Categories
Victims

Mahamedi, 24.07.2025. Shot dead – Montornès del Vallès

July 14, Police station – Montornès del Vallès
22-year-old. Shot: deceased

Unfortunately, we are witnessing a new episode of police and institutional racism. It is not an isolated incident in Montornès del Vallès, but is part of a machinery of persecution and criminalization of our migrant and racialized communities, throughout the Spanish territory, including in Catalonia.

Mahamedi was a 22-year-old black man, a resident of Montornès del Vallès, born in Catalonia, son of Gambian parents. This lifelong villager —a former football player in the lower categories of the village team, who worked delivering packages to neighbors as a delivery man— died from gunshot wounds.

It happened last Friday, July 24, at the Local Police headquarters, under the opacity of all the administrations and media outlets that, in unison, rushed to establish a criminalizing narrative, when referring to our neighbor.

The Montornès del Vallès City Council, far from taking steps to inform the family of Mahamadi‘s death and clarify the facts, rushed to issue an institutional statement on social media. They talk about an “incident” at police stations, in which “an armed man” entered the police station, “was shot” by an officer, while “another officer was injured“. They omit to define how the latter was injured, and they do not even mention why a shot caused the death of a local resident. Nor did they communicate with the respect due to his family the violent death of Mahamedi.

We see once again how the media has finished constructing the official narrative, asserting that the young man was carrying a knife to a police station, and that it was an accident. This has given space to the police unions to request more personnel and resources to “prevent these regrettable events” of which police officers are victims, without any mention of the young man who lost his life in the police action.

We are once again faced with the death of a black person, with opacity in communication protocols and undignified treatment, in police stations, which refers us to other cases of police and institutional racism and deaths by gunfire from state security forces.

To clarify the regrettable facts and establish responsibility for the authorship of this death in police custody of the young Mahamedi, we ask:

  • Clarification of the facts and why a firearm was used to reduce the victim. How many shots and in what area of the body were fired to cause the death of young Mahamedi?
  • To know why the family was not informed of the death at the same time and why questions were asked at the victim’s home in the hours following his death?
  • Mahamedi was a well-known neighbor and recognized among his community as a peaceful person. How can the use of firearms to kill and the fact that other forms of restraint were not used be justified?
  • We ask the media for responsibility and journalistic rigor. That they do not serve as a hook to criminalize a person without having verified the facts beyond reproducing the police version that criminalizes and dehumanizes the young Mahamedi. Especially, in a context of growing threats and hate speech against Muslim and racialized migrant communities by far-right criminal organizations.

From several anti-racist social groups we demand that the cause of death at our neighbor’s police station be clarified. We demand dignified institutional treatment towards the family and responsibilities, to seek truth, justice and reparation regarding the death of young Mahamedi.

Physical violence
 Arrest
 Detention / Custody
 Hustle / Projection
 Prone position / lying flat on the stomach / ventral decubitus
 Folding” (holding a person in a seated position with their head resting on their knees)
 Painful armlock
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Sexual abuse
 Striking with a police vehicle
 Electric shocks
 Use of gloves
XUse of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
 Use of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
 Use of batons
 Use of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
 Use of tranquillisers
 Torture / Inhumane and degrading treatment
 Execution
 Kidnapping
 Disappearance
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Charge of disrespect
 Charge of resisting arrest
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Intimidation, blackmail, threats
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Mock execution
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Prolonged uncomfortable position
 Failure to assist a person in danger
 Photographs, fingerprints, DNA
 Threat with a weapon
 Shooting in the back
 Charging without warning
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Car chase
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Intervention in a private place
XAt the police station
 Mental health issues
 Harassment
 Body search
 Home search
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Sleep deprivation
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Complacency of doctors

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Ayman Sabry Abdel Wahab, 19.07.2025. Arrested and tortured – Cairo

July 19, 2025 – Belqas Police Station in the Dakhalia governorate, north east of Cairo
21-year-old. Arrested and tortured for a week in custody: deceased

Ayman Sabry Abdel Wahab, a university student, has been tortured to death inside an Egyptian police station, a rights group told Middle East Eye.

The Egyptian Network for Human Rights (ENHR) said that 21-year-old Sabry died on Friday while in custody at the Belqas Police Station in the Dakhalia governorate, north east of Cairo, following “a week of deadly torture”.

Riots erupted in the aftermath of his arrest, with journalists sharing footage of protestors clashing with security forces outside Belqas court.

According to the ENHR, Sabry was arrested on 19 July while he was on his way to a barber shop.

He was then taken to Belqas Police Station and detained for several days, during which time he was subjected to severe torture that resulted in a “serious deterioration in his health”.

Sabry’s family reported that he collapsed in front of prison guards during a visit on Friday after handing them a list of medication without explanation. They said that he was not transferred to hospital for medical treatment and a doctor was not called to examine him.

The family were not officially informed of Sabry’s death, only hearing about it through his lawyer 24 hours later in the early hours of Sunday morning.

He came out of detention dead,” Sabry’s sister told ENHR.

According to ENHR, the police are claiming that Sabry suffered a cardiac arrest. But his sister said that, when her family went to identify his body at the hospital, it bore the signs of beatings and electric shocks.

His face was ruined, his body used to be white as cotton, but his whole dead body was blue,” she told ENHR.

My brother died from torture, and the ones who killed him work at Belqas Police Station,” Sabry’s sister said, naming a senior investigations officer at the station as one of the perpetrators of the torture that killed her brother.

Ahmed Attar, the executive director of ENHR, emphasised that Sabry’s death is not an isolated case but a “natural consequence of the unchecked power of the executive authorities, the absence of proper oversight and inspection by the public prosecution, and the continued application of the policy of impunity practiced by the Egyptian state”.

The death of this university student is neither the first nor likely to be the last to occur in Egyptian prisons and detention centers,” he warned.

Sabry’s death comes amid a surge in detainee deaths in Egyptian prisons and police stations amid rapidly deteriorating conditions and spiralling abuses.

In May, Egyptian rights monitor the Committee for Justice (CFJ) reported that so far in 2025, 15 prisoners had died in Egyptian custody, the majority of them due to medical negligence.

In July, 15 prisoners reportedly attempted suicide at Egypt’s notorious Badr 3 prison within just two weeks.

Rights groups have documented surging abuses in Egyptian prisons since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi came to power in 2014. 

While official figures are cloaked in secrecy, under Sisi, Egypt’s prison population is estimated to have swelled to around 120,000 as of 2022, despite the prison system’s capacity being at 55,000 in 2020.

The surge has resulted in dangerous overcrowding, crumbling infrastructure and further exacerbated poor detention conditions.
Justice & Light for Sabri and his family and friends!
Physical violence
 XArrest
 XDetention / Custody
 Hustle / Projection
 Prone position / lying flat on the stomach / ventral decubitus
 Folding” (holding a person in a seated position with their head resting on their knees)
 Painful armlock
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Sexual abuse
 Striking with a police vehicle
 Electric shocks
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
 Use of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
 Use of batons
 Use of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
 Use of tranquillisers
XTorture / Inhumane and degrading treatment
 Execution
 Kidnapping
 Disappearance
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Charge of disrespect
 Charge of resisting arrest
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Intimidation, blackmail, threats
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Mock execution
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Prolonged uncomfortable position
 Failure to assist a person in danger
 Photographs, fingerprints, DNA
 Threat with a weapon
 Shooting in the back
 Charging without warning
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Car chase
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Intervention in a private place
 Mental health issues
 Harassment
 Body search
 Home search
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
XRefusal to allow medical care or medication
XLies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Sleep deprivation
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Complacency of doctors

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Saniyah Cheatham, 05.07.2025. Died in police custody – New York

July 5, 2025 – NYPD  41st Precinct
18-year-old. Found hanged in NYPD holding cell: deceased

Family and community members gathered on Tuesday 22 of July for a wake service to commemorate Saniyah Cheatham, an 18-year-old young Black woman from the Bronx who died in NYPD custody earlier this month.

Saniyah was arrested on July 4 for disorderly conduct after fighting with her girlfriend while leaving a family cookout, the family previously told News 12.

She was taken to the 41st Police Precinct in the Longwood neighborhood of the Bronx shortly before midnight. Anonymous NYPD officials with knowledge of the case told the New York Times that at about 12:15 a.m. Saniyah hanged herself with the sweater she was wearing while in her cell. An NYPD official told the Times she had only been in the cell for two minutes when she hanged herself.

She was found unresponsive in her cell around 12:40 a.m. the next day. Police called for an ambulance and attempted to revive Saniyah: “Multiple officers performed CPR while awaiting EMS response,” police said in an official release about her death.

Saniyah was transferred to Lincoln Hospital, where she was pronounced dead. It’s unclear if there were any other detainees in the cell, if anyone witnessed the incident, or if Saniyah called for help. 

Before her death, Saniyah was earning her GED at Bronx Community College and wanted to join the Army and eventually become a social worker, according to the program distributed at the memorial service. She loved art and music and “lived a life full of purpose, passion, and quiet strength,” it said. 

The circumstances surrounding Saniyah’s death in police custody are being investigated by the NYPD Force Investigation Division.

City medical examiners ruled the teen’s death a suicide, but her family continues to demand justice and answers into what led to her death, after Saniyah was found hanging in a holding cell at an NYPD precinct on July 5. The family she was in good spirits earlier that day, was in good health and was not wearing a sweater, and they have demanded surveillance video to be publicly released. They are being represented by civil rights attorney Ben Crump:

NYPD, the blood is on your hands! We cannot let them sweep her death under the rug, We have to fight for our Black sisters.

Her mother Thomasina is hopeful that security cameras in the jail and the medical examiner’s autopsy will give a clearer understanding of what led to her daughter’s death :

“The cameras should show exactly what happened…I’m praying that it does. I’m really praying. This is very heartbreaking to me and my family. That was my only princess. I have four boys and one girl. And we just …we just [are] really heartbroken right now”.

Saniyahs death and alleged suicide have shocked many of her close friends and family. They say she enrolled at Bronx Community College and worked so she could save up money to live on her own. Growing up, Saniyah was active in the church, which initially caused her to struggle with her sexuality. When she came out as gay to her older brother, he accepted her with no hesitation. 

Ember Baez, Saniyah’s friend and former partner, told the Times, “Everyone who has spoken to her recently knows she’s been happy. So when I heard this happened, I called her multiple times to see if it was real, and her phone just kept going straight to voicemail.

Physical violence
 XArrest
 XDetention / Custody
 Hustle / Projection
 Prone position / lying flat on the stomach / ventral decubitus
 Folding” (holding a person in a seated position with their head resting on their knees)
 Painful armlock
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Sexual abuse
 Striking with a police vehicle
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
 Use of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
 Use of batons
 Use of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
 Use of tranquillisers
 Disappearance
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Charge of disrespect
 Charge of resisting arrest
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Intimidation, blackmail, threats
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Prolonged uncomfortable position
 Failure to assist a person in danger
 Photographs, fingerprints, DNA
 Threat with a weapon
 Shooting in the back
 Charging without warning
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Car chase
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Intervention in a private place
 Mental health issues
 Harassment
 Body search
 Home search
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
XLack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Complacency of doctors
  • 00.07.2025 – NYPD Force Investigation Division tasked with investigating
  • 05.07.2025 – Discovery of the hanging dead body of Saniyah
  • 04.07.2025 – Arrest for disorderly conduct
Categories
Victims

Abdul Rahim Qanbarzahi, 29.06.2025. Sentenced to death – Tehran

June 29, 2025 – Tehran
Sentenced to death for “rebellion and formation of groups opposed to the Iranian regime”

Branch 28 of Tehran’s Revolutionary Court has sentenced four Baluchi citizens to death: Eidou Shabakhsh, Abdul Ghani Shabakhsh, Abdul Rahim Qanbarzahi and Suleiman Shabakhsh.

