DENVER (AP) — A police recruit who had to have both of his legs amputated after losing consciousness and repeatedly collapsing during fight training at Denver’s police academy is suing those who allegedly forced him to continue the “barbaric hazing ritual” after paramedics ignored warning signs.

Victor Moses, 29, alleges in a lawsuit filed Tuesday that aggressive officers knocked him down multiple times in the second round of “fight day” last year, with one of them shoving him off the mat and causing him to hit his head on the floor. He said he was pressured to continue, with officers picking him up and setting him back on his feet, before paramedics standing by were asked to check him out, the lawsuit said.

Moses told them he had the sickle cell trait, which puts him at an increased risk of medical complications from high-intensity exercise. He also said he had very low blood pressure and complained that his legs were cramping, according to the lawsuit. The symptoms are danger signs for people with his condition.

Nevertheless, paramedics cleared Moses to return to training, which the suit alleges was a decision made to support the police.

  • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    Minor injuries are common and occasionally recruits die

    Just ordinary “new job” stuff then. Like any other employer.

    The legal action alleges the practice is an unnecessarily violent rite of passage that recruits have to endure to be accepted into the police “fraternity.” It notes that other recruits suffered injuries before Moses started his drills, including one person whose nose was broken.

    The lawsuit also claims that training teaches recruits that excessive force is “officially tolerated, and indeed culturally expected.”

    Moses’ lawyers, John Holland and Darold Killmer, say that mindset has nurtured a violent police force and led to lawsuits costing Denver millions of dollars.

    “Fight Day both encourages Denver police to engage in brutality and to be indifferent to the injuries they inflict,” Holland said.

    A culture of violence, bullying, and not caring when they hurt or kill people? Surely not. What an utterly absurd accusation to level against the police.

  • BlackLaZoR@kbin.run
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    4 months ago

    Minor injuries are common and occasionally recruits die, often because of an underlying medical condition.

    What. The. Fuck.

    Moses told them he had the sickle cell trait

    How was he even cleared for police training in the first place? This is a serious medical condition.

    This sounds like an entire chain of lethal fuckery going on

  • Guy_Fieris_Hair@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Fuck it, I’ll say it… if you have a medical trait that makes it risky to do high intensity exercises, don’t take up a career that requires high intensity exercise. The law suit should be directed at the person that did his pre-employment physical and OK’d him to work. Firefighters get physicals and have physical agility tests, cops get physicals and have physical agility tests, as do paramedics (to an extent). The jobs require it in emergency situations so they shake you out in controlled situations. It is what it is. Don’t let your hatred of cops make you gloss over that fact. If they targeted him in any way it is a valid complaint and if their agility test isn’t certified they can get in trouble, but it exists for a reason. If he couldn’t hang, they should have removed him.

      • Guy_Fieris_Hair@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I would venture to say that a cop that can’t out fight a criminal is more likely to reach for his gun… but I have zero data to back that up, just common sense.

  • elbucho@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    For a group that wants to distance itself from gangs, it sure doesn’t help their case when they jump in new recruits.

  • dynamic_generals@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I don’t have much thought experience in this realm so I’m happy to be shown I’m wrong. I put all the blame on the paramedics who foolishly, probably, gave deference to non-medical folks who wouldn’t know better.

    But on the surface I see a benefit to that being a rite of passage in becoming a cop. If I’m a cadet expecting to, in a couple of months, have a non-zero chance to encounter someone trying to kill me at, say, a domestic violence call, I’d want to know what such an encounter would be like before it happens outside a controlled environment. No?

    *I am distinguishing this from the bullshit fake fear that gets Black Americans murdered by cops seemingly every day.

    • Sparhawk87@lemmynsfw.com
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      4 months ago

      I’m an electrician and although there’s a risk I may get an electric shock at work my training did not include being electrocuted because that’s just stupid. This hazing is pretty much the same.

      • dynamic_generals@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Hi, thanks for that. Im not an electrician but I work for the IBEW! In the given example, electricians in my state have years of training and on the job experience*. To a non-electrician like me, my thinking is that they can control their environment- cut off power, and have an idea of what they’re going into at a given time. You don’t know what is behind the door at a domestic violence call.

        ETA: *before earning a license. And FWIW, I’m not the one downvote; I was the second upvote. People be out here voting their opinions, not discussions.

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    4 months ago
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