Crime AP: Georgia sheriff releases video showing a violent struggle before deputy shoots exonerated man - “I don’t feel, no matter what happened, that he should have been killed,” his mother said.

Video (age gated by youtube):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GrcptVf8Yk
My upload is sucking atm, so here's a couple of links:
https://files.catbox.moe/e7uqib.mp4 (480p, six minutes, all of the action)
https://preservetube.com/watch?v=7GrcptVf8Yk
edit:


Georgia sheriff releases video showing a violent struggle before deputy shoots exonerated man
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Russ Bynum
2023-10-18 23:32:55GMT

WOODBINE, Ga. (AP) — A Georgia deputy fatally shot a Black man at point-blank range during a traffic stop after the man, who had been wrongfully imprisoned years ago, grabbed the officer by the neck and was forcing his head backward, according to video released by a sheriff Wednesday.

The family of Leonard Cure, 53, viewed the dash and body camera video before Camden County Sheriff Jim Proctor’s office posted it online. Relatives said they suspect Cure resisted being arrested because of psychological trauma from spending 16 years imprisoned in Florida for an armed robbery he didn’t commit.

“I believe there were possibly some issues going on, some mental issues with my brother,” Michael Cure said of his slain brother. “I know him quite well. The officer just triggered him, undoubtedly triggered him. It was excitement met with excitement.”

The sheriff released the video two days after one of his deputies, who is white, pulled over Cure’s pickup truck on suspicion of reckless driving and, after a struggle, fatally shot him on Interstate 95 a few miles north of the Georgia-Florida line. Cure had been visiting his mother in Port St. Lucie, Florida, and was returning to a home he bought recently in metro Atlanta.

The video shows the deputy shouting several times for Cure to get out of his vehicle. Cure exits from the driver’s-side door, but at first refuses a command to put his hands on the back of the truck.

“I ain’t doing (expletive),” he tells the deputy.

Cure complies after the deputy threatens to use a stun gun on him. With his hands on the truck, he questions why he was pulled over.

“You passed me doing 100 miles per hour (160 kph),” the deputy replies.

When Cure ignores commands to put his hands behind his back, the deputy fires his stun gun — shocking Cure with electrified prongs connected to the weapon by wires. The video shows Cure spin around and start flailing his arms, as if trying to break free of the wire.

Cure grabs the deputy as highway traffic speeds past them. Both men can be seen grappling with arms around each others’ necks. Cure gets a hand on the deputy’s lower face and neck and begins forcing his head backward. The deputy strikes Cure in the side with a baton, but Cure maintains his grip.

“Yeah, bitch!” Cure says. Then a single pop can be heard.

Cure slumps to the ground and the deputy can be seen holding his handgun. He shouts at Cure to stay on the ground, then raises his radio.

“Shots fired, suspect down!” the deputy says. “Send help!”

The sheriff has placed the deputy, whose name has not been released, on administrative leave during a review by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, which is customary in Georgia for shootings involving law enforcement officers.

The agency will send its findings to Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Keith Higgins, who will determine whether to seek charges.

Higgins met with Cure’s family Wednesday after the video was released. But the prosecutor’s spokeswoman, Cheryl Diprizio, said he would not make a final decision until the bureau finishes its investigation.

Studies show Black Americans face a disproportionate risk of being killed by police or wrongfully convicted of crimes compared to white people. Both happened to Cure.

After viewing the video, Cure’s relatives said they still believe shooting him was unnecessary. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing the family, blamed the deputy for acting aggressively from the start and never attempting to de-escalate the conflict with Cure.

“He really should be alive,” Michael Cure said. “The officer hit him with his baton and he tased him, twice as a matter of fact. But he did not have to shoot him.”

Cure was wrongfully convicted of armed robbery in 2004 and was sentenced to life in prison in Florida, but authorities reviewing his case in 2020 concluded he didn’t commit the crime. He was released three years ago.

Cure’s mother and brothers said he lived in constant fear of being arrested and incarcerated again. Michael Cure said he’s confident that’s why his brother resisted arrest.

