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OCEANSIDE (KGTV) -- A North County mother said Oceanside Police used excessive force on her son in a civil lawsuit that has been ongoing for nearly two years.Josette Pyper said her son, Timothy, has been battling mental health issues and addiction. She believes his injuries by police should not have happened.“It was horrible,” Pyper said, sharing her story publicly for the first time. “I couldn’t even watch the whole video. It’s hard. Very very hard.”Pyper is referring to the incident that happened on Nov. 22, 2018.According to the lawsuit filed against Oceanside police and the City of Oceanside, a report of tire slashing was called in by Timothy’s father. His father had a restraining order against him, yet often invited him to visit, according to court documents.The lawsuit states his father called police and also mentioned “that there were potentially two guns in the home.”Police came to investigate the possible restraining order violation and vandalism. Court documents said that police began making public announcements for him to come out of the home, but he did not.Several officers and police K-9 entered the home. They found him in a locked bedroom, which the lawsuit stated was Timothy’s room. An officer picked the lock and opened the door, ordering him to come out with his hands up.“Tim complied with the officers’ command and began walking towards the door. As he did so, the officers changed their command and told him to ‘crawl out,’” the lawsuit said. The family’s lawyers aid the command was confusing, as Timothy began to slowly walk towards the officers to surrender.Police body camera video shows Timothy slowly start to exit his bedroom with one armed raised and the other near his ribcage. “He was wearing only boxers and clearly did not possess any weapons. It looked as though he had been sleeping,” the lawsuit stated.With a shield, an officer pushed Timothy back into his bedroom. Video showed him on the ground after being shoved back into the room with his hands up and feet on the floor. The family’s lawyer said reports from officers that Timothy tried to “violently” strike police were false.The body camera video showed police pulling Timothy up to arrest him, then getting bit by the police K-9.“He’s in full surrender mode and it’s captured on video and they yank him up, they pull him up by his arm,” said the family’s attorney Christina Denning. “He trips over some clothes and then it’s just a brutal multi-tactical attack on him at every different angle as he’s screaming… for his life.”According to the lawsuit, one officer admitted to punching Timothy “with a closed fist in [his] right ribcage… and then applied a choke hold during the arrest.” Another officer admitted “he shot Tim with a .40 mm sponge impact munition,” or rubber bullet.“It’s not right… there was a point in that video where he actually was asking [for his] dad,” Pyper said. “They were still on top of him. Is that a threat?”Josette’s son has a criminal history. His most recent cases included public intoxication and possession of drug paraphernalia. She said Timothy is schizophrenic, dealing with addiction. She does not believe the officers were equipped to handle someone who has mental health issues.Oceanside City Attorney John Mullen defended officers. In a statement to Team 10, he said officers waited more than an hour before entering the bedroom and at least 44 orders were made demanding he exit the room. “As plaintiff approached the officers with one hand obscured, the officers deployed less than lethal tactics, including the use of a canine. The officers were concerned [Timothy] was trying to access a weapon,” Mullen wrote to Team 10.He said the restraining order was issued due to elder abuse against the father and that Timothy “violated this order and barricaded himself in the father’s house.”“OPD was called to this same address one month earlier for a similar violation of the restraining order and plaintiff was combative and injured two officers during that arrest,” Mullen said.Team 10 asked if officers knew of Timothy's mental health history and asked if the Psychiatric Emergency Response Team was called to the home. Mullen said “the City has no information concerning his mental state at the time of the incident or now.”Mullen said he does not believe PERT was called to the home "because this was an active crime scene with unsecured guns in the house."The family’s lawyers disputed that, saying officers were aware of his mental health from meetings they’ve had with opposing counsel.Pyper wants to her get her son help and firmly believes the incident with Oceanside Police could have been handled differently.“They need to be accountable for what happened," she said.A trial date is scheduled for late 2021. 4779
OCEANSIDE, Calif. (KGTV) — MiraCosta College fell victim this week to vandalism from a white supremacy group.In a letter to students, university President Sunita Cooke said the incident occurred Wednesday involving vandalism by a white supremacy group.The letter didn't elaborate on what was exactly done on campus, only that the vandalism violated the college's "values of inclusion and serve to incite fear within our campus community."RELATED: CSU San Marcos police take down white nationalist posters"The district strongly opposes racist acts. To be clear – any doctrine that elevates one group above another has no place at this college. MiraCosta College does not condone any language or actions that promote racism, religious discrimination, anti-Semitism, homophobia, violence, bigotry, and other forms of hate," Cooke wrote.Cooke did not say what specific group was responsible for vandalizing campus.Campus police are investigating the vandalism and said they will monitor the campus for any more similar incidents.RELATED: White supremacist propaganda increasing on college campuses, according to new dataThe vandalism comes a week after several white supremacist posters were placed around campus at California State University, San Marcos.University police also removed those posters because they violated the university's posting policy.According to CSUSM, the group responsible for the posters, Identity Evropa, is the same group that put posters up at San Diego State University in February. CSUSM also said it believes the timing of the posters was connected to the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting. 1651

On the same day Dick's Sporting Goods announced it would no longer carry assault rifles, Walmart said on Wednesday that it is raising the minimum age to purchase a firearm from 18 to 21. The announcement comes two weeks after a 19-year-old confessed gunman took the lives of 17 people at a high school in Parkland, Florida. The massacre has since reignited a national debate on gun control. It has also caused a number of companies, most notably Delta Airlines and Enterprise Rental Cars, to end its support of the National Rifle Association. Walmart said it will begin enforcing the new rule as soon as possible. The company said the rule is one of many Walmart has implemented that goes beyond federal gun laws."We take seriously our obligation to be a responsible seller of firearms and go beyond Federal law by requiring customers to pass a background check before purchasing any firearm," Walmart said in a press release. "The law would allow the sale of a firearm if no response to a background check request has been received within three business days, but our policy prohibits the sale until an approval is given."Walmart added that in 2015, it stopped selling some assault rifles, including AR-15s. Walmart added that it does not carry bump stocks, high-capacity magazines and similar accessories. 1346
OCEANSIDE, Calif. (KGTV) -- Two people have been arrested after a teenager was stabbed to death in Oceanside earlier in October.Police say Cesar Robles, 21 and Coryell Taylor, 37, were taken into custody and booked for homicide in the stabbing death of 17-year-old Alan Sandoval.Oceanside Police say Sandoval was with two friends when they were approached by Taylor and Robles. The two suspects then stabbed the victims multiple times, according to police.The two other victims suffered non-life threatening injuries. Police are still investigating the incident.Anyone with information is asked to contact Det. Erik Ellgard at 760-435-4787 or the Oceanside Police Departments anonymous tip line at 760-435-4730. 719
One suburban Georgia county has become a flashpoint for concerns over voter suppression for rejecting hundreds of mail-in absentee ballots weeks before Election Day.Gwinnett County, located northeast of Atlanta, now faces two federal lawsuits and accusations from voting rights activists who say the rejections disproportionately affect minority voters, particularly Asian Americans and African Americans.The county has rejected 595 absentee ballots, which account for more than a third of the total absentee-ballot rejections in the state, even though Gwinnett County accounts for only about 6% of absentee ballots submitted in Georgia, according to state data analyzed by CNN Friday.Officials tossed out the ballots due to missing birthdates, address discrepancies, signatures that do not match those on registration records and other issues, according to the data.A lawsuit brought by the Coalition for Good Governance on behalf of a group of Georgia voters demands that a judge order the county to notify voters within one day of the rejections and provide adequate time to address the discrepancies. 1112
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