The four men were convicted of “rebellion and formation of groups opposed to the Iranian regime”. The context of Israeli aggression is pushing the weakened regime towards repression. Since the ceasefire, at least 115 people have been arrested in Kermanshah province alone for “disturbing security”. Further arrests have been reported by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and police in Hamedan, Hormozgan, Fars (53 detainees), Gilan (36) and Zarand (11 arrested for anti-regime activities). The IRGC and its paramilitary Basij forces set up checkpoints at the entrances and exits of Kurdish towns, searching vehicles and arresting several people. A large deployment of plainclothes security forces, dispatched from other provinces, was observed in the streets of Kurdish towns. These forces arrested individuals they deemed suspicious without presenting a judicial warrant. The IRGC intelligence organization and the Ministry of Intelligence have also summoned and interrogated family members of Kurdish political activists living abroad, threatening and pressuring them to cease their activism abroad.

Physical violence
 Hustle / Projection
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Sexual abuse
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
 Use of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
 Use of batons
 Use of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
 Use of tranquillisers
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Charge of disrespect
 Charge of resisting arrest
 Photographs, fingerprints, DNA
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Charging without warning
 Car chase
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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Neiyerver Adrián Leon Rengel, 13.03.2025. Wrongfully arrested and deported – Irving (TX)

March 13, 2025 – parking lot of his apartment in Irving (TX)
27,-year-old. Wrongfully arrested, deported to the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) maximum security in El Salavador, hit with fists and batons : sueing Department of Homeland Security

Leon joined the United States in June 2023 on a request with the CBP One app, used by the Joe Biden government to manage migrant appointments on the Mexican border. He had applied for legal status under the Temporary Protection Status program, and his application was still in the process when he was arrested. Since then, the Trump administration has ended the program for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, and its government has repurposed the CBP One app to allow a process of self-deportation.

ICE agents took Leon into custody on March 13 in the parking lot of his apartment in Irving, Texas, wrongly claiming his tattoos reflected an affiliation with Tren de Aragua, according to his claim. He had entered the U.S. in 2023. He worked as a barber and was scheduled to appear before an immigration judge in 2028.

Homeland Security said in an email that Leon was a “confirmed associate” of the Tren de Aragua gang — though it did not specify how it reached that conclusion — who had entered the country illegally. It called his claims a fake “sob story.”

President Trump and Secretary Noem will not allow foreign terrorist enemies to operate in our country and endanger Americans,” the email said. It added, “We hear far too much about gang members and criminals’ false sob stories and not enough about their victims.

A federal judge ruled in June that the Trump administration must give some of the migrants sent to the prison in El Salvador a chance to challenge their deportations. U.S. District Court Judge James Boasberg said the people hadn’t been able to formally contest the removals or allegations that they were members of Tren de Aragua. He ordered the administration to work toward giving them a way to file those challenges. The judge wrote that “significant evidence” had surfaced indicating that many of the migrants were not connected to the gang “and thus were languishing in a foreign prison on flimsy, even frivolous, accusations.”

At El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, Leon said guards hit him with fists and batons and, on one occasion, viciously beat him after taking him to an area of the prison without cameras. Leon spent four months at the Terrorism Confinement Center, or Cecot, where he said he was beaten and abused.

When Leon was sent to El Salvador, his family failed to locate him for more than a month, his brother David said in an interview from his Chicago home. Leon‘s foreign identification number disappeared from the website used to track detainees in the U.S. immigration system. Neither his brother nor Leos girlfriend could get answers from federal immigration agencies about his whereabouts.

