The Washington Post
May 11, 1989, Thursday, Final Edition
Suspect Injured While Cuffed Says Police Offered Cash;
Fairfax Assault Prompts NAACP To Seek Meeting on Harassment
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BYLINE: Patricia Davis, Lynda Richardson, Washington Post
Staff Writers
SECTION: METRO; PAGE B1
LENGTH: 810 words
A handcuffed suspect whose treatment by Fairfax County
police led to disciplinary action against five officers said the police
department offered him $ 1,000 yesterday to repair a tooth damaged by an
officer's nightstick. A spokesman said the police department has no comment.The
suspect, Steven Martin, said the offer came from a lieutenant in the internal
affairs division before Martin's hearing in General District Court on
misdemeanor charges. Martin, whose case was postponed, said he rejected the
offer and is consulting his attorney.
Fairfax County Attorney David T. Stitt declined to comment
on the case. He said the department occasionally makes offers to settle civil
claims, and said the money would come from general funds. Martin said he has
not filed a claim. Police officials have acknowledged that the handcuffed
suspect was hit, but they will not disclose the names of the five officers who
have been disciplined. Police did not release the suspect's name until
contacted by a Washington Post attorney.The March 31 incident has raised concerns
among some black Fairfax police officers and the NAACP. Martin is black; the
five officers involved are white. Martin, holding the business card he said the
lieutenant gave him yesterday, gave this account of that March evening:Martin,
a 27-year-old lawn service employee, said he was visiting his son at the
Stonegate Village apartment complex in Reston when he was arrested on charges
of trespassing and being drunk in public. Knowing that police were looking for
a man who had assaulted two officers, he told police on his way to jail that he
knew the man's whereabouts.He said yesterday that he had no idea where the man
was. "I was just [messing] with them -- that's how they do me," he
said. Martin acknowledged that he has a lengthy criminal record -- "just
about every charge you can think of except murder" -- and has been in
prison three times.Martin said he was driven to Dogwood Elementary School in
Reston, where "they yanked me out of the car and threw me on the
ground." Martin said he did not know how many officers were there, but
that "they were all just surrounding me."Martin, whose hands were
cuffed in front of his body, said an officer placed a nightstick in his mouth
and twisted it numerous times, leaving one bottom front tooth so loose that a
dentist told him it will probably have to be removed. His pants were pulled
down, and the pockets were ripped, he said.His shoes and two pairs of socks
were removed, and he said he is still angry that his $ 4-a-pair athletic socks
have not been returned to him. He said that at one point, another officer
"smacked me in my damn face." He did not recall being struck at any
other time.Martin, saying that he had had a lot to drink that night, said he
could not estimate how long he was outside the school. Afterward, he was taken
before a magistrate at the county jail, released on personal recognizance, and
walked to his sister's home in Centreville, where he is staying."He came
in with blood all over him," said Helen Martin, 29, who accompanied her
brother to the court hearing yesterday. "He said [the police] beat him up,
and put the stick in his mouth. I was mad. I said: 'You should do something
about that.' "NAACP officials said yesterday that they plan to request a
meeting with Col. John E. Granfield, chief of police, to discuss the Martin
case and at least a half-dozen complaints they have received in recent weeks
alleging police harassment and civil rights violations by officers working near
Stonegate. The apartment complex is the site of one of the county's open-air
drug markets and the focus of police antidrug efforts.They said the police
assault on the suspect seemed to indicate a clear-cut violation of his civil
rights, and they questioned whether the disciplinary action against the
officers -- suspension, and in one case demotion, according to sources -- was
sufficient.Some NAACP officials said they are interested in the incident
because of alleged civil rights violations, but they acknowledged that the
suspect's criminal history and the police department's efforts to clean up a
drug-weary neighborhood present some sensitivities."He's probably not a
member of the NAACP," said Glenwood Roane, president of the Northern
Virginia regional division of the organization, which in Fairfax is made up
primarily of middle-class blacks.Citing the recent complaints about Fairfax
police, another NAACP official said they raised a broader concern about police
treatment of blacks in general."The issue is the protection of the rights
of minorities to walk the streets without worrying that the police are going to
harass them solely because of their color," said Donald Grant, chairman of
the legal redress committee of the NAACP's Fairfax County branch.