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City Pays Out Almost $350,000 More for Four Protest
Cases In a rare case that went all the way to a jury, community medic Erin Wenzel was awarded $40,272 in early October for injuries she incurred when Portland officers pushed her to the ground during an August 2020 protest (Oregon Public Broadcasting, October 4). A similar case involving another medic, Evelyn Cushing, was settled for $47,500 by an October 26 City Council vote. Cushing was also pushed to the ground and injured by police. A third person, Anne Sires, settled for $7000 in late August for another protest incident ("encounter" in the City's verbiage) from August 2020. In a huge win, the City agreed to pay five community members $250,000 (and the group Don't Shoot Portland a nominal $1) for force used at the 2020 protests. Meanwhile, Portland Copwatch updated its online list of the top 25 settlements/jury awards since 1993, where those highest amounts add up to just under $15 million out of nearly $21 million spent on police misconduct over the last 30 years. It is not clear if Wenzel's case might be reconsidered, as one juror revealed after the trial was over that they work for the City of Portland. If it does go back for reconsideration, the OHSU employee might get more of the $450,000 she originally sought. The City Attorney tried to minimize the fact that Wenzel's arm was broken, claiming the cops were "dodging ball bearings being thrown by the crowd" (Oregonian, October 5). Cushing's case was put on the "consent agenda" at Council because they have arbitrarily decided that only settlements of $50,000 or more should get full review in a public session. Portland Copwatch member Marc Poris pulled the item for discussion anyway, and wondered whether the $47,500 figure was deliberately chosen in order to keep the settlement from the public eye. Video of the incident shows Officer Brian Wheeler (#57813) break from a flank of riot cops, rush over to Cushing and shove her to the ground, then return to the other officers. PCW has learned Wheeler was found out of policy for misconduct in this case, affirmed (with no names mentioned) in the latest Compliance Officer's Report on the US DOJ Agreement. What is not clear yet is what kind of discipline Wheeler received.
PCW also pulled and testified on Sires' case. A city representative explained that the "encounter" was during a protest on North Lombard where an officer hit her in the thigh with an impact munition, causing lacerations and large bruises. While it was mentioned that the munitions are supposed to be aimed only at the lower legs, it was not clear whether the involved officer was investigated for violating that policy. No member of Council made any comments when voting on the settlement, despite PCW encouraging them to discuss the underlying issues when they vote on these cases.
The major 2020 protest suit will also lead to the
"decommissioning" of grenades known as
"Rubber Ball Distraction Devices" (OPB, November 29). The $250,001
The new top 25 list includes the $400,000 settlement for Kyle Odell, who was gravely injured when
a cop crashed their patrol car while transporting Odell (PPR #86), and a $211,000
settlement for Edward Gathright, whose First Amendment rights were violated in 2001 by police
preventing him from preaching. The average cost of such misconduct and more serious cases
including many deaths by shooting and other means? $696,000 a year. PCW has also separately
tracked over $4.5 million in negligence cases (where police inaction was the issue) and almost $2
million for car crashes in which misconduct was not necessarily an issue. At least $700,000 has
been paid out for protest actions just in the last two years. The updated list can be found at portlandcopwatch.org/top25settlements22.html.
NOTE: The total settlement amount with 5 community members including Don't Shoot Portland appeared incorrectly in the print edition (as $250,000). PCW regrets the error. |
January, 2023
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Portland Copwatch Portland Copwatch is a grassroots, volunteer organization promoting police accountability through citizen action.
People's Police Report
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