By Bob Walsh
Joseph Garces in custody of Santa Paula officer Chris Rivera on October 9, 2020
The first chapter of this little morality play ran out in
the teeming metropolis of Santa Paula, CA. about 2 1/2 years ago. It
is now coming into the final chapter in federal court.
Joseph
Garces was driving down the road minding his own business when he saw a
woman on a cell phone. There was obviously something wrong with her.
As he was a retied fire fighter and a basically nice guy he pulled
over. He then saw a man apparently passed out on the pavement of the
parking lot. Garces then realized the liquid he saw was blood, not
beer, and that the man was not breathing. Garces checked the situation
out, relieved the man of a loaded gun, which he unloaded and then placed
on the floor of his own car, and a knife.
He used the knife to cut the shirt off the gunshot victim and began to give CPR. So far, so good.
Then
the local constabulary showed up. One of them took over the CPR and
the other began to interview Garces. Shortly thereafter Detective Chris
Rivera showed up and jumped in Garces shit fairly sternly. Fortunately
this is all on body cam. Rivera bounced Garces off as tree, hooked him
up and threw him into the back of a black-and-white.
Garces
did not take the whole thing well and sued in federal court, alleging
civil rights violations, unreasonable use of force, battery and
negligence. That was about 1 1/2 years ago.
Last
week U. S. District Court Judge Fernando Anelle-Rocha ruled against the
city in their attempt to throw out the case. He did agree with the
city in one aspect. He did say that Detective Rivera did in fact have
qualified immunity and could not be sued as an individual.
Garces, who is now 54, left the area in a meat wagon. His shoulder had been dislocated and required surgery to repair.
The shooting victim survived. A suspect is in custody awaiting trial.
The general feeling is that the city is likely to offer a reasonable settlement.
3 comments:
Don't take everything at face value. A detective is paid to investigate the situation.
True. But bouncing somebody off as tree who was administering aid to the victim and who had been seen to be doing so by witnesses maybe deserves better than a stream of "motherfuckers" being directed at him. Especially since he was cooperating very nicely with the initially responding cops before the detective showed up and started screaming.
Oh, I agree. My point is that the detective didn't investigate. He reacted and that's not a detective's job. My original post was a tad vague.
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