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Inkster, MI– Dashcam video released on Tuesday proved several Inkster officers lied about their extremely brutal encounter with 57-year-old Floyd Dent on January 28.

On Thursday, the lawyer representing Dent released perhaps an even more sinister video from the evening.

Portland police crack down fast on protesters Saturday night By Bradley W. Parks ( OPB ) and Sergio Olmos ( OPB ) Portland, Ore. 6, 2020 1:22 a.m. 6, 2020 6:45 p.m.

Police originally reported that the blood on his brain, broken orbital bone, and four broken ribs inflicted upon Dent came about as they acted in self-defense. They even went so far as to charge the retired grandfather with resisting arrest, assault on an officer, and fleeing police. All of these charges would ultimately be dropped after the judge watched the video.

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However, a possession charge from the evening remained as the officers claimed they found crack cocaine under the passenger seat of the vehicle.

Dent was offered a plea deal that would include probation and expunging his record in six months, but Dent has refused to admit guilt for a crime he did not commit.

“I’m lucky to be living. I think they was trying to kill me, especially when they had choked me. I mean, I was on my last breath. I kept telling the officer, ‘Please, I can’t breathe,’” Dent said.

After being choked, punched 16 times, and repeatedly tasered- the beaten and bloodied man insisted that the drugs were planted in his car; a claim many might roll their eyes at and call a likely story. Dent was so adamant, however, that he insisted the hospital blood test him. All tests came back as clean as his criminal record.

Dent, in 57 years, had never had a single run in with the law and absolutely no drugs or alcohol were found in his system.

Now, newly released footage appears to prove Dent’s innocence. It shows the officer who is seen choking Dent in the video, William “Robocop” Melendez, pull what appears to be a plastic bag filled with a white substance from his pocket before searching the battered man’s vehicle.

The video is a bit blurry, and it is difficult to make out for sure what is going on, but a quick glance at Robocop’s history certainly does not make the image less suspicious.

The former Detroit officer has an extremely long list of offenses, including having “been sued at least four times for excessive use of force. He has cost the city more than $1 million in legal settlements and received more citizen complaints than any other in the city,” the LA Times reported in 2003.

In one particularly expensive settlement, the officer cost Detroit a million dollars following the fatal shooting of an unarmed man during a traffic stop in 1996. Melendez shot the man execution style 11 times, in front of horrified witnesses.

During a joint investigation by the FBI and Detroit Police Department, he was indicted for corruption, falsifying police reports, and planting drugs/guns on suspects who had been illegally arrested. The officer was somehow acquitted by a jury, despite other police testifying against him.

Some of the allegations in the indictment against Melendez included:

Melendez and two officers illegally arrested Victoria Tillmon on June 16, 2001, outside her home in the 3500 block of Wesson and falsely claimed she dropped a vial of crack cocaine. On the way to the police station, the indictment said, Melendez threatened her, saying that people who testify against him will be killed.

On Feb. 26, 2001, Melendez and two officers illegally entered a residence at 3820 Wesson and illegally searched Clifton White and Shannon White. The officers falsely reported that they confronted the pair on the street and that Clifton White was carrying cocaine.

In a lawsuit filed March 12 in U.S. District Court, a Detroit man accused Melendez and Officer Troy Bradley of concocting a gun case that landed the man in jail for 213 days.

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In his lawsuit, Darell Chancellor said Melendez and Bradley arrested him and another man, Robert Louis Blackwell, near midnight on April 22, 2002, on Clippert Street.

The suit says that Melendez and Bradley, after a routine stop, planted handguns that led to federal charges against Chancellor. He was held in jail from April through November last year, until the U.S. Attorney’s Office agreed to his release on bond, the suit says. On Nov. 26, the U.S. Attorney’s Office asked for charges to be dropped against Chancellor.

Despite prosecutors determining that Robocop led the ring of 17 officers in engaging in corrupt policing, the crooked cop was allowed to keep his job and continue putting lives in danger.

If a bartender is suspected of not washing their hands at a bar, they can be fired for being a health risk.

However, if you have a history of brutality, murder, and corruption, and you are a cop, you keep your job. After all, it only places the lives of the community you work for in your corrupt hands. You plant drugs, beat and execute innocent people because you are a hero, and you just want to make it home to your family every night.


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Winter's Bone
Directed byDebra Granik
Produced byAnne Rosellini
Alix Madigan-Yorkin
Screenplay byDebra Granik
Anne Rosellini
Based onWinter's Bone
by Daniel Woodrell
Starring
  • Kevin Breznahan
Music byDickon Hinchliffe
CinematographyMichael McDonough
Edited byAffonso Gonçalves
Anonymous Content
Winter's Bone Productions
Distributed byRoadside Attractions
  • January 21, 2010 (Sundance)
  • June 11, 2010 (United States)
100 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2 million[1]
Box office$16.1 million[2]

Winter's Bone is a 2010 American mysterydrama film directed by Debra Granik. It was adapted by Granik and Anne Rosellini from the 2006 novel of the same name by Daniel Woodrell. The film stars Jennifer Lawrence as a teenage girl in the rural Ozarks of Missouri who, to protect her family from eviction, must locate her missing father. The film explores the interrelated themes of close and distant family ties, the power and speed of gossip, self-sufficiency, poverty, and patriarchy as they are influenced by the pervasive underworld of illegal meth labs.

The film won several awards, including the Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic Film at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. It also received four Oscar nominations: Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actress for Lawrence and Best Supporting Actor for John Hawkes.

Plot[edit]

In the rural Ozarks of Missouri, seventeen-year-old Ree Dolly looks after her mentally ill mother, twelve-year-old brother Sonny, and six-year-old sister Ashlee. She makes sure her siblings eat and teaches them survival skills such as hunting and cooking. The family is destitute. Ree's father, Jessup, has not been home for a long time; his whereabouts are unknown. He is out on bail following an arrest for manufacturing meth.

Sheriff Baskin tells Ree that if her father does not appear for his court date, they will lose the house because it was put up as part of his bond. Ree sets out to find her father. She starts with her meth-addicted uncle Teardrop and continues to more distant kin, eventually trying to talk to the local crime boss, Thump Milton. Milton refuses to see her; the only information Ree comes up with are warnings to leave the situation alone and stories that Jessup died in a meth lab fire or skipped town to avoid the trial.

When Jessup fails to appear for the trial, the bondsman comes looking for him and tells Ree that she has about a week before the house and land are seized. Ree tells him that Jessup must be dead, because 'Dollys don't run'. He tells her that she must provide proof that her father is dead to avoid the bond being forfeited.

Ree tries to go see Milton again and is severely beaten by the women of his family. Teardrop rescues Ree, promising her attackers that she will not cause more trouble. Teardrop tells Ree that her father was killed because he was going to inform on other meth cookers, but he does not know who killed him. He warns her that if she finds out who did, she must not tell him. Later, Ree talks to an Army recruiter about enlisting for the $40,000 bonus, but he tells her that she needs her parents' signatures to enlist, and that she has the wrong reasons. On the way home from a bar, Ree and her uncle are stopped by the sheriff, who wants to question Teardrop. After a tense standoff, where Teardrop implies that he knows the Sheriff leaked that Jessup was an informer, Teardrop convinces the sheriff to let them leave without any interrogation.

A few nights later, the Milton women who beat Ree come to her house and offer to take her to '[her] daddy's bones'. The women place a sack on her head and drive her to a pond, where they row to the shallow area where her father's submerged body lies. They tell Ree to reach into the water and grasp her father's hands so they can cut them off with a chainsaw; the severed hands will serve as proof of death for the authorities. Ree takes the hands to the sheriff, telling him that someone flung them onto the porch of her house.

The bondsman gives Ree the cash portion of the bond, which was put up by an anonymous associate of Jessup. Ree tries to give Jessup's banjo to Teardrop, but he tells her to keep it at the house for him. As he is leaving, he tells her that he now knows who killed her father. Ree reassures Sonny and Ashlee that she will never leave them. As the three sit on the porch, Ashlee begins to play the banjo.

