The Demouria Hogg case

On June 6, 2015 Oakland Police Officer Nicole Rhodes shot Demouria Hogg to death. Hogg had been unconscious behind the wheel of a BMW that, according to San Francisco police, had been involved in a robbery and a chase there the night before. Firefighters had reported seeing a firearm in the passenger’s seat, and police tried for an hour to rouse Hogg with loudspeakers, beanbag rounds, and by breaking the car’s windows. Finally they sent one officer in to grab the gun while Officer Rhodes provided covering fire through the windshield. Although she said she couldn’t see Hogg clearly, she also said that she saw him reach over to the passenger’s seat where the gun was still sitting. Rhodes fired two shots at Hogg, killing him (another officer fired a taser at about the same time).

The Community Response Team of the Anti Police-Terror Project interviewed 15 witnesses to the police action; read or watched media reports; listened to publicly-posted recordings of police, sheriff’s, and fire department radio chatter during the operation; analyzed bystanders’ photos and video of the scene; and discussed the case with an officer from another jurisdiction. A slightly edited version of the report is here.

The Pedie Perez Case

Richmond Police Commission members say DA and Mayor are obstructing investigation of Pedie’s death.

Felix Hunziker wrote an editorial saying that the DA doesn’t have authority over the Commission, and that he colluded with the Commission’s Confidential Investigator and Appeals Officer (CIAO) to block the complaint. Mayor Butt replied, and Hunziker replied to that, as did Commissioner David Brown. The Contra Costa Times has picked up the story.

Oscar Grant Committee Letter to Sacramento DA about Yvette Felarca


View or download this letter as a PDF document

October 3, 2017

The Honorable Anne Marie Schubert
District Attorney of Sacramento County,
901 G Street, Sacramento, CA 95814
daoffice@sacda.org

Dear District Attorney Schubert,

We continue to be deeply concerned about the prosecution Yvette Felarca on what appear to be trumped-up charges. We wrote earlier that her arrest in connection with the June 2016 events in Sacramento appeared to be a case of selective prosecution. Now it appears that the Berkeley Police Department is joining in, targeting Ms. Felarca in what appears to be a premeditated and unwarranted arrest on the part of the police. (See the YouTube video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HZN1Qb44Yk.) This raises the question of possible collaboration between the police and the neo-fascists and white supremacists. In light of the vicious smear campaign against her by the Alt-Right, it could be argued that the police should be protecting Ms. Felarca, not harassing her further.

We fear that the recent arrest of Ms. Felarca may be used as a pretext to increase her bail, even though no one has suggested that she has become a flight risk. If anything, she has become more dedicated to her cause and is in no sense a flight risk.

In the interests of justice, the Oscar Grant Committee again urges you to drop the pending charges against Yvette Felarca and certainly her bail should not be increased in what might be seen as a punitive manner.

Sincerely,

Eugene E Ruyle, Oakland, CA
For the Oscar Grant Committee
Against Police Brutality and State Repression