MDC 7,111 Posted June 14, 2024 California Man Gets $900,000 Settlement for 'Psychological Torture' During 17-Hour Police Interrogation Detectives in Fontana, California, told Thomas Perez Jr. that his father was dead and that he killed him. Neither was true. C.J. Ciaramella5.28.2024 3:35 PM (Phartisan | Dreamstime.com) The California town of Fontana will pay $900,000 to settle a federal civil rights lawsuit after police falsely accused a man of murdering his father, interrogated him for 17 hours, threatened to have his dog euthanized, and withheld medication from him, eventually leading the distraught man to give a false confession and try to commit suicide in the police station. His father was alive the whole time. The case, first reported by the San Bernardino Sun, is a particularly deranged example of how abusive police interrogation techniques can produce false confessions. Reason has previously reported how several states around the country have tightened rules for police interrogations of minors, banning deception and requiring lawyers to be present. But even adults can be pushed into confessing a crime they didn't commit, as the case of Thomas Perez Jr. shows. In 2018, Perez reported to the Fontana police that his 71-year-old father, Thomas Perez Sr., had disappeared the previous day while taking the family dog out for a walk. The dog had returned without the elder Perez. Perez Jr. agreed to go to the police station to talk to detectives. While there, the police obtained a search warrant for the family's house, and based on small blood stains around the house and an alert from a corpse-sniffing dog, their suspicions turned to Perez Jr. Video of Perez Jr.'s interrogation showed that Fontana police told him, falsely, that they had already found his father's corpse and that there was evidence pointing to him as the murderer. According to his lawsuit, he was kept in police custody for 17 hours, during which detectives berated him, refused to let him sleep, and wouldn't let him retrieve his medications for depression, stress, asthma, and high blood pressure. "At one point while they are telling him to confess, he starts pulling at his own hair, hitting himself, making anguished noises, tears off his own shirt, and nearly falls to the floor," U.S. District Judge for the Central District of California Dolly Gee wrote in an order in Perez Jr.'s case, summarizing the video. "During this episode, the officers laugh at him and tell him that he is stressing out his dog. Later, they tell him that they are going to give away his dog." Detectives in fact brought Perez Jr.'s dog into the interrogation room so he could say goodbye to it. Perez then confessed to stabbing his father with a pair of scissors. After confessing, while he was left alone in the interrogation room, Perez Jr. tried to hang himself with his shoelaces. He was taken from the police station and temporarily committed to a psychiatric hospital. While the younger Perez was in the hospital, police located the elder Perez alive and well at Los Angeles International Airport, where he was flying to Oakland to see his daughter. Perez Jr. filed a lawsuit against Fontana in 2019, alleging that the Fontana police violated his due process rights, as well as his constitutional rights against unreasonable search and seizure and excessive force. The Supreme Court ruled it was lawful for the police to lie during interrogations in 1969, in Frazier v. Cupp, a case where a man challenged his murder conviction on the grounds that police had claimed that the man's cousin had already confessed and implicated him, which was not true. At the time, a mentally sound adult falsely confessing to a crime was considered a myth. The advent of DNA testing has shown that it is an all-too-real phenomenon. According to the Innocence Project, nearly 30 percent of DNA exonerations involved false confessions. Only a third of those false confessors were 18 years old or younger at the time of their arrest. However, police officers' freedom to lie during interrogations does not extend to physical or psychological torture. Gee wrote there was no legitimate government interest that would justify detectives' treatment of Perez Jr. "A reasonable juror could conclude that [the detectives] inflicted unconstitutional psychological torture on Perez," Gee wrote in her summary judgment order, finding that their "tactics indisputably led to Perez's subjective confusion and disorientation, to the point he falsely confessed to killing his father, and tried to take his own life." According to the San Bernardino Sun, three of the Fontana officers involved in Perez Jr.'s case remain employed with the department, while one has retired to enjoy his public pension. https://reason.com/2024/05/28/california-man-gets-900000-settlement-for-psychological-torture-during-17-hour-police-interrogation/ 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Drizzay 698 Posted June 14, 2024 Not the brightest bulbs in the drawer. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Maximum Overkill 1,738 Posted June 14, 2024 Bang up job by the cops here DEFUND THEM ALL Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thegeneral 2,877 Posted June 14, 2024 Same cops from “Superbad”? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wiffleball 4,788 Posted June 14, 2024 Not gonna change as long as we foot the bill for their incompetence. Need to start seizing their pensions and assets. How the Hell are these guys still on the job? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
IGotWorms 4,057 Posted June 14, 2024 I thought HT was supposedly NYPD? 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Maximum Overkill 1,738 Posted June 14, 2024 Keystone Cops Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
seafoam1 2,797 Posted June 14, 2024 8 hours ago, MDC said: California Man Gets $900,000 Settlement for 'Psychological Torture' During 17-Hour Police Interrogation Detectives in Fontana, California, told Thomas Perez Jr. that his father was dead and that he killed him. Neither was true. C.J. Ciaramella5.28.2024 3:35 PM (Phartisan | Dreamstime.com) The California town of Fontana will pay $900,000 to settle a federal civil rights lawsuit after police falsely accused a man of murdering his father, interrogated him for 17 hours, threatened to have his dog euthanized, and withheld medication from him, eventually leading the distraught man to give a false confession and try to commit suicide in the police station. His father was alive the whole time. The case, first reported by the San Bernardino Sun, is a particularly deranged example of how abusive police interrogation techniques can produce false confessions. Reason has previously reported how several states around the country have tightened rules for police interrogations of minors, banning deception and requiring lawyers to be present. But even adults can be pushed into confessing a crime they didn't commit, as the case of Thomas Perez