Cast[edit]

  • Jennifer Lawrence as Ree Dolly - a 17-year old girl in the Ozark Mountains.
  • Isaiah Stone as Sonny Dolly - Ree's younger brother.
  • Ashlee Thompson as Ashlee Dolly - Ree's younger sister.
  • Valerie Richards as Connie - Ree's mentally ill mother.
  • John Hawkes as Teardrop Dolly - Ree's uncle, a methadon addict.
  • Garret Dillahunt as Sheriff Baskin.
  • Lauren Sweetser as Gail Lockrum - a friend who left school to have a baby.
  • Cody Shiloh Brown as Floyd - Gail's husband.
  • Shelley Waggener as Sonya - a neighbour who takes care of Ree's horse.
  • William White as Blond Milton - Sonya's husband, a methadon addict.
  • Casey MacLaren as Megan - Ree's distant cousin.
  • Kevin Breznahan as Little Arthur - Megan's husband, member of the methadon gang.
  • Ronnie Hall as Thump Milton - leader of the methadon gang.
  • Dale Dickey as Merab - Thump Milton's wife.
  • Tate Taylor as Mike Satterfield, the bondsman.
  • Sheryl Lee as April, Jessup's ex-girlfriend.

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Reception[edit]

Critical response[edit]

Winter's Bone received widespread critical acclaim, with Jennifer Lawrence's performance being universally lauded. The film has an approval rating of 94% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 174 reviews with an average score of 8.31/10. The website's critical consensus states: 'Bleak, haunting, and yet still somehow hopeful, Winter's Bone is writer-director Debra Granik's best work yet — and it boasts an incredible, starmaking performance from Jennifer Lawrence.'[3] The film also has a score of 90 out of 100 on Metacritic based on reviews from 38 critics indicating 'universal acclaim'.[4]

Roger Ebert gave the film 4 out of 4 stars, praising Lawrence's steely 'hope and courage' that remains optimistic despite her tribulations, and calling attention to Granik's direction that avoids passing moral judgment on the characters or descending into stereotypes.[5] Reviewer Peter Travers found the film 'unforgettable', writing in Rolling Stone, 'Granik handles this volatile, borderline horrific material with unblinking ferocity and feeling.... In Lawrence, Granik has found just the right young actress to inhabit Ree. Her performance is more than acting, it's a gathering storm.'[6] Critic James Berardinelli said that 'Winter's Bone is a welcome reminder that thrillers don't have to be loud and boisterous to grab the attention and keep it captive.'[7]David Edelstein wrote in New York magazine, 'For all the horror, it’s the drive toward life, not the decay, that lingers in the mind. As a modern heroine, Ree Dolly has no peer, and Winter’s Bone is the year’s most stirring film.'[8]New Yorker critic David Denby called Winter's Bone 'one of the great feminist works in film'.[9]The A.V. Club put the film at No. 1 on their list of the best movies of the year.[10]

Top ten lists[edit]

  • 1st – David Edelstein, New York
  • 1st – The A.V. Club
  • 1st – Keith Phipps, The A.V. Club
  • 1st – David Germain, Associated Press
  • 1st – Anne Thompson, Indiewire
  • 1st – David Fear, Time Out New York
  • 1st – Peter Hartlaub, San Francisco Chronicle
  • 2nd – David Ansen, Newsweek
  • 2nd – Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times
  • 2nd – Noel Murray and Scott Tobias, The A.V. Club
  • 3rd – Christy Lemire, Associated Press
  • 3rd – Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly
  • 3rd – Eric Kohn, Indiewire
  • 5th – Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
  • 5th – Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York
  • 6th – Tasha Robinson, The A.V. Club
  • 9th – Kirk Honeycutt, The Hollywood Reporter
  • 9th – Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
  • 10th – Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times
  • 10th – Claudia Puig, USA Today
  • 10th – Peter Rainer, Christian Science Monitor
  • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal
  • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – David Denby and Anthony LaneThe New Yorker
  • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Carrie Rickey and Steven ReaPhiladelphia Inquirer
  • Top 10 (listed alphabetically) – Rick Groen and Liam Lacey The Globe and Mail

