Feidin Sanatana, the man who recorded video of Walter Scott's shooting, almost erased the recording
out of fear:
"I won't deny that I knew the magnitude of this, and I even thought about erasing the video," Santana said in an interview on MSNBC's "All In With Chris Hayes" Wednesday.
"I felt that my life, with this information, might be in danger. I thought about erasing the video and just getting out of the community, you know Charleston, and living some place else," the 23-year-old said. "I knew the cop didn't do the right thing."
In an interview with TODAY's Matt Lauer on Thursday, Santana said: "I'm still scared."
"I say life changed in a matter of seconds. I never thought this would happen, that I would be a witness," he told TODAY's Matt Lauer in an exclusive interview Thursday. "I'm still scared."
Consider
what happened to Ramsey Orta after he shot footage of the chokehold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island:
Cops busted Orta at his Staten Island home on Feb. 10 for allegedly peddling drugs to undercover officers nine times. Authorities also arrested his mother and brother in the sweep.
In August 2014, police arrested Orta for criminal possession of a firearm -- just one month after he taped the video showing Garner’s death.
Orta has claimed he’s being framed on trumped-up charges as vengeance. He faces felony charges for both incidents.
He's been imprisoned at Rikers Island -- which is, to say the least,
not a country club -- and he's
been on a hunger strike:
Orta, 23, refuses to eat prison food over fears that New York Corrections Department officers will taint it with rat poison—a complaint echoed by 19 other inmates who filed a lawsuit last month claiming they were sickened by blue-green pellets found in their Rikers meatloaf.
Orta's wife, Chrissie Ortiz, was
also arrested shortly after the video went public. Orta's cousin Lisa Mercado said
this on
Democracy Now!:
LISA MERCADO: It’s just, ever since the film -- the filming that Ramsey did, it was a constant harassment every day, on a daily basis, within the day hours and it could be 3:00, 4:00, 5:00 in the morning, police would ride by the home and put spotlights into the windows of the home.
And there was this:
LISA MERCADO: ... once he got that video out he got treated differently. I mean, he’s in Staten Island, small little community, and it’s just constant, you know -- they wanted him to not put the video out. They tried to get the video from him a couple of times.
AMY GOODMAN: How did they try to get it from him?
LISA MERCADO: By searching him every time they see him walking in the street. They have taken his phone a few times.
AMY GOODMAN: The second time he was arrested, they said to him -- he said they said, you filmed us, now we are filming you?
LISA MERCADO: That was actually in the_New York Daily News_.
On the same show, Ken Perry, one of Orta's lawyers, said this:
JUAN GONZĂLEZ: And Ken Perry, can you talk about this -- this continuing situation with the family, the harassment here?
KEN PERRY: Well, it seems to be a purposeful set of circumstances, where they’re going to show people don’t mess with us. Other than that, I’m not sure what we can really say about it. I mean, these people have had to move out of the area. When Ramsey’s out we want him out of the area as well.
A
Gofundme page for Orta has now raised enough money to bail him out. But I'm sure that won't guarantee his safety. His lawyers want a change of venue for any trials -- Staten Island is where a lot of cops live, and there's no way he'll be tried fairly there. And if anything else, um,
unusual happen to him, it won't be a surprise.
These guys should have used Wikileaks.
ReplyDeleteI lived in Staten Island from '82-'83, and can attest to it being like a small town within a larger city.
ReplyDeleteIt's very close-knit and parochial.
The woman I was dating was from there - and the reason I moved there - and her father was a Police Chief, so I had to watch what I said and did around her - she was daddy's little girl.
I got an invite to an exclusive dinner in some local bar. The owner, once a month, threw a dinner party for the cops and the mobsters.
Best Italian food I ever ate - and I've eaten in a lot of the top Italian restaurants around the country.
Nothing, and I mean nothing, could touch that evening's dinner!
And you had to see all of the fancy cars parked all around. And the jewelry the men and women wore - both on the cops and mobster's side.
It seems like once a month, both groups got together to eat a spectacular meal.
I don't think much has changed in the last 30+ years, so, this guy has plenty to worry about if he doesn't get the hell our of Staten Island 'Dodge.'
Ditto the guy in SC. I've been to that city, and it has the feel of a small town.
He needs to get the hell out, too!
Pissing-off the cops in our current militarized country, is a sure way to either a long prison sentence, or a toe-tag at the morgue.