Philly Lawyers Prepping Massive Lawsuit Against City Over Tear Gas and Other Incidents – Philadelphia magazine

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Police and other officials need to be held accountable for these military-style assaults, says Center City lawyer Paul Hetznecker.

The Philadelphia Police Department using tear gas against protesters along I-676 on June 1st. Philly lawyers are now preparing to file a massive lawsuit or lawsuits against the city and police. (Photo by Mark Makela/Getty Images)

A roundup of Philly news. This post may be updated at any time as new information becomes available.

The decision to use tear gas against protesters in Philadelphia has become one helluva bad PR nightmare for city officials.

If you havent seen the damning New York Times investigation into the June 1st tear gas incident on I-676, watch it now, and youll see what I mean.

But that decision could also wind up becoming an incredibly costly one for the city. Philly Mag has learned that lawyers will soon file a lawsuit or multiple lawsuits in federal court against various city and police officials as well as individual police officers on behalf of numerous plaintiffs.

One of the lead lawyers, Paul Hetznecker, says he expects the defendants to include the city, individual city officials, the police department, Philly police commissioner Danielle Outlaw, and police officers themselves once the team of lawyers can identify who those police officers are, in certain cases.

There were so many incidents where we cant really identify the police officers right now, because many of them did not have their names or badges displayed, explains Hetznecker, who has represented countless protesters throughout his career, including from incidents surrounding the 2000 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia and the Occupy movement. And others, its hard to identify them with riot gear on. So we will probably file the lawsuit and name them later on once we discover their identities. They should be named personally. They should be held accountable along with those in charge.

Paul Hetznecker (photo provided) and Michael Coard (file photo), two of the attorneys organizing the tear gas lawsuit in Philadelphia.

Prominent activist and attorney Michael Coard, one of the lawyers working with Hetznecker, says that he expects controversial Philly cop Joseph Bologna to be at the front of the line in terms of cops named individually as defendants. Philly district attorney Larry Krasner has charged Bologna with assaulting a protester.

According to Hetznecker, the use of tear gas on I-676 and in West Philly will certainly be at the center of any legal actions filed. But he notes that there were plenty of other examples of police actions like Bolognas during the protests that constitute violations of protesters First and Fourth amendment rights.

Police and other officials need to be held accountable for these military-style assaults, he insists.

The First Amendment is sacrosanct, adds Coard. It is not to be praised one day as this glorious document and then used like a piece of toilet paper the next day even if the city and police think that peaceful protesting is a shitty way to petition your government. What happened here is blatant, obvious and egregious. There should not only be civil liabilities but also more criminal prosecutions.

A lot of people out there have been hoping that Philly would move into the Green Phase of reopening this Friday, July 3rd. After all, its Fourth of July weekend. And officials had previously said that July 3rd was the target date. But it sounds like the Green Phase may be farther away than we expected.

Philadelphia health commissioner Thomas Farley took to Fox 29s Good Day Philadelphia on Monday morning to talk about Phillys reopening (or not reopening) plans.

As of late last week our numbers were rising rather than falling, Farley told anchors Alex Holley and Mike Jerrick. And thats in the context of numbers rising a lot around the country. Its looks like were not going to meet the targets we had laid out to go to green. So were reevaluating now

Farley added that officials are particularly concerned about restaurants. He said to expect a final decision on Tuesday.

Heres the full interview:

While Philadelphia considers pulling back on its reopening plans, a much different scene is playing out at the Jersey Shore. The state is allowing Atlantic City casinos to reopen at 25 percent capacity as of Thursday.

Hard Rock is reopening on Thursday. Ballys, Caesars and Harrahs reopen on Friday. The Borgata will begin allowing guests to enter by invitation only on Thursday prior to opening to the public on Monday.

For a full list of Atlantic City casino reopening dates and the new guidelines they have in place to try to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, go here.

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Philly Lawyers Prepping Massive Lawsuit Against City Over Tear Gas and Other Incidents - Philadelphia magazine

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