Box office[edit]

Winter's Bone debuted in cinemas on June 11, 2010 in a limited release in 4 theaters and grossed 'a hearty' $84,797, with an average of $21,199 per theater and ranking #35 at the box office. The film's subsequent outing and expansion to 39 theaters earned $351,317, with an average of $9,008 per theater.[11] The film's distributors Roadside Attractions aimed, concurrently with New York, Los Angeles and Boston, at 'heartland cities' such as Minneapolis, Overland Park, St. Louis, Springfield, Dallas and Denver, which eventually all attracted significant audiences, surpassing New York's.[11] According to the distributor, 'the filmmakers had always wanted to deliver the movie to the people who helped them make it'.[11] The film was in cinemas for over 45 weeks and ultimately earned $6,531,503 domestically and $9,600,048 internationally for a total of $16,131,551, surpassing its $2 million budget.[12]

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Accolades[edit]

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The film won the Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic Film and the Best Screenplay Award at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.[13] It also received two awards at the 2010 Berlin Film Festival in Germany and at the 2010 Stockholm International Film Festival, it won the awards for Best Film, Best Actress (Lawrence) and the Fipresci Prize.[14]

Winter's Bone also won Best Feature and Best Ensemble Performance at the 2010 Gotham Awards[15] and it earned seven nominations at the 2010 Independent Spirit Awards, including Best Film, Best Director, and Best Actress.[16]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Winter's Bone'. Box Office Mojo.
  2. ^'Winter's Bone (2010)'. The Numbers. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  3. ^'Winter's Bone (2010)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  4. ^'Winter's Bone Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  5. ^Ebert, Roger. 'At the end will be her father, alive or dead'. RogerEbert.com. Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved June 16, 2010.
  6. ^Travers, Peter (June 3, 2010). 'Winter's Bone'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  7. ^Berardinelli, James. 'Winter's Bone'. reelviews.net. Retrieved February 7, 2011.
  8. ^Edelstein, David (June 6, 2010). 'Ozark Gothic'. New York Magazine. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  9. ^Denby, David (July 5, 2010). 'Thrills and Chills'. The New Yorker. Retrieved 2011-02-01.
  10. ^Noel Murray; Keith Phipps; Nathan Rabin; Tasha Robinson; Scott Tobias (December 16, 2010). 'The best films of 2010'. The A.V. Club. Retrieved November 17, 2013.
  11. ^ abc'Winter’s Bone Heats Up in the Heartland'Wall Street Journal, June 27, 2010
  12. ^'Winter's Bone (2010)'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  13. ^Zeitchik, Steven (January 31, 2010). ''Winter's Bone' wins grand jury prize for drama at Sundance'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 30, 2010.
  14. ^'Winners 2010 – Stockholms filmfestival'. stockholmfilmfestival.se. Stockholm International Film Festival. Archived from the original on December 3, 2010. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  15. ^Ryzik, Melena (November 29, 2010). ''Winter's Bone' Dominates at Gothams'. New York Times. Retrieved November 30, 2010.
  16. ^Tourtellotte, Bob (November 30, 2010). ''Winter's Bone,' 'Kids' come up big at Spirit Awards'. Reuters. Retrieved November 30, 2010.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Winter's Bone
  • Winter's Bone on IMDb
  • Winter's Bone at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Winter's Bone at Metacritic
  • Winter's Bone at AllMovie
  • Winter's Bone at Box Office Mojo
  • Interview with John Hawkes ('Teardrop') at Quietearth.us
  • Interview with Jennifer Lawrence ('Ree Dolly') on YouTube
  • Moon, Michael and Colin Talley. 'Life in a Shatter Zone: Debra Granik's Film Winter's Bone.'Southern Spaces, December 6, 2010.
Awards
Preceded by
Precious
Sundance Grand Jury Prize: U.S. Dramatic
2010
Succeeded by
Like Crazy

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