate. Follow all guidelines of Lemmy!

Rule 2: All topics must be related to Spokane County. This may also include Eastern Washington and North Idaho.

Rule 3: All guidelines of Lemmy's Content Policy apply here.

Rule 4: Please use the search bar before posting/no repeat posts. Posts that are rife with misspelling, are vague, or do not generally reflect civil discourse may be removed.

Rule 5: We encourage diversity of ideas and civil disagreement but we do not allow unreasonably dangerous or misleading information (e.g. Covid is a hoax, Pizzagate, Vaccines are the mark of the devil, etc.)

Rule 6: No sensationalizing news, history, or other primary source titles. Use the title from the source.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

In February this year, Spokane police investigators concluded there was probable cause to charge Sgt. Hilton with second-degree assault. The charges were referred to the Yakima County Prosecutor's office, which is still investigating.

The chat logs — which were obtained through a public records request and viewed by the Inlander this week — shed additional light on Sgt. Hilton's demeanor immediately after the violent arrest.

Joshua Maurer, an attorney representing Hinton, says the tone of the chat messages is "pretty sickening."

It's concerning that any officer — especially a sergeant — would make fun of and laugh about a citizen they had just assaulted and arrested, Maurer says.

"Sgt. Hilton was proud of his actions," Maurer says. "He told the dispatcher to look at the booking photo because that was evidence of the 'lesson' Sgt. Hilton taught Mr. Hinton."

Maurer says it's also troubling that Sgt. Hilton saw Hinton's perceived status as a "No Person" as justification for assaulting him to the point of breaking his ribs and puncturing a lung.

Despite knowing the communications would be recorded, Sgt. Hilton "shows no remorse, or even concern over being disciplined," Maurer says. "Instead, he is laughing and bragging about what he had done."

top 1 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] Anticorp 2 points 7 months ago

What the hell is a "no person" status? Whomever created that code also needs discipline.

Anyways, this isn't a surprising or even unusual event. It's quite often that the type of person who becomes a police officer, is the type of person who feels tough for beating a handcuffed and helpless person. They're cowards, and shit bags. He'll do it again. He'll continue doing it as long as he has a badge.