Click here to read CPJ's letter to Mayor Giuliani
New York, March 28, 2000 --- Journalist Errol Maitland of the
radio station WBAI was attacked by members of the New York Police
Department (NYPD) while covering the March 25 funeral of Patrick Dorismond,
a Haitian-American who was fatally shot by an NYPD officer on March
16.
Maitland, 49, is a producer for the WBAI program "Wake Up Call" and
technical director of the program "Democracy Now," which is broadcast
on the Pacifica Radio network, of which WBAI is an affiliate.
The journalist was providing live coverage of Dorismond's funeral
for WBAI via cell phone, a tape of which was reviewed by CPJ. At about
3 p.m. on Saturday, after the memorial service in Brooklyn's Holy
Cross Church had ended, Maitland told WBAI that police officers were
forcing a woman to the ground. WBAI continued to broadcast Maitland's
report as he identified himself as a WBAI journalist and asked an
officer for a statement. Maitland then announced that the police had
thrown him to the ground.
"Errol was just holding the cell phone up, trying to keep some distance
from the cops," said Joel Kupferman, an attorney who witnessed the
incident as a legal observer for the National Lawyers Guild. "And
suddenly about four officers physically grabbed him and forced him
to the ground." Maitland was arrested for disorderly conduct and taken
to the 72nd Precinct.
Although the journalist was experiencing significant pain in the chest,
shoulder, back, knees, and head, as well as breathing difficulties,
he was initially denied medical treatment, according to his attorney,
Michael Tarif Warren, who visited Maitland at the 72nd Precinct on
the evening of March 25. After Warren's intervention, an ambulance
took Maitland to Kings County Hospital Center, where he remains in
the coronary intensive care unit.
At the hospital, Maitland was handcuffed to his bed and had a police
guard posted outside his room, Warren said. The handcuffs and police
guard were removed on March 27, when police issued a desk appearance
ticket at the instigation of Judge William Miller of the Kings County
Criminal Court. Maitland will have to appear in court at a later date
to answer the disorderly conduct charges, according to Warren.
A spokesman at the office of the Deputy Commissioner of Public Information
confirmed Maitland's arrest to CPJ, claiming that the journalist suffered
only minor injuries. A hospital spokeswoman informed CPJ that Maitland's
condition is stable.
END