r******s 发帖数: 1388 | 1 警方经过调查,学生是自己撞上的,警车无过错。
最后,死者的父母花钱请了私人侦探,警察才慌了。
我不是说警察卷入这起灭门案,我是觉得,警察对于中国人,外国人,不会认真尽力侦
查破案。 | j***y 发帖数: 2074 | | l******g 发帖数: 2076 | | r******s 发帖数: 1388 | 4 the victim is called Ryo Oyamada. He was 24.
【在 j***y 的大作中提到】 : 能不能贴一下链接?美国警察真是无下限啊。
| y****2 发帖数: 1987 | 5 这个姓,是个日本人吗?
【在 r******s 的大作中提到】 : the victim is called Ryo Oyamada. He was 24.
| l*****u 发帖数: 3051 | 6 http://gothamist.com/2013/05/03/family_of_japanese_student_kill
Nearly two and a half months after Japanese student Ryo Oyamada was killed
by a cop car in Queens, the Oyamada family's attorney says the NYPD still
refuses to release any information that might shed light on the 24-year-old'
s death; now, he and the Oyamadas are suing the city for $8 million, citing
gross negligence on the part of the patrol car's driver, and they're
demanding the NYPD disclose any surveillance tapes or other evidence they're
withholding from the night of the crash.
Oyamada, who lived in Queensbridge at the time of his death, was struck by a
patrol car in his neighborhood just after midnight on February 21st; though
the NYPD's accident report maintained that the car—which the NYPD says was
responding to an emergency call at the Queensbridge projects nearby—was
traveling with its emergency lights "engaged", various witnesses reported
that the car had neither its lights nor its siren on. Attorney Jeffrey Kim
says he believes the NYPD has surveillance video that would confirm whether
or not the car's lights were on, in addition to the speed of the car and
whether or not Oyamada was jaywalking when he was hit—the accident report
alleges that Oyamada was crossing in the middle of the street. But the NYPD
has withheld all evidence from the family, and Kim says they will continue
to withhold it unless he can obtain it through litigation.
"When I interviewed the Oyamadas, they were told by the police officer when
they came to the precinct that there was surveillance video," Kim told us
today. "If the other side has anything that could shed light on this, by
federal [lawsuit] discovery, they'd have to disclose that." In March, local
blog Queensbridge.us reported that an NYPD officer said the department "has
NYCHA security video showing that RMP's lights were flashing when victim was
struck."
The complaint, which names the city, the NYPD and patrol car driver Daren
Ilardi as defendants, alleges Ilardi operated the vehicle in a "gross and
negligent manner," and that Oyamada was a "lawful pedestrian" at the time of
impact; surveillance video "would contribute substantially into finding out
how and why the accident happened," Kim said. And though the case isn't
necessarily a federal matter, Kim says the rules governing federal discovery
are stricter than those in city court, and he wants to avoid running into
the same problems faced by the family of cyclist Mathieu Lefevre, which
battled over evidence disclosure with the NYPD for nearly a year.
Kim says he and an accident reconstruction expert will also examine the
patrol car for further evidence later this month. He also noted that several
key witnesses in the case were not cooperating with him. "I would ask
anyone with firsthand knowledge of the accident to come forward and help,"
he said. A funeral for Oyamada was held in his native Japan last month, with
over a hundred friends and family members in attendance. |
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