Finally, his family learned that he was being held in the CECOT of El Salvador. According to his complaint, the guards routinely assaulted detainees in an area without cameras so as not to leave digital evidence of the abuses. In the document, Leon said officers used fists and batons to beat him in the chest and stomach, and forced him to see how they brutally abused other prisoners.

His complaint describes the terrible conditions at CECOT. He says he was being held with nearly 20 other Venezuelan detainees in a cell about 9.2 meters per side, which was only cleaned once a week. Men were rarely allowed to go abroad, had no access to medication and were not allowed to exercise or talk to their relatives or lawyers, the complaint said.

When Leon complained about his gastritis, he said he was only given water. To pass the time, the inmates made dice with soap and tortillas and used toilet paper to play the Park, a board game.

Anything could lead to beatings, If we played, they beat us up. If we talked, they beat us, if we laughed, they beat us up. If we took a bath, they beat us.

To every migrant who is still in the United States, be whoever you are or from any country that comes, I want you to achieve your goals, focus on working for your family, and that overnight you don’t take everything away from you.

He recalled that he only had contact with someone from abroad once during his stay, with the Red Cross, who visited him for 30 minutes on June 12.

Leon  has now met with his daughter, Isabela. In the interview, he said he had no plans to return to the United States, but that he would go ahead with his legal process in the hope of preventing other migrants from suffering the same treatment he received.

On July 24, Leon filed an administrative complaint with the Department of Homeland Security, accusing U.S. immigration agencies of expelling him without due process. It is the first such complaint filed by one of 252 Venezuelans who were expelled and sent to El Salvador in March, their lawyers said, and it is a necessary step before taking legal action against the U.S. government in federal court. He claims $1.3 million in damages, was released last week as part of a large-scale prisoner swap between Venezuela and the United States. He now lives in Venezuela.

I want to clear my name,” Leon said in a telephone interview Wednesday night from his home in Miranda State. “I’m not a bad person“.

Leon filed his complaint with the help of the League of United Latin American Citizens, a civil rights group. Its executive director, Juan Proaño, says he plans to file dozens of other complaints on behalf of men who were sent to El Salvador prison. His lawyers say he has no criminal record in the United States, except for an offence committed in November 2024. In that incident, Leon was arrested after police stopped a car he was travelling in and found drug-related paraphernalia. Leon claimed that the material did not belong to him and that he did not even know about his presence. He pleaded guilty and was fined.

Physical violence
 XArrest
 XDetention / Custody
 Hustle / Projection
 Prone position / lying flat on the stomach / ventral decubitus
 Folding” (holding a person in a seated position with their head resting on their knees)
 Painful armlock
 XKicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
 Blows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Sexual abuse
 Striking with a police vehicle
 Electric shocks
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
 Use of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
 Use of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
 Use of tranquillisers
 Execution
XDeportation
 Kidnapping
 Disappearance
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Charge of disrespect
 Charge of resisting arrest
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XIntimidation, blackmail, threats
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Mock execution
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Prolonged uncomfortable position
 Failure to assist a person in danger
 Photographs, fingerprints, DNA
 Threat with a weapon
 Shooting in the back
 Charging without warning
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Car chase
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Intervention in a private place
 Mental health issues
 Harassment
 Body search
 Home search
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
XRefusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
XDeprivation during detention (water, food)
XInappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Sleep deprivation
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Complacency of doctors
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Victims

S., 24.02.2025. Mollested, batonned and gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhagen
18 to 30 years old. Mollested, batonned, pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

S. : “Even as we were leaving they fired tear gas”

“We were sitting outside the entrance of Maersk HQ to protest Maersk shipments to and from Israel. On our way there the cops beat some comrades while we were crossing the police line. We sat down outside the building and the cops shoved to get through and stand by the glass doors. They shoved journalists and legal observers, threw protesters around to “herd us” and finally covered the place in tear gas and pepper spray. Even as we were leaving they fired tear gas, causing people to panic and escalating the situation for no reason.”

