A SOCIAL JUSTICE BLOG SITE OF THE AMERICAN CREOLE INDIAN NATION

Thursday, June 3, 2010

East St. Louis Police Officer Sentenced on Civil Rights Conviction






FBI Seal Springfield Illinois
Division


Federal Bureau of Investigation

Department of Justice Press Release

















white <br />spacer
For Immediate
Release


June 1, 2010
United States Attorney's
Office
Southern District of Illinois


Contact: (618) 628-3700




East
St. Louis Police Officer Sentenced on
Civil Rights Conviction

A. Courtney Cox,
United States Attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, announced
today
that on June 1, 2010, ANTONIO C. MCWHERTER,
age 47, of Shiloh, Illinois, was sentenced in the
United States District Court in East St. Louis
for deprivation of civil rights. MCWHERTER pled
guilty to the offense on May 27, 2010.



MCWHERTER received three years’ probation with four months of
home detention, fined $5,000, ordered to pay a
$25 special assessment, and was ordered to pay restitution
to the victim in the amount of $3,489.



The violation occurred on January 30, 2006,
in East St. Louis, Illinois, when the defendant,
while acting under color of law as a police
officer for the East St. Louis Police Department, struck an
individual, D.C., in the mouth without legal
justification. The assault occurred in the booking area of
the East St. Louis Police Department.



As part of MCWHERTER’s plea agreement,
MCWHERTER agreed to immediately resign
from the East St. Louis Police Department.
MCWHERTER also agreed not to seek or accept any law
enforcement employment, as well as any
position or assignment in the military which would require him
to supervise, care for, direct, or manage
detainees or prisoners.



The investigation was conducted by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. The case was handled
by Department of Justice – Civil Rights
Division Trial Attorneys Patricia Sumner and Jeff Blumberg and Assistant
United States Attorney Angela Scott.



__




Do I really need to comment or can you just look over to the sidebar on your right? See any "deprivation of civil rights"?

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Real Time Web Analytics