“There
is plenty of law at the end of a nightstick.” Grover Whalen
On
June 28, 1989, Troy M. Davis, a Black day laborer who lives in Ohio and
traveled to the DC area for work was arrested for disregarding a red
light. The cops determined he was drunk,
took him to the Mount Vernon Police Substation and that’s where the beatings
started, at least according to Davis.
He
acknowledged that he swore at the cops as they took him to his cell and said
that once inside the cell, one cop grabbed by the throat and started choking
him while another handcuffed him. The
cop who was choking him slammed Davis’s head into a windowsill, which knocked
him out. When he woke up he was in the
Mount Vernon Hospital, getting 15 stitches sewn into his head.