 

Physical violence
XKicks, punches, slaps
 XFeet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Tirage par les cheveux
 Painful tightening of colson ties or handcuffs
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XCalls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
XPassivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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Victims

I., 24.02.2025. Mollested, batonned and gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhagen
18 to 30 years old. Mollested, batonned, pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

I. : “I have never felt this scared before in my life”

“When we tried to enter the terrain of Maersk, we were immediately met with violence. The police took out their batons and started hitting us, even when we were not trying to get through them. They hit me on my upper body and my friends on their head.

After 4 hours of blockade the police used tear gas, pepper spray, and physical violence to get us away from the terrain. Me and 4 friends could not get away because of the crowd that was stopping us. While we were standing there with nowhere to go, the police kept hitting us with batons.

When I told them they were using disproportionate violence, they hit me in my face. We told them to stop and said we could not go anywhere but they kept hitting and pushing us. They hit me several times, once very hard on my upper leg, which now has a big bruise. They used more tear gas, even when everyone was trying to leave.

I have never felt this scared before in my life. They kept chasing us and threatening us, even when we could not breath and were panicking. This violence was disproportionate and I have had flashbacks which have caused me to feel very anxious, even now, after the action has ended.”

Physical violence
X
Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
XHair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
XAggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XCalls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
XPrevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

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J., 24.02.2025. Mollested, batonned and gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
18 to 30 years old. Mollested, batonned, pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

J. : “At the worst time i think there three people on top of me and i had a hard time breathing”

“Some of us were sitting down while other were standing and the police pushed the people standing so they fell on us. At the worst time i think there three people on top of me and i had a hard time breathing.

Then they used pepper-spray on all of us and were pummeling others with their batons.

One person was bitten by a dog and another was taken to hospital.

After running away they threw teargas on us.”

Physical violence
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
XPainful armlock
XFingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
XCharge of disturbing public order
XCharge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

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A., 24.02.2025. Batonned and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhagen
18 to 30 years old.batonned, tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

A.: “Having to move in the direction of the teargas caused loss of breath and puking for several minutes and throat ach and headache that lasted until the following day.”

“While sitting in front of the HQ of Maersk, I saw the police first use pepperspray against unarmed, activists sitting down. Then I saw them using batons to hit people.

An activist that had just been hit lay on the ground on her belly in between several police officers, she was crawling away. From my sitting position in front of the police, I tried to cover her head so she would not be hit more or so the police would not stand on top of her.

This prompted the police to hit me with a baton on my shoulder and right arm until I was laying flat and another activists carried me several meters further. There I stood for a short moment while someone checked if I was OK and while I was looking for a friend. When everyone in that area in front of the building stood up and we were being shoved away, we couldn’t get away because of the large crowd and there was only one direction to move.

Many people that were repeatedly getting hit were trying to get away but could not. Activists that pleaded to “please, stop” were still being hit with batons. That’s when I received several more hits on my left arm while I was trying to move away from the cops in a direction that I could not.

Then tear gas exploded in the crowd in the direction we had to leave and the people dissipated. Having to move in the direction of the teargas caused loss of breath and puking for several minutes and throatache and headache that lasted until the following day.”

Physical violence
X
Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
 Spraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
 Aggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
 Calls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
 Passivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
 Refusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

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M., 24.02.2025. Batonned and tear-gassed – Copenhagen

February 24, 2025 – Cut Ties with Genocide, blockading Maersk Headquarters for Palestine – Copenhaguen
18 to 30 years old. Batonned, water-sprayed and tear-gassed

Cut Ties with Genocide, action in front of Maersk offices, Copenhagen – February 24, 2025

M. : “At some point the pain became unbearable, I shouted very loudly, they didn’t stop”

“The police started suddenly to attack and remove people. At first an activist, I think a girl, quite small in appearance, was grabbed and thrown on the floor by the police. I tried to drag the person between me and the activist next to me so that we could cover them, I was scared they might get trampled by policemen.

