The Other Florida Shooting
Guest column by Hugh Turley
In May, just 25 miles
from the Florida town where Trayvon Martin was shot,
27-year-old Ibragim Todashev
(pronounced Ih-brah-HEEM
To-DAH-shev) was killed in his Orlando apartment
during an interrogation by federal and state law-enforcement officials.
Reni Manukya,
TodashevÕs
widow, has said the FBI arrived at 7:30 p.m. on May 21 to question her husband
about a possible link to Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan
Tsarnaev. In the wee hours of May 22, Todashev was shot seven times, including what his father, Abdulbaki Todashev, called Òan
execution-styleÓ shot to the head, by an
FBI agent.
The father plans to file
a civil
suit against the FBI. Good
luck. My friend Patrick Knowlton
tried to sue the FBI for grand jury witness
intimidation and he could not find a judge all the way to the Supreme Court
who would allow his case to proceed.
On July 22, the ACLU
called for an independent investigation.
Since law-enforcement officers from Massachusetts and Florida were
present at TodashevÕs
death, attorneys asked state officials to launch investigations. They declined.
The
other officers present, as well as myriad official sources quoted in news
reports, and the shooter have not been named. Senior law enforcement officials have leaked to
the press ÒfactsÓ to assassinate the
character of the victim saying he was Òthe aggressor,Ó ready
to confess to a triple murder, and was once charged with road rage. The public has a right to know the name
of the shooter, in case he would come to other homes to Òask
questions.Ó
The FBI, which is
handling the only investigation into TodashevÕs death, has blocked the
Florida Medical ExaminerÕs Office from releasing
the official report on the cause of death.
Quoting anonymous senior
law enforcement officials, news outlets reported that Todashev
was being questioned about Tsarnaev, whom he
apparently knew from working out at the same Boston gym. Some law enforcement
officials reported that the interrogation concerned an unsolved triple homicide
in Waltham, Mass. on September 11, 2011.
Depending on which
published account you read, at some point during the questioning Todashev attacked the FBI agent with an object, a knife, a
sharp object, a metal pole, a broomstick, an overturned table, a samurai sword,
or some kind of weapon. In other
reports, he was unarmed.
CBS News senior
correspondent John Miller said, Òaccording to people IÕve
spoken to,Ó moments before the shooting, Todashev was Òwriting out on a pad his
involvement in the triple murder.Ó Before joining CBS, Miller was an
assistant director of public affairs for the FBI. Why should anyone believe John MillerÕs
unnamed sources?
Michael German, senior
policy counsel in the American Civil Liberties UnionÕs
legislative office, spent 16 years as an FBI agent. Now, he says, Òwhat needs to happen, because so much contradictory
information has been released, is an independent investigation.Ó
We might consider: From
what, exactly, should an independent investigation be independent? The answer:
the government.
The U.S. Constitution
provides for an independent investigation in the Fifth Amendment, which states
that ÒNo
person shall be held to answer for a capital crime or otherwise infamous offense,
unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury ... nor shall any person
... be compelled in a criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be
deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.Ó
The original grand jury panel
of citizens was truly independent of the government, without any federal
prosecutor in the grand jury room. But in 1946, the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure placed the grand jury under the governmentÕs
control. Only by restoring
its original independence can an independent investigation by citizens
determine if Todahshev was being compelled to be a
witness against himself and deprived of his life by government agents.
Could Americans be the
most uninformed people on earth regarding their constitutional rights and
responsibilities?
This article appeared originally in
the August 2013
Hyattsville (MD) Life & Times. It is reprinted here
with their permission. See also ÒThe Todashev
Killing and the House of Cards.Ó
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