Jr. shows. In 2018, Perez reported to the Fontana police that his 71-year-old father, Thomas Perez Sr., had disappeared the previous day while taking the family dog out for a walk. The dog had returned without the elder Perez. Perez Jr. agreed to go to the police station to talk to detectives. While there, the police obtained a search warrant for the family's house, and based on small blood stains around the house and an alert from a corpse-sniffing dog, their suspicions turned to Perez Jr. Video of Perez Jr.'s interrogation showed that Fontana police told him, falsely, that they had already found his father's corpse and that there was evidence pointing to him as the murderer. According to his lawsuit, he was kept in police custody for 17 hours, during which detectives berated him, refused to let him sleep, and wouldn't let him retrieve his medications for depression, stress, asthma, and high blood pressure. "At one point while they are telling him to confess, he starts pulling at his own hair, hitting himself, making anguished noises, tears off his own shirt, and nearly falls to the floor," U.S. District Judge for the Central District of California Dolly Gee wrote in an order in Perez Jr.'s case, summarizing the video. "During this episode, the officers laugh at him and tell him that he is stressing out his dog. Later, they tell him that they are going to give away his dog." Detectives in fact brought Perez Jr.'s dog into the interrogation room so he could say goodbye to it. Perez then confessed to stabbing his father with a pair of scissors. After confessing, while he was left alone in the interrogation room, Perez Jr. tried to hang himself with his shoelaces. He was taken from the police station and temporarily committed to a psychiatric hospital. While the younger Perez was in the hospital, police located the elder Perez alive and well at Los Angeles International Airport, where he was flying to Oakland to see his daughter. Perez Jr. filed a lawsuit against Fontana in 2019, alleging that the Fontana police violated his due process rights, as well as his constitutional rights against unreasonable search and seizure and excessive force. The Supreme Court ruled it was lawful for the police to lie during interrogations in 1969, in Frazier v. Cupp, a case where a man challenged his murder conviction on the grounds that police had claimed that the man's cousin had already confessed and implicated him, which was not true. At the time, a mentally sound adult falsely confessing to a crime was considered a myth. The advent of DNA testing has shown that it is an all-too-real phenomenon. According to the Innocence Project, nearly 30 percent of DNA exonerations involved false confessions. Only a third of those false confessors were 18 years old or younger at the time of their arrest. However, police officers' freedom to lie during interrogations does not extend to physical or psychological torture. Gee wrote there was no legitimate government interest that would justify detectives' treatment of Perez Jr. "A reasonable juror could conclude that [the detectives] inflicted unconstitutional psychological torture on Perez," Gee wrote in her summary judgment order, finding that their "tactics indisputably led to Perez's subjective confusion and disorientation, to the point he falsely confessed to killing his father, and tried to take his own life." According to the San Bernardino Sun, three of the Fontana officers involved in Perez Jr.'s case remain employed with the department, while one has retired to enjoy his public pension. https://reason.com/2024/05/28/california-man-gets-900000-settlement-for-psychological-torture-during-17-hour-police-interrogation/ Really? You really don't have a life to live do you cack? 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MLCKAA 540 Posted June 14, 2024 Disgusting. I wish more people understood their rights. Perez could’ve walked out any time. But Detectives bank on people sitting through it all when they don’t have to. Those detectives are pigs. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Engorgeous George 2,117 Posted June 14, 2024 https://youtu.be/BHUbNCjEMBE Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
edjr 6,578 Posted June 14, 2024 BS Cops never lie. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MDC 7,111 Posted June 14, 2024 4 hours ago, seafoam1 said: Really? You really don't have a life to live do you cack? 4 am 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wiffleball 4,788 Posted June 14, 2024 I think most of us agree that there's some incredibly stupid cops out there. Moreover, that haven't received the amount of training that a Starbucks barista gets. However, this is Way beyond that. This is a level of depravity and cruelty that isn't accidentally performed. This was thought out. And frankly just evil and mean. I feel more and more like Bob Dole- " where is the outrage?" Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
LOD01 198 Posted June 14, 2024 That's CA for ya. Let all the real criminals go. Try and pin a false murder charge on an innocent man. What a fockin cesspool of a state. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
iam90sbaby 2,472 Posted June 14, 2024 That 900k will last him about 3-4 years in California Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wiffleball 4,788 Posted June 14, 2024 Didja read about the poor woman who was cuffed & locked in a police car - WHEN IT WAS PARKED ON A CLEARLY Marked Train Crossing? And yes, HIT by the Train. Happened in Colo. Stoopid MFers Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
torridjoe 48 Posted June 15, 2024 On 6/14/2024 at 7:34 AM, wiffleball said: I think most of us agree that there's some incredibly stupid cops out there. Moreover, that haven't received the amount of training that a Starbucks barista gets. However, this is Way beyond that. This is a level of depravity and cruelty that isn't accidentally performed. This was thought out. And frankly just evil and mean. I feel more and more like Bob Dole- " where is the outrage?" This is standard MO. Nothing unusual here. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
seafoam1 2,797 Posted June 15, 2024 On 6/14/2024 at 1:35 PM, wiffleball said: Didja read about the poor woman who was cuffed & locked in a police car - WHEN IT WAS PARKED ON A CLEARLY Marked Train Crossing? And yes, HIT by the Train. Happened in Colo. Stoopid MFers Well, they are biden voters out there. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hardcore troubadour 14,903 Posted June 15, 2024 Yeah but reported crimes are at historic lows. So, you take the good with the bad I guess. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
seafoam1 2,797 Posted June 15, 2024 10 minutes ago, Hardcore troubadour said: Yeah but reported crimes are at historic lows. So, you take the hood with the bad I guess. It's focking surreal these dopey liberals. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites