Police officers who engage in excessive force and misconduct face criminal charges including misconduct in office, which can result in jail sentences, probation, and permanent disqualification from law enforcement careers; the Matthew Furman case demonstrates that a pattern of excessive force during traffic stops can lead to conviction on multiple charges, with prosecutors strategically using misconduct in office charges to permanently bar officers from future law enforcement positions.
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America's most hated cop Matthew Furman sentenced to 6 months jail Legal breakdown on the sentencingHinzugefügt:
