Posted: 8/27/2005 12:03:40 AM EDT
Police Beating of Minister Disputed Witnesses say an attack on Nation of Islam's Tony Muhammad was unprovoked. But LAPD says he joined a mob that assaulted officers.Richard Winton and Andrew Blankstein Times Staff Writers August 27, 2005 www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-muhammad27aug27,0,1283157.story?coll=la-home-localAppearing battered with a swollen face, the western regional director of the Nation of Islam stood Friday with community activists who accused Los Angeles police of beating the leader without provocation during a street vigil for a Hyde Park slaying victim Thursday night.
Police, however, said Minister Tony Muhammad had joined in a mob assault on two police officers and was injured in the "scuffle" when police tried to take him into custody. "Minister Tony Muhammad became quite belligerent and joined in the assault," Assistant Chief Jim McDonnell said at an afternoon news conference.
Police arrested Muhammad on suspicion of battery of an officer, and two of his bodyguards were arrested on suspicion of resisting or obstructing an officer.
The incident prompted a day of press conferences and demonstrations, with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa speaking on live television promising a full investigation and urging the community to stay united.
Los Angeles Sentinel Publisher Danny Bakewell told reporters that the officers punched and kicked Muhammad as he lay on the ground.
"The attack was unprovoked. He was wrestled to the ground, pepper-sprayed in his face, and once he was on the ground he was kicked brutally and punched in the mouth," said Bakewell, a longtime activist and founder of the Brotherhood Crusade.
The incident erupted as angry residents gathered to mourn 21-year-old Nahum Beaird, who was killed Wednesday in what police believe was a gang-related shooting. Some bystanders claim that paramedics declared Beaird dead even though he appeared to move under the sheet. Los Angeles fire and police officials deny this, saying he was dead at the scene.
City Councilwoman Jan Perry told reporters that Muhammad told her the confrontation began when he approached police to complain that they had not set up traffic control and that a police car had driven up the street quickly.
Bakewell added that Muhammad was speaking by cellphone with Deputy Chief Earl Paysinger just before the altercation, telling the officers, "I'm on the phone with your boss."
One man who said he witnessed the incident said Friday that officers struck Muhammad after he came out of a nearby apartment complex and began to talk to them. "They hit him with their fists and then their nightsticks," said the man, who spoke on the condition that he not be named.
The LAPD, however, offered a significantly different account.
Officers were patrolling the 6300 block of 10th Avenue in the Hyde Park neighborhood, where Beaird was shot, on Thursday to protect against potential retaliatory shootings, McDonnell said. About 8:30 p.m., two officers asked Nation of Islam members to move two double-parked SUVs that were blocking traffic, fearing the vehicles could become a target.
The officers then were surrounded and assaulted, McDonnell said. One officer's breast pocket and name tag were ripped, and a police radio was stolen. Muhammad joined in the assault, he said.
As officers tried to arrest the minister for battery on a police officer, a "scuffle ensued," McDonnell said.
More than 100 officers were sent to the scene to prevent further violence, said McDonnell, who was acting chief during the incident. LAPD Chief William J. Bratton returned Friday evening from vacation and went to the station near Hyde Park.
"We can only trust that the community will rationally evaluate the situation and consider the facts and the source of those facts," McDonnell said during a press conference Friday afternoon in front of a church not far from the apartment complex.
About an hour later at 5 p.m., Villaraigosa called for unity and calm.
"Let me be clear: No one is above the law," Villaraigosa said. "Not a politician, not a priest, not a criminal, not a police officer. We are all accountable for our actions."
Villaraigosa was flanked at the press conference by John Mack, the civil rights leader the mayor recently appointed head of the police commission, and Inspector General Andre Birotte.
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