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Swiss basketball star slams police in US trial

Swiss NBA star Thabo Sefolosha insisted on Wednesday that he was targeted with unjustified police violence after an incident outside a night club, at his trial for resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.

Swiss basketball star slams police in US trial
Sefolosha (centre) leaves court. Photo: Jewel Samad/AFP

Lawyers for the Atlanta Hawks forward, who is black, maintain that New York police officers who arrested him handled him so aggressively that they broke his leg. Police say Sefolosha was belligerent, and that he called an officer a midget.
   
In any event, lawyers for the player, and Sefolosha himself, have cast the incident as another case of overzealous police handling of black men.
   
A wave of police killings of unarmed black men has become a defining issue across the United States, sparking a wave of protests and giving birth to a new generation of rights activists.
   
Sefolosha had ligament damage, had to undergo surgery as well as months of rest that he says made him miss the National Basketball Association playoffs.
   
The incident took place April 8th, shortly after another pro player, Chris Copeland, was knifed on his way out of the same club.
   
Prosecutors argue that Sefolosha did not obey the orders of police officers who were trying to clear a crime scene.
   
“He doesn't think the rules apply to him,” Jesse Matthews, an assistant district attorney, told jurors. “Defendant displayed a sense of entitlement and disdain.”
   
But Sefolosha's lawyer, Alex Spiro, had a different take.
   
“I think he (the arresting police officer) saw a black man in a hoodie,” Spiro said referring to the hooded sweatshirts favored by American teens and young adults.

Born to a Swiss mother and a South African father, Sefolosha is a native of Vevey in the canton of Vaud.

The 201-centimetre-tall athlete is the best known of four players from Switzerland currently playing basketball in the American big leagues.

He launched his career in Vevey with the Riviera Basket pro team before playing in France and Italy.

Sefolosha was picked in the 2006 NBA draft debuting with the Chicago Bulls before playing with the Oklahama City Thunder and for a year (2011-12) with the Turkish team Feberbahçe Ülker of the Euroleague.

He joined the Atlanta Hawks in 2014.

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POLICE

Acquittal of six police officers in Swiss ‘George Floyd’ case confirmed on appeal

A Swiss appeals court confirmed Monday the acquittal of six police officers over the death of a Nigerian man, in a case that drew comparisons to George Floyd's killing in the United States.

Acquittal of six police officers in Swiss 'George Floyd' case confirmed on appeal

A Swiss appeals court confirmed Monday the acquittal of six police officers over the death of a Nigerian man, in a case that drew comparisons to George Floyd’s killing in the United States.

As with the lower court verdict a year ago acquitting the officers of negligent homicide in the case of Mike Ben Peter, Monday’s ruling sparked immediate protests and chants of “Shame!” outside the courthouse.

Around 80 people crowded outside the court, shouting: “Black lives matter!”, “Justice for Mike”, and “Police kill, the judiciary acquits!”

The 39-year-old Nigerian died following a violent arrest after he refused a police drug search in Lausanne in western Switzerland in early 2018.

In the encounter with the six police officers, he was pinned to the ground on his stomach. He died in hospital a few hours later after suffering a heart attack.

His death initially received little attention, but the global outcry over Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police in May 2020 placed a bigger spotlight on the Swiss case.

During the first trial in June last year, a court in Lausanne ruled that the six officers involved in the incident could not be found guilty of negligent homicide.

The public prosecutor’s office also decided to drop the charges, referring in particular to forensic analyses that were unable to state with certainty that Ben Peter died due to the police intervention.

After three days of hearings last week at the appeals court in Renens, near Lausanne, the three judges confirmed the lower court ruling, acquitting the officers of negligent homicide.

They also acquitted them on an additional charge of abusing their authority, brought by the lawyer of Ben Peter’s family, Simon Ntah.

As with during the first trial, the judges relied heavily on forensic expert testimony to reach their conclusion.

The experts testified that it was impossible to say for certain that Ben Peter died due to the police intervention.

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