In that situation a cold liquid was sprayed on us, I suppose water. The police started beating us, so quickly I lost track of everybody around me, trying to protect myself from batons. While I was being beaten, I think from 2-3 agents, another agent pressed their thumb under my right ear, that caused extreme pain and I tried to move my head so to detach them from me, since I was also protecting myself from the beating, but it didn’t work.

At some point the pain became unbearable, I shouted very loudly, they didn’t stop, I managed to push the hand away from me with my arm, after which I closed myself more into a ball, to avoid being gripped again. The policeman tried several times to grip me again, unsuccessfully, while the others continued to beat me.

The gang beating stopped suddenly, when another activist that knows me fell next to me and called for me, trying to grab me, and then a medic arrived, shouting at the policemen to stop and pushing them away from me. He/She/They managed to get me up and walk me away, even if I struggled to walk, since they had beaten me also next to the right knee. He/She/They tried to sit me on a wall nearby, but another policeman impeded that and pushed us away, even if the medic protested.

We finally found a spot where He/She/They left me after getting sure I was doing good enough to be left with another activist from the group, who was nearby. The medic recognized me also afterwards, at the end of the march, checking again my situation. Soon after I was dropped with the other activist, the teargas was used. We heard an explosion, then a teargas bomb exploded very next to us, I started to run dragging my comrade with me, then she slowed down and I slowed with her. Then I breath the teargas. I couldn’t breath anymore, my throat felt like stuck with air, but empty of oxygen. I panicked and started walking away as fast as I could.

I shouted more than once that I couldn’t breath, I noticed a person puking next to me by the side of the road, but in the panic didn’t know what to do and walked. People from the park took me and helped me wash my eyes and clean my face. I slowly regained myself and made contact with some people from my group. Some of us went missing and we managed to completely collect each other only later that day.”

Physical violence
 Kicks, punches, slaps
 Feet / knees on the nape of the neck, chest or face
XBlows to the victim while under control and/or on the ground
 Blows to the ears
 Strangulation / chokehold
 Painful armlock
 Fingers forced backwards
XSpraying with water
 Dog bites
 Hair pulling
XFingers pressed behind the ears
 Painfully pulling by colson ties or handcuffs
 Use of gloves
 Use of firearm
 Use of “Bean bags” (a coton sack containing tiny lead bullets)
 Use of FlashBall weapon
 Use of sound grenade
 Use of dispersal grenade
XUse of teargas grenade
 Use of rubber bullets weapon (LBD40 type)
XUse of batons
XUse of Pepper Spray
 Use of Taser gun
Psychological violence
 Charge of disturbing public order
 Charge of rebellion
 Accusation of beatings to officer
 Charge of threatening officer
 Charge of insulting an officer
 Threat with a weapon
XAggressive behaviour, disrespect, insults
XCalls to end torment remained unheeded
 Sexist remarks
 Homophobic remarks
 Racist comments
 Violence by fellow police officers
XPassivity of police colleagues
 Lack or refusal of the police officer to identify him or herself
 Vexing or intimidating identity check
 Intimidation or arrest of witnesses
 Prevented from taking photographs or from filming the scene
 Refusal to notify someone or to telephone
 Refusal to administer a breathalyzer
 Refusal to fasten the seatbelt during transport
 Refusal to file a complaint
XRefusal to allow medical care or medication
 Lies, cover-ups, disappearance of evidence
 Undress before witnesses of the opposite sex
 Bend down naked in front of witnesses
 Lack of surveillance or monitoring during detention
 Lack of signature in the Personal Effects Register during detention
 Confiscation, deterioration, destruction of personal effects
 Pressure to sign documents
 Absence of a report
 Deprivation during detention (water, food)
 Inappropriate sanitary conditions during detention (temperature, hygiene, light)
 Complacency of doctors
 Kettling (corraling protestors to isolate them from the rest of the demonstration)
 Prolonged uncomfortable position

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

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