NYC Sets A Record, Most Media Sources Ignored It

New York City was on a roll: No murders for 12 days in a row. NYC hasn’t had 12 days of no homicides since at least the 90’s. Tim’s Take looks at the story.

New York City’s longest recorded homicide-free streak ended on Friday the 13th, when a 28-year-old man was shot multiple times just before midnight, according to CNN.

Eric Roman was transported to a nearby hospital in critical condition with gunshot wounds to his head, hand and leg and died Saturday, said the NYPD.

New York City had gone 12 days without a homicide, its longest stretch on modern record, police said Monday.

The last reported homicide was February 1, Super Bowl Sunday, in Upper Manhattan, police said.


Tim’s Take

Dontre Hamilton

Dontre Hamilton and Christopher Manney

Who is Dontre Hamilton?

According to fox6now.com, Dontre Hamilton is the 31-year-old unarmed African American man shot and killed by a Milwaukee police officer inside a park in Milwaukee, Wisconsin last April.

The attorney for Hamilton’s family released an autopsy report, toxicology report, and cause of death from the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office on Monday, December 1st

Dontre Hamilton’s family received a copy of his autopsy report in July, and it was released to the media on December 1st.

Seven months after Dontre Hamilton was shot and killed by Christopher Manney, a former Milwaukee police officer terminated for his handling of Hamilton that day, the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office continues to investigate. That office will ultimately decide whether Manney should face criminal charges.

On April 30th, 2014, Dontre Hamilton was sleeping in Red Arrow Park. Milwaukee Police Officer Christopher Manney was performing a welfare check, and police say Hamilton grabbed Manney’s baton and struck him with it. That’s when Christopher Manney opened fire, shooting Hamilton 14 times.

Demonstrators have marched through Milwaukee’s streets for months, demanding charges against Officer Christopher Manney in the death of Hamilton. The have protested in areas such as City Hall and even in front of Milwaukee County Prosecutor John Chisholm’s home in Bayview, Wisconsin. Members of the community are also asking for changes in the way police interact with the minority community.

“The family has wanted to get (the autopsy report) out for some time. We’ve held off on doing that, hoping again that there would be a decision by the District Attorney. It’s now been seven months,” said Hamilton family attorney Jonathan Safran.

“The family continues to hear mischaracterizations of the facts. (Dontre Hamilton)’s a person that is my size. He’s 5’6″ or 5’7″ weighing 169 pounds. Not a large person. It does not jive with how Manney described Dontre,” said the attorney.

The autopsy report lists 21 gunshot wounds — and that includes entry and exit wounds.

“The fact there is no stippling or gun residue on Dontre Hamilton’s body would reflect that there was some distance. I’m not a forensic expert — probably at least three feet or so at the minimum. The wounds show that at least half of them were in a downward direction, even though they were both supposedly standing. There’s one that reflects it was shot into Dontre Hamilton’s back,” Safran said.

The autopsy report released by Dontre Hamilton’s family through Safran says Hamilton died as a result of multiple gunshot wounds. His death was ruled a homicide by the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office. That ruling means Hamilton died at the hands of another.

“We think there is sufficient evidence there should be state criminal charges,” Safran said.

The Hamilton family says they want the public to know Dontre Hamilton wasn’t homeless. He had the following items on his person when he died: a wallet, a cell phone, a backpack, a blanket, candy and cash totaling $160.

His family says Hamilton was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia a couple years before he was shot and killed, but he didn’t have a long history of mental health issues and no criminal record.

A toxicology report released with the autopsy report shows there were no drugs in Dontre Hamilton’s system when he died.

Hamilton’s family continues to wait for the District Attorney’s Office to determine whether Hamilton’s death merits criminal charges. The District Attorney’s Office says they are aware of the autopsy report, and they have no comment at this time.