Crime does pay, but not as richly: A judge has reduced from $51 million to $9.75 million a Bronx jury’s award to Darryl Barnes, who was paralyzed in a 1988 shootout with off-duty police officer Franz Jerome. Jerome gave chase on the night of Aug. 22 after spotting Barnes carrying an illegal Tec-9 semiautomatic and a shootout ensued: while Barnes (who pleaded guilty to assault on a police officer) denied that he fired his gun at Jerome, two Tec-9 shell casings were found at the scene and ballistics experts confirmed that they were from Barnes’s gun. The officer’s third shot entered Barnes’s back from close range. A jury in 1998 awarded Barnes $76.4 million, a record for a police-brutality case, but its award was later thrown out and a retrial ordered when an appeals court ruled that the city should have been allowed to introduce evidence that Barnes was a member of the Five Percenters gang, which preaches hatred of police and advises its members to shoot rather than submit to arrest. The second jury, this March, deliberated for less than three hours before ordering the $51 million award, payable by city taxpayers. (Stephanie Gaskell, “$51M Award Cut to $9.75 M”, New York Post, Jul. 10; Jeffrey Toobin, “Pay Day”, The New Yorker, Apr. 21 & 28 (not online); Stephanie Gaskell, “Retrial Jury Awards $51M to Bronx Gunman Shot by Cops”, NYPD News, Mar. 14; VerdictSearch/New York Jury Verdict Reporter, Mar. 13).
Bronx gunman’s award cut to $9.75 M
Crime does pay, but not as richly: A judge has reduced from $51 million to $9.75 million a Bronx jury’s award to Darryl Barnes, who was paralyzed in a 1988 shootout with off-duty police officer Franz Jerome. Jerome gave chase on the night of Aug. 22 after spotting Barnes carrying an illegal Tec-9 semiautomatic and […]
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