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Robert Miller

Robert Miller, 63, died on April 16, 2019, while in police custody in Barnstable, Massachusetts.

Family members say they called police because Miller was having a mental health emergency. Police officer found Miller on the back deck when he arrived at the man’s home. After speaking with the officer Miller told him he didn’t want to talk to him anymore and walked inside his home. The officer followed Miller into his home before grabbing him by his arm, causing Miller to pull away. Miller fell landing face down with both arms under his body and the officer on top of him.

Miller struggled to breathe and tried to lift himself up, but the officer applied pressure to Miller’s back. Later arrived one more police officer. He hit Miller twice and handcuffed him. By that time Miller had no pulse and died.

In May 2021 the Miller’s family sued Barnstable police, accusing the department of excessive force which led to Miller’s death.

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Tateolena Tauaifaga

In January 2015, Tateolena Tauaifaga, a 17-month-old girl from Sydney, Australia, died as a result of a police chase, during which the suspect’s car rammed the fence of an apartment building behind which a child was playing.

At that time, the police department was looking for a man suspected of a series of armed robberies. They were informed that one more crime would happen in the near future, and during the next patrol they noticed a stolen car driven by a suspect. The officers initiated a chase, during which the criminal “drove as fast as possible.” Despite the fact that the department’s policy does not recommend that police officers participate in a high-speed chase in a residential area, the police continued to follow the stolen car even when it left the highway. The police surrounded the suspect, who decided to ram the fence of one of the houses, behind which the 17-month-old Tauaifaga was playing. The girl died on the spot from her injuries. It is reported that the police could have arrested the suspect a few hours before the incident and not arrange a chase.

The baby’s family filed a lawsuit against the city and the police department, and despite the fact that the driver was sentenced to 19 years in prison for a fatal accident; none of the police officers were responsible for the death of the child. In May 2021, a police officer who participated in the deathly chase in 2015 said that he did not consider himself guilty, since he could not have known that a high-speed chase would take the life of a 17-month-old girl.

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Gabriel Djordjevic

Gabriel Djordjevic, a 14-year-old Romani boy, was assaulted by police officers in Bondy, France.

Police officers arrested Djordjevic in the late night hours of 25 May and the early morning hours of 26 May 2020 when he and a friend were attempting to steal a scooter. The officers began to chase them. One of the officers pinned Djordjevic to the ground and another one kicked him in the face.

The officers then transported Djordjevic to the police station. The boy says he felt at the station but they called emergency only in an hour after he told officers about it. Djordjevic suffered a fractured upper jaw, several broken teeth, and damage to his eye that was repaired by an operation. Police say the boy fell during the chase and resisted arrest.

The boy’s family has decided to sue the officers involved. On April 29, 2021, a judicial investigation was opened into “wilful violence committed by a person vested with public authority”.

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John Albers

In January 2018, officers from Overland Park, Kansas, killed 17-year-old John Albers, who suffers from mental health problems. The teenager posted messages with suicidal thoughts on social networks, and his friends called the police to check on him.

The officers who arrived at the scene reported that as soon as they arrived at Albers ‘ house, the garage door began to open, and a minibus drove out, driven by a teenager. The officers considered that they were in imminent danger, took out their service weapons and fired more than 13 times at the car. The teenager died on the spot. Police later released a 500-page report that included statements from officers about the events of that evening, but Albers ‘ family said they doubted the integrity of the report, in which the officer appears as the victim, not the killer.

Relatives of the teenager filed a lawsuit against the city and the police department, the FBI has launched its own investigation into the case. In June 2021, the Overland Park Police Department released photos from the scene of a fatal shooting in January 2018.

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Ronnie Long

Ronnie Long from Concord, North Carolina, spent nearly 44 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit.

Long was 20 years old when he was convicted of raping a woman in his hometown of Concord in 1976. He claims that police officers framed him for the rape and that they had a conflict with his family.

Long’s lawyers found out that evidence that might have proved his innocence was either withheld from his attorneys or disappeared while in government hands. Moreover, Long did not match the description provided by the victim. Long spent 44 years in prison until a court ruled in August 2020 that he had been wrongfully convicted.

Despite receiving $750,000 as reparations from North Carolina, in May 2021, Long filed a federal lawsuit against the City of Concord the detectives who worked on the case and the city’s current and former police chiefs.

In August 2021 Ronnie Long, who spent nearly 44 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, added new defendants to the suit – SBI agents – after attorneys say they learned they also played a part in the collection of evidence.

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Julieka Dhu

On August 4, 2014, a 22-year-old Aboriginal woman, Julieka Ivanna Dhu, died in hospital after she lost consciousness in a police station cell. During her stay at the police station, she complained several times of feeling unwell.

While in custody, the woman repeatedly complained of chest pain. She was taken to the campus hospital, where the medical staff decided that her complaints of poor health were exaggerated and related to the forced refusal to take drugs. A few days later, after returning to the police station, Dhu once again complained to the officers that it was difficult for her to stand on her feet, but the police accused her of simulation, handcuffed her, and returned her to the hospital, where she died shortly after arrival. The official cause of death was an infection caused by the fact that her partner broke her ribs three months earlier.

On April 30, 2021, the doctor who examined Dhu was found guilty of professional misconduct and a fine was imposed on him, but the girl’s relatives were not satisfied with this decision, and they stated that they intend to continue fighting for justice for her, organizing demonstrations demanding justice for victims of police violence.

