December 24, 1999
Louima Cops Face 2nd Trial
By William Van Auken
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| The Chief-Leader/Gary
Fabiano
THE WRONG MAN?: Patrolmen's Benevolent Association President
Patrick J. Lynch, flanked by fellow union officials Robert Zink (left) and John
Puglissi, argues that ex-Police Officer Charles Schwarz was wrongly identified
as the cop who helped Justin Volpe savagely assault Abner Louima in a stationhouse
bathroom. |
Justin A. Volpe, sentenced to 30
years in Federal prison for his brutal August 1997 assault on Haitian immigrant
Abner Louima in the athroom of Brooklyn's 70th Precinct stationhouse, may be the
star witness in an obstruction of justice trial of three Police Officers, his
former co-defendants, when they appear in Brooklyn Federal court Jan. 3.
Two of the officers, Thomas Wiese
and Thomas Bruder were acquitted in a Federal civil rights trial last May in which
they were accused of assaulting Mr. Louima in a patrol car after he was arrested
outside a Flatbush nightclub.
The third officer, Charles Schwarz,
was convicted of aiding Mr. Volpe in the bathroom assault by holding Mr. Louima
down while the other cop shoved a broken piece of broomstick up his rectum, causing
severe internal injuries. Mr. Schwarz, who was fired from the NYPD after his conviction,
faces a possible life sentence without parole.
Lied to Aid Schwarz
In the second trial, all three men
are accused of conspiring to lie about the incident to Federal investigators in
order to clear Mr. Schwarz of any role in the bathroom assault.
The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association,
together with Mr. Schwarz's attorney, family and supporters, are looking to an
acquittal on the obstruction charge as a step toward exonerating the former cop
of a crime they say he did not commit.
PBA President Patrick J. Lunch joined
with the union's first vice president, John Puglissi, and Recording Secretary
Robert W. Zink in calling for Mr. Schwarz's release after they visited the imprisoned
cop inside the Metropolitan Correction Center in lower Manhattan Dec. 17.
"With Justin Volpe standing up in
court and proclaiming that Charles Schwarz was not there, it is obvious that an
innocent man is in prison," Mr. Lynch said. "A New York City Police Officer has
been wrongfully convicted of a crime he did not commit."
Asked whether he was concerned that
Mr. Volpe's statement, while exonerating Mr. Schwarz, could also be used to indict
Officer Wiese as an accomplice in the bathroom assault, the PBA leader said his
first concern was to secure Mr. Schwarz's release. "This is something for the
courts to sort out," he said. "But there has been an injustice done and it must
be righted."
Mr. Schwarz's lawyer, Ronald Fischelli,
had a subpoena for Mr. Volpe delivered to the Metropolitan Correction Center Dec.
14 so that the convicted ex-cop will be available as a defense witness at the
trial.
Put Wiese on Spot
Addressing the court before his
Dec. 13 sentencing, Mr. Volpe said he wanted to "clear up the government's misconception
that Schwarz was the officer in the bathroom with me. At no time was Schwarz in
the bathroom with me during the assault. The officer I was referring to was Wiese."
While the convicted cop had given
a similar account to his attorneys and to Federal probation officials, it was
his first public claim that the Government had convicted the wrong man.
Mr. Fischetti said that the jury
in the second trial will not hear evidence that could not be brought out in the
first. Both of Mr. Schwarz's co-defendants, Officers Bruder and Wiese, who didn't
testify at the original trial, have stated that he was not the second cop in the
bathroom. Officer Bruder told a reporter that he saw Mr. Louima being led to the
bathroom area by Officers Volpe and Wiese, while Officer Wiese told prosecutors
that he walked into the bathroom to find Officer Volpe leaning over the Haitian
immigrant with a stick in his hand.
The second trial is also expected
to focus at least in part on a meeting held between the defendants and the PBA
representatives in the aftermath of the assault. While the union anticipated that
its Brooklyn South Trustee, Michael J, Immitt, and others involved in the meeting
would be called as witnesses, they have yet to receive subpoenas from Federal
prosecutors, PBA attorney Stuart London said.
"This was a normal meeting between
PBA representatives and Police Officers in which arrangements were made to get
attorneys," said Mr. London. "There was no conspiracy."
Mr. Lynch also dismissed allegations
that the union was somehow involved in an attempt to obstruct justice. "Some people
feel that the big prize in this trial could be the PBA," said the union president.
"The only thing the PBA was doing was its job, defending New York City Police
Officers. Who else is going to stand up for them?"
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