Latest news with #BuckAldridge
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
Georgia deputy who killed exonerated man faces unrelated civil rights charges
A Georgia sheriff's deputy who fatally shot a man who had been exonerated and freed from prison has been indicted on unrelated civil rights charges, federal prosecutors said Thursday. The civil rights counts against Buck Aldridge are not related to the fatal shooting of the exonerated man, Leonard Cure, whom Aldridge killed during a struggle after a traffic stop in 2023. No criminal charges were filed in that case. The federal indictment returned by a grand jury in Georgia charges Aldridge with 13 counts, including five counts of deprivation of rights under color of law. He is accused of using excessive force against people arrested on four occasions, involving three victims. He is also accused of preparing 'multiple' misleading reports to justify the use of force, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Georgia said in a statement. The indictment alleges that in 2021 he used a Taser on one person without justification and kicked that person and that the same year he used a Taser on someone who was already handcuffed. Aldridge is also accused of punching a third victim in the face without legal justification in 2022 and of repeatedly using a Taser on that victim after he had stopped resisting arrest. The Camden County Sheriff's Office said Thursday that Aldridge has been relieved of his duties effective immediately. 'The Camden County Sheriff's Office is committed to transparency and accountability at every level,' Sheriff Kevin Chaney said in a statement. Aldridge was indicted on five counts of deprivation of rights under color of law and eight counts of falsification of records. Federal court records did not show an attorney for Aldridge and did not show any events or plea in the case announced Thursday. Aldridge fatally shot Cure, 53, on Oct. 16, 2023, after he pulled over Cure's pickup truck on Interstate 95 near the Georgia-Florida line for speeding and there was a struggle, officials have said and video showed. District Attorney Keith Higgins, who reviewed body camera and other evidence, announced in February that there would be no criminal charges. He told The Associated Press that 'use of deadly force at that point was objectively reasonable given that he was being overpowered at that time." Body camera video released in that case shows Aldridge threatening to use a Taser against Cure during an argument and Aldridge telling Cure that he is under arrest for speeding and reckless driving. Dashcam video shows Cure in a struggle with Aldridge and Cure placing his hand on Aldridge's face and pushing his head back before Aldridge shoots him. Cure's family criticized the shooting at the time, saying it was unnecessary. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said at the time that Cure complied until he learned he would be placed under arrest. Three years before he was fatally shot, Cure was released from a Florida prison after having served 16 years for an armed robbery conviction. He had been sentenced to life. Cure was found to have been wrongfully convicted in 2020. A review by authorities that was sought by the Innocence Project of Florida found through an ATM receipt and other evidence that Cure was miles away from the robbery. The Broward County prosecutor's office concluded that he did not commit the crime. This article was originally published on Solve the daily Crossword


Reuters
26-02-2025
- Reuters
Georgia sheriff's deputy who fatally shot Black man will not be charged
Feb 26 (Reuters) - A white sheriff's deputy in Georgia who fatally shot a Black man who previously was freed from prison after exoneration will not face criminal charges following a local prosecutor's conclusion that the officer's use of force was reasonable. The officer, Buck Aldridge, had pulled over Leonard Allan Cure, 53, in October 2023 along Interstate 95 in Camden County near the Florida border while Cure was driving to visit his mother. The Camden County Sheriff's Office has said that Cure was pulled over for driving more than 100 miles (161 km) per hour in a 70 miles (113 km) per hour zone. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said the deputy told Cure he was under arrest but Cure failed to comply with the officer's requests and assaulted him. Before shooting, the deputy used a Taser and a baton in an effort to subdue Cure, the agency said. The Camden County Sheriff's Office said on Wednesday that Keith Higgins, the district attorney for the Brunswick Judicial District, concluded that Aldridge's use of force was "objectively reasonable." "The pursuit of criminal charges, therefore, is not warranted," Higgins said in a statement. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents Cure's family, called the decision not to bring charges "a devastating failure of justice." Cure was exonerated in 2020 after serving 16 years for an armed robbery conviction. Several high-profile killings of Black people in recent years led to anti-racism protests against police brutality in the United States and elsewhere, particularly after the 2020 murder of George Floyd, a Black man who died after a white police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes.