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NYPD Denies Victim's Claim Of Walkie-Talkie Sodomy

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NYPD Denies Victim's Claim Of Walkie-Talkie Sodomy

Attorneys: 5 Officers Attacked Michael Mineo Inside Subway Stop After Suspecting Him Of Smoking Pot

Man Spends 4 Days In Hospital, Which Contacts Brooklyn D.A.

NEW YORK (CBS/AP) ― Prosecutors are investigating allegations that five NYPD officers attacked a tattoo parlor worker and sodomized him with a walkie-talkie in a subway station.

The Police Department strongly denied the allegations.

"Police officers grappled with an individual who they observed smoking marijuana after he had fled and resisted being handcuffed. His assertion that he was sodomized is not supported by independent civilian witnesses on the scene," NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said in a statement.

The case was being investigated by police and the Brooklyn district attorney's office. Prosecutors said Friday they were setting up a local phone line -- 718-250-2759 -- for witnesses to come forward.

The accusations brought back memories of the 1997 assault of Abner Louima, who was beaten and sodomized with a broomstick in a police precinct by officers in one of the most notorious cases of police brutality in NYPD history.

In the latest case, lawyers for 24-year-old Michael Mineo came forward Thursday afternoon with the startling allegations, and Brookdale Hospital officials confirmed that Mineo was admitted on the day of the alleged attack and spent four days there.

The man sought medical care again on Thursday, complaining he was urinating blood and suffering lingering pain.

Lawyers say five officers approached Michael Mineo on Oct. 15 around 12:30 p.m. because they believed he was smoking marijuana near a subway stop in Brooklyn.

When the tattoo parlor employee entered the station, he claims officers jumped him from behind, handcuffed him and wrestled him to the ground, according to attorney Stephen Jackson.

Mineo told his lawyers that he felt a foot on his neck as the officers beat him, then yanked down his pants and sodomized him with the radio antenna.

The lawyers say the officers took the bleeding Mineo into a police car, wrote him a disorderly conduct ticket and left him at the subway station.

"My God, this just sent chills throughout my body when I heard this," Jackson said. "This is one of the most horrendous acts of police brutality."

One of Mineo's co-workers took him to the hospital, where he remained most of the week with internal injuries. His attorney says the hospital administrator contacted the Brooklyn district attorney's office because it appeared Mineo was the victim of a sexual assault. Jackson said it's possible he will have to return for surgery. The attorneys say medical records corroborate Mineo's story, but would not immediately provide copies of them.

Jackson said he and Mineo didn't go public with the allegations right away because they wanted to give prosecutors time to investigate. The district attorney's office says it doesn't comment on any open investigations.

A law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, said many initial details about the incident cast doubt on Mineo's claims.

For instance, the official said Mineo initially yelled at the scene that he had been shocked with a stun-gun by the officers, but none of the officers was carrying the weapon.

Jackson said there were several witnesses in the subway who were talking to the district attorney's office.

The attorney said he was planning to file a lawsuit against the city on Mineo's behalf. Mineo was not available to speak. He was previously arrested in June on a charge of gang assault and criminal possession of a weapon.

Louima was beaten and sodomized with a broomstick after he was arrested in a brawl outside a Brooklyn nightclub. Louima suffered a ruptured bladder and colon and spent two months in the hospital. Charges against him were dropped.

That assault was committed by white officers on a handcuffed black suspect. In the current case, Mineo is white and said the officers involved where black, Hispanic and white.

The Louima assault ignited outrage and racial tensions. It led to prison terms for two officers and the largest settlement ever in a police brutality case in New York. The city and police union agreed to pay Louima $8.7 million, which came to about $5.8 million after legal fees.

Officer Justin Volpe pleaded guilty to civil rights violations and is serving a 30-year prison sentence. Officer Charles Schwarz pleaded guilty to perjury for helping cover up the assault and served a five-year term.

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