CT Police try arresting one of their own....

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
The seven-page arrest warrant application submitted by Lt. Lawrence Curtis concluded that Officer Matthew Worden hit suspect Mark Maher with punches that "were neither necessary nor needed" during an arrest on April 1.

"Although striking Maher may have violated Enfield Police Department's use of force policies, Worden's conduct seemed to be aimed at an attempt to restrain Maher who was resisting officers' attempts to handcuff him, rather than an intention to inflict physical harm," Hardy concluded

According to the arrest warrant application, Worden told Curtis that he hit Maher twice in the shoulder area because he was resisting arrest and that Maher was "tensing his arm" and "clenching his fists" while Worden was patting him down on the hood of a cruiser.

Worden told Curtis that he delivered two closed fist punches aimed at Maher's upper right arm "to disrupt the nerves and incapacitate the muscles so the arms could be controlled." Worden said Maher was thrashing on the ground after officers took him down and that "this thrashing caused one of the punches to hit Maher in the right side of his forehead above the eye," the application states.

The application states Curtis concluded that the video did not show Maher resisting arrest and that at one point it shows Worden, while Maher is on the ground with one arm pinned behind him, stopping to adjust the glove on his right hand before delivering two of the four punches he threw.

In her letter rejecting the arrest warrant Hardy said the video "depicts many moving parts where it is extremely difficult to keep up with everything that is going on with all parties."

http://www.courant.com/news/connect...ity-warrant-20140722,0,5118738.story#vcomment

The Enfield police officer recently accused of brutality has been the subject of 14 internal affairs investigations over the past seven years, department records indicate.

The citizen's complaints against Officer Matthew Worden range from his being "rude and discourteous" during traffic stops to allegations of racial profiling and ordering his dog to attack a man he mistakenly thought was a burglar.

The Courant reviewed more than 400 pages of internal affairs reports on eight complaints registered against Worden since 2010. In all of those cases Worden was either exonerated or the complaint was not sustained by the investigating officer from the Enfield police department.

Worden was suspended once, records show, when he got into a fight with a fellow officer in 2007 during a domestic dispute with his then-girlfriend. He was arrested on assault charges later dropped. Worden was suspended for 60 days by Chief Carl Sferrazza

http://www.courant.com/news/connect...er-citizen-complaints-20140718,0,540378.story
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
We know this isn't true. Chis told us that cops protect each other. There's a thin blue line which they don't cross.

Sounds like this guy left them no choice.

You'd think in this day and age of cop hating they'd be a little more stringent with problem cops. You let them go and the media try to paint ALL cops as rogue thugs, skewing stories to make the them look bad as a whole.
 
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