Before watching the video, Cure’s family held a news conference outside the Camden County courthouse. Mary Cure grasped a framed portrait of her slain son and said she knew when officers came to her Florida home Monday that he had been killed, even before they told her.

“I don’t feel, no matter what happened, that he should have been killed,” Mary Cure said.

When Cure was wrongfully imprisoned, the Innocence Project of Florida persuaded a case review unit of the Broward County prosecutor’s office to take a look at his case. That unit examined an ATM receipt and other evidence that Cure was miles away from the robbery. A judge vacated his conviction in 2020.

“He is someone that was failed by the system once and he has again been failed by the system. He’s been twice taken away from his family,” Seth Miller, executive director of the Innocence Project of Florida, said Wednesday.

Miller said that for so many of his clients, including Cure, their biggest fear is that an officer will knock on their door or stop them while driving “without cause, for something they didn’t do, send them back right where they worked so hard to get out of.”

“I can only imagine that must have been what he was thinking during this traffic stop,” Miller said.

---

Police release video of fatal shooting of Black man in Georgia
Reuters (archive.ph)
By Rich Mckay and Daniel Trotta
2023-10-19 02:46:41GMT

nig01.jpg
Leonard Allan Cure, 53, who, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI), was killed by a Georgia sheriff's deputy during a traffic stop, poses at the Florida Senate Chamber in Tallahassee, Florida, U.S., April 26, 2023, in this picture obtained by Reuters on October 17, 2023. Innocence Project of Florida/Handout

ATLANTA, Oct 18 (Reuters) - Officials on Wednesday released video of the traffic stop and physical confrontation that ended with a sheriff deputy in Georgia shooting a Black man to death at point-blank range.

Leonard Allan Cure, 53, died on Monday after a Camden County sheriff's deputy shot him; the officer has not been officially identified. Cure was exonerated in 2020 after being wrongfully convicted of armed robbery and serving 16 years in prison.

The case is the latest in a series of police shootings of unarmed Black men that have raised questions about race relations and police use of force in America.

His family has retained civil rights lawyer Ben Crump, who has won multimillion-dollar settlements for the relatives of others killed by police. Crump said at a news conference on Wednesday that the officer had acted too aggressively.

The Camden County Sheriff's Office said in a posting online the video was released because of rumors and misinformation, but did not elaborate.

A representative for the sheriff's office did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment on Wednesday.

The Camden County Sheriff's office released threevideos, one from the deputy's body camera and two from his vehicle's camera, that show the deputy pulled Cure over for speeding and immediately shouted at him to get out of the car. The deputy later told Cure on the video that Cure was driving 100 miles per hour (160 kph) on Interstate 95 in southern Georgia.

In the altercation which lasted just under 3 minutes, Cure argues with the deputy but complies with his orders to get out of the truck and put his hands on the tailgate, the video shows.

Cure then does not comply with orders to put his hands behind his back, and the deputy shoots him with a Taser stun gun, the video shows. At that point Cure and the deputy grapple with each other, with both men grabbing each other around the face and neck, the video shows.

Cure is heard saying "Yeah, bitch," twice as the deputy says "sit down" multiple times, the video shows.

The deputy hits Cure with a baton and then fires one shot at point blank range with his service weapon and a pop is heard, according to the video.

After telling Cure to "stay down" after he briefly struggled to sit up, the deputy then handcuffs Cure, prone on the asphalt, and begins to render aid, the video shows. Other uniformed personnel arrive and attempt to revive Cure with chest compressions, but his body is eventually loaded into an ambulance, the video shows.

Cure's family watched the video Wednesday at a Georgia Bureau of Investigation office with their attorney just before it was released by Camden County, in southern Georgia.

At a news conference organized by Crump's law firm and posted online, Cure's brother Wallace Cure said there was "absolutely no reason why my brother was murdered for a traffic stop." They said Cure was driving to his home in the Atlanta area from Florida after visiting his mother.

Crump blamed the deputy for acting too aggressively from the start and possibly "triggering" Cure, who the family said suffers from emotional stress from his years in prison.

"We don't understand why there weren't more attempts to de-escalate the situation," Crump said.
 
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The family of Leonard Cure, 53, viewed the dash and body camera video before Camden County Sheriff Jim Proctor’s office posted it online. Relatives said they suspect Cure resisted being arrested because of psychological trauma from spending 16 years imprisoned in Florida for an armed robbery he didn’t commit.
We'll you should be happy to know that he wasn't put into the ground for a crime he didn't commit.
Studies show Black Americans face a disproportionate risk of being killed by police or wrongfully convicted of crimes compared to white people. Both happened to Cure.
"ITS ALMOST LIKE", smacks lips, "A BROTHER CAN'T EVEN", spits on the ground, "MURDER A COP IN COLD BLOOD NO MO." said the local NAACP representative.
 
FInally saw the bodycam footage through YouTube's algorthim. I'm no cop, but I'm sure you don't just yell "get out" to a suspect during a traffic stop. Sheriff sounded like he had anger issues.

Now, things went south when Leonard Cure started attacking the officer. Common sense would dictate that one should not fight somebody with lethal weapons in their person. Easiest thing would've been to comply and take it to court if he felt wronged. Oh well.
 
FInally saw the bodycam footage through YouTube's algorthim. I'm no cop, but I'm sure you don't just yell "get out" to a suspect during a traffic stop. Sheriff sounded like he had anger issues.
Yeah, thought that too at first but I guess it was reported the dude was doing 100 and really stalling on a pullover, instead trying to weave lanes for some time?

Prob a cop is going to pissed if it looks like running.
 
Yeah, thought that too at first but I guess it was reported the dude was doing 100 and really stalling on a pullover, instead trying to weave lanes for some time?

Prob a cop is going to pissed if it looks like running.
They are always pissed when that happens. To quote Chris Rock: "If the police have to come get you, they're bringing an ass beating with them."
 
Georgia Sheriff’s Deputy Will Not Be Charged in Shooting of Black Man
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Christine Hauser
2025-02-26 20:34:06GMT
A sheriff’s deputy in Georgia will not be charged for fatally shooting a Black man during a traffic stop that turned violent in 2023, officials said on Tuesday. The man who was killed, Leonard Cure, 53, had been wrongfully imprisoned in Florida for 16 years.

The Camden County Sheriff’s Office said in a post on social media that the district attorney for the Brunswick Judicial District, Keith Higgins, had concluded that the use of force by the deputy, Staff Sgt. Buck Aldridge, was “objectively reasonable.”

“The pursuit of criminal charges, therefore, is not warranted,” he said.

Mr. Higgins, who could not be reached on Wednesday, told The Associated Press that the deputy was “overpowered” during the stop. His announcement followed an investigation by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Mr. Cure had been exonerated and released from prison three years before the fatal traffic stop. The attorneys for his family, Benjamin Crump and Harry Daniels, said in a statement that the announcement demonstrated “a devastating failure of justice, sending the message that law enforcement officers can take a life without consequence.”

“Leonard Cure was a man who had already fought so hard to reclaim his life after a wrongful conviction, only to have it stolen from him again,” the attorneys said in the statement. “His family will not stop fighting for accountability, and neither will we.”

On Oct. 16, 2023, Mr. Cure, 53, was traveling to his home outside of Atlanta, Ga., after visiting his mother in South Florida, when Sergeant Aldridge stopped him on Interstate 95, not far from the state line.

The Camden County Sheriff’s Office said that Mr. Cure was pulled over for driving more than 100 miles per hour in a 70 m.p.h. zone. It later released camera footage of the encounter, showing Mr. Cure saying that he had done nothing wrong and pulling his arm away from the deputy.

After Sergeant Aldridge told Mr. Cure that he was being arrested because of speeding and reckless driving, they continued to argue and Mr. Cure refused to put his hands behind his back, according to the footage.

The footage also showed the deputy using his Taser on Mr. Cure. The two struggled, with their arms wrapped around each other. The footage shows Mr. Cure grabbing the deputy’s face, pushing his head and body back and cursing at him, while Sergeant Aldridge hit him with a baton. The sergeant then shot Mr. Cure.

After the shooting, Mr. Cure’s family and attorneys said that he might have been triggered by the encounter after having been wrongfully imprisoned.

He had been convicted in 2003 and sentenced to life in prison, based on prior convictions, for an armed robbery at a Walgreens in Broward County, Fla. But in 2020, he was exonerated and released on a finding of “actual innocence,” according to the Innocence Project of Florida.

“This fight is not just for Leonard’s family — it is for every family who has suffered due to unchecked police violence and a chronic lack of accountability,” his family’s lawyers said in the statement. “We will not let this grave injustice be forgotten.”

After the shooting, Sergeant Aldridge was placed on leave for about two months before he returned to work in the sheriff office’s administrative division, according to his attorney, Adrienne Browning.

“We’re happy he’ll be able to continue to serve the citizens of Camden County as he’s done for the past 12 years,” she said.

Mr. Cure’s attorneys announced in December 2023 that the family was suing Sergeant Aldridge, whom they said had been fired from Georgia police department in 2017 after throwing a woman to the ground during a traffic stop and handcuffing her. The lawsuit also names Camden County and Sheriff Jim Proctor as defendants.
 
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Here's the video. Seriously intense struggle, and the cop is very in shock and weeping afterward.


The cop came in very hot which meant the situation was escalated immediately. That said, it does seem like Cure was trying to outrun him for awhile.
Man this one checks all the nigger stereotype boxes.

Probably undiagnosed mental illness? Random sky point says yes.
Intellect level and cognitive skills of a retard? "That's a speeding ticket right?" "Georgia traffic tickets are a criminal offense." "I don't have a traffick ticket in Georgia!" Is pure "what if you didn't eat breakfast".
Extreme aggression and rage issues? "Yeah bitch"

Rest in peace Nigger. You may have been not guilty for that armed robbery but I'm sure you committed a ton of crimes you weren't caught for and more if that brave Sheriff Deputy didn't put you under the sod line.
Georgia Sheriff’s Deputy Will Not Be Charged in Shooting of Black Man
Hell yeah. This is Trump's America now niggers.

Got to love how they keep banging the drum about his exoneration. Does that just give you a lifetime pass to commit other crimes?
 
Georgia Sheriff’s Deputy Will Not Be Charged in Shooting of Black Man
Gotta love a happy ending.

First he tried to use words: no effect.

Then he tried the taser: no effect.

Then he tried the baton: no effect.

If the cop hadn't of used the gun, the kang would have got him on the ground and stomped him out.

The only people who find fault with the cop here are ether mind-broken lefties, or bleeding hearts who have never been in any kind of physical confrontation in their lives.

Edit: You know, when you look at the events in sequence like this, it seems like there might be a way to streamline this process...
 
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Got to love how they keep banging the drum about his exoneration. Does that just give you a lifetime pass to commit other crimes?
You saw how fast the media jumped on the 3 or so J6 pardons that went out and committed fresh crimes - forgiveness is only okay if the LEFT gives it.

The random sky pointing could have been a tactic to distract the officer so that Cure could more easily attack.
That would require intellect not in evidence anywhere else in the video.
 
they continued to argue and Mr. Cure refused to put his hands behind his back, according to the footage.
There is something that feels insidiously disingenuous with the phrase "according to the footage". We know the journoscum is retarded, so it could just be that. However, it almost seems like the journoscum is trying to cast the footage as a statement from a person that could be fallible. That's not how recordings work, and this nigger definitely diddu somfin' that got him justifiably shot.
 
There is something that feels insidiously disingenuous with the phrase "according to the footage". We know the journoscum is retarded, so it could just be that. However, it almost seems like the journoscum is trying to cast the footage as a statement from a person that could be fallible. That's not how recordings work, and this nigger definitely diddu somfin' that got him justifiably shot.
Bodycams were infallible and all we needed to ever see..... until the first one showed that black guys often resist when pulled over... then they became suspect and racist.

That's the new narrative, update your NPC OS and move on.
 
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