It Can Happen to You – the Veth Mam travesty.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Damian Dovarganes/AP/Shutterstock (6274269a) Veth Mam, Kelly Thomas Plaintiff Veth Mam takes questions about his encounter with Fullerton police officers, as his attorney Garo Mardirossian, not seen, announces that Mam has filed a lawsuit against the Fullerton Police, in Los Angeles. Mam was arrested last October for allegedly jumping on an officer’s back and choking him. A jury acquitted Mam last month after seeing a video in which the camera is knocked from his hands and he is wrestled to the ground by another officer. In the background is a photograph of Kelly Thomas, another client of attorney Mardirossian, who died after an altercation with Fullerton Police Department Officers last month Fullerteron Police Lawsuit, Los Angeles, USA

Matt Leslie for Fullerton Rag

On April 22 in a Santa Ana courthouse a jury decided that Veth Mam’s civil rights were not violated in October, 2010 by officers of the Fullerton Police Department, who pulled Mr. Mam from a crowd of onlookers as he video recorded them in action. The officers arrested him, charged him with assaulting a police officer, and swore he obstructed their work and tried to choke one of them. When he was tried in court the reports filed by FPD officers were easily disproven by the existence of a now widely circulated YouTube video. Mr. Mam went free, but not before the officers changed their stories mid-stream to what we can only call highly improbable narratives…

So Veth Mam sued them in federal court, claiming they had violated his civil rights by singling him out for daring to video them while they arrested his friend in the early morning hours in downtown Fullerton, and for throwing him in jail and maliciously prosecuting him, knowing he did not commit the crimes for which he was charged and eventually acquitted.

Last week an Orange County jury ruled against Mr. Mam…  Continue reading here at Fullerton Rag…

About Fullerton Rag

Stories cross-posted from "The Fullerton Rag" are generally written by Green and good-government activist Matt Leslie.