When armed men attacked Dan Halsted in the dark of night as he walked home in a safe neighborhood of Portland, Ore., he ran screaming for someone to call police. What he didn’t know is that his attackers were police officers — who tased him in the back five times and beat him.
Police were in the area looking for someone who had spray-painted graffiti on a nearby building. Halsted just happened to be walking by, so police attacked him instead.
“I was walking home and all of a sudden a flashlight came on in my eyes and I stopped, and I heard a voice say, ‘Get him!'” Halsted told Portland television station KATU. “And I heard footsteps coming at me, so I turned and I ran. I didn’t know what was going on. I was screaming to call the police the whole time, and I didn’t realize this was the police because they never identified themselves at all.”
In the arrest report, the officer made up a story about Halsted running down the street with a couple of other people. In reality, he had been in a restaurant with other people. He was never charged with any crime, but the city didn’t want to compensate him for the attack. So after four years, he finally sued.

Love & Hope — Episode 12:
Apple’s Steve Jobs is dead
Black Friday orgy of consumerism makes me very uncomfortable
This is my private confessional; the truths I write often scare me
After long but necessary detours, the beginning finally nears for me
What if repairing my worst flaw meant losing my greatest power?
Uh, oh: For first time since ’45, U.S. job growth was zero last month
Good riddance, UAB football: Taxes shouldn’t subsidize college sports
Irony: Libyan rebels now rounding up blacks, sticking them into jails