Policemen Indicted in Post-Katrina Shootings
7 New Orleans Officers Charged in Incident in Which 2 Died and 4 Were Wounded
Friday, December 29, 2006; Page A09
NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 28 -- Seven police officers were indicted Thursday on charges of murder or attempted murder in a shooting incident on a bridge that left two people dead during the chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
The district attorney portrayed the officers as trigger-happy.
![]() Orleans Parish District Attorney Eddie Jordan said the city could not allow officers "to shoot and kill our citizens without justification like rabid dogs." (By Judi Bottoni -- Associated Press) |
"We cannot allow our police officers to shoot and kill our citizens without justification like rabid dogs," District Attorney Eddie Jordan said.
The shootings took place under murky circumstances six days after the storm and became widely cited examples of the anarchy that descended after Katrina.
Two men were killed and four people were wounded on the Danziger Bridge, which spans the Industrial Canal.
Police initially said the Sept. 4, 2005, shootings occurred after shots were fired at Army Corps of Engineers workers.
At the time, the sweltering city was still littered with corpses, as rescuers tried to evacuate stranded residents and looters ransacked stores.
Police Superintendent Warren Riley called Jordan's comments "highly unprofessional, highly prejudicial and highly undignified" and urged the community to withhold judgment until a jury decides their guilt or innocence.
"We want justice first and foremost," Riley said, "but for the district attorney to try and prejudice the community against these officers before all the evidence is heard is really, I think, a sad day for the city."
Defense attorneys said their clients are innocent.
"As a wise man once said, a district attorney can get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich," said Franz Zibilich, attorney for Officer Robert Faulcon, who is charged with murder. "They heard only one side of the story."
A judge gave the officers 24 hours to surrender and said there would be no bond for the four accused of murder, which carries a possible death sentence. The officers accused of attempted murder were to be held on $100,000 bond for each count.
After hearing weeks of testimony, the grand jury deliberated for two hours Thursday before issuing the charges. The foreman of the panel, Lee Madare, declined to comment in detail as he left the courthouse but asked a reporter, "Do you understand the word 'coverup'?"
A spokesman for Mayor C. Ray Nagin declined to comment on the indictments. According to a police report, several officers responded to a radio call that two fellow officers had been hurt. When they arrived at the bridge, seven people were seen running and four began firing at police, the report said. The officers returned fire.
The men killed were Ronald Madison, a 40-year-old mentally retarded man, and James Brissette, 19. The coroner said Madison was shot seven times, with five wounds in the back.
Police Superintendent Riley has described the confrontation as a "running gun battle" that lasted several minutes.
Madison's brother Lance has said the two were crossing the bridge on their way to another brother's dental office when a group of teens ran up behind them and opened fire. As they fled, Lance Madison said, he and his brother encountered seven men who jumped out of a rental truck and also began firing.
The Police Department has said an officer shot Ronald Madison after he reached into his waistband and turned toward the officer.
Lance Madison denies that his brother was armed.
In addition to Faulcon, Sgts. Kenneth Bowen and Robert Gisevius and Officer Anthony Villavaso were charged with murder. Officers Robert Barrios, Mike Hunter and Ignatius Hills were charged with attempted murder.
The indictments were the latest blow to the reputation of the beleaguered Police Department. More than 200 officers on the 1,500-member force were disciplined for various offenses after the storm, including failure to show up for work.
Associated Press writer Stacey Plaisance contributed to this report.