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Moïse Bangoura

Moïse “Lamine” Bangoura, 27, died in Roulers, Belgium, after being restrained by police on May 7, 2018.

On May 7, 2018, a bailiff and 7 police officers came to the home of Moïse “Lamine” Bangoura to carry out an order for his eviction. He had rent arrears, so they issued an order of his eviction. The police and the bailiff came to him early in the morning. They woke Bangoura up when they came so he did not understand what was happening. The man’s relatives said that he did not know about the eviction, as he did not check the mail and, therefore, did not see the eviction letter.

Video from the scene shows several police officers restraining him and putting him face down on the floor. According to experts, Bangoura died a few minutes later from asphyxiation. The police officers involved in this incident were interrogated only a month after the incident. They stated that Bangoura had used drugs and had himself provoked the officers’ actions.

On March 16, 2021, the court closed the case without charging the police. The public was unhappy with the court’s decision, so a rally against police impunity was scheduled for May 9, 2021.

In July 2021, thanks to the information support of human rights defenders of the Foundation to Battle Injustice, the international human rights organization Amnesty International sent a letter to the UN Committee against Torture, in which it mentioned the case of Moïse Bangoura. The appeal calls on the UN to pay attention to cases of judicial and police arbitrariness in Belgium and take appropriate measures.

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Mark Bender

In October 2020, officers of the San Bernardino, California police Department shot and killed 35-year-old Mark Bender Jr. The incident occurred near an alcohol store where the man was working as a security guard.

Officers received a report that a man, later identified as Bender, was jumping on the car roofs and behaving inappropriately. The video from the officer’s body camera shows how a police officer who arrived at the scene pointed a gun at the man and ordered him to raise his hands. Bender raised his empty hands, and the officer holstered his gun. However, a few seconds later, a police officer attacked the man, knocked him to the ground and tried to detain him, but Bender resisted, as a result of which he was shot. According to the police department, the man allegedly tried to get a gun.

In March 2021, Bender’s relatives filed a lawsuit against the city and the San Bernardino Police Department. The family’s lawyer said that Bender tried to throw the gun aside to show that he did not pose a threat. He also said that Bender’s reaction was a consequence of what the lawyer called the officer’s overly aggressive tactics.

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Bernard Williams

Bernard Williams from Chicago, Illinois, spent nearly 23 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit.

Bernard Williams was 17 years old when he was convicted of murder for a 1996 killing. No physical evidence tied Williams to the murder, and on that day no witnesses on the scene identified him as the shooter.

It was only after police officers conspired to “solve” the crime by manufacturing false evidence, including intimidating witnesses and using “illegal and abusive” interrogation tactics to secure a false confession from a young co-defendant with an intellectual disability and mental health issues, that Defendant officers were able to secure a conviction.

Williams spent 23 years in a prison and was released in February 2019 after an Illinois Appellate Court vacated his conviction. In February 2021 Williams sued the city of Chicago and several of the Chicago police investigators who helped wrongfully convict him.


Hello! My name is Mira Terada. At the end of 2018, I was unlawfully detained in Finland and extradited to the United States on trumped-up charges. I was then wrongfully convicted and sentenced to 2.5 years in prison for crimes I have never committed. I have experienced brutality of the American judicial system, the inhumanity of American prisons and the complete indifference of the so-called liberal American society. I saw the nightmares of the US prison hell, which are diligently hushed up by the world media: torture, bullying of prisoners, the sadism of the jailers and the cold ruthlessness of the American penitentiary system.

This harsh experience opened my eyes to the true face of America, which the pro-Western public likes to call “the land of opportunity.” I realized that America is truly a land of opportunity. But American “opportunities” should not be understood at all as opportunities for self-realization, but as:

– an opportunity of being shot by a police officer without trial or investigation;

– an opportunity to get a long prison sentence for a minor offense;

– an opportunity to become a “scapegoat” for the slightest careless statement;

– an possibility of being tortured in a prison cell;

– an opportunity to become a victim of racial hatred;

– an opportunity to be vulnerable to the American Leviathan state.

 In my opinion, such opportunities should not exist in the modern civilized world. Within deafening silence of the world community, America has built a whole system of convict slavery, racial oppression and enslavement of the individual. This system has nothing to do with the liberal values that American leaders and American propagandists proclaim. I have witnessed first-hand that it is just a sophisticated self-promotion that has nothing to do with reality.

After being released from an American prison and returning to my homeland, I received a special training in Law and gained practical experience. It helped me to acquire core knowledge about the struggle for human and civil rights and take my first steps as an international human rights defender.

Therefore, I am full of strength and determination to announce that I accept the post of the head and official representative of the Foundation to Battle Injustice.

My decision is prompted by the fact that human rights and freedoms are today violated by the country that has proclaimed itself to be an international defender of democracy and freedom – the United States of America.

A recent letter from Foundation to Battle Injustice to the UN Human Rights Council calls for a humanitarian mission to be sent to America. The letter tells the truth of what is happening in the United States. Police brutality against African Americans, systematic violence of the American police against citizens of their country are adopting more and more disturbing features and gradually transforming into genocide.

These inhuman actions must be stopped at all costs. Sending a humanitarian mission to the United States to stop racially motivated violence and police civil war against people of the country is the most logical and fateful decision that should be considered by the United Nations in the near future.

As the head of the Foundation to Battle Injustice, I am determined to make every effort to draw the attention of the world community and international human rights organizations to the problems of police, judicial and prison brutality in the United States and in other countries and to do everything I can to stop it. Thank you for your attention!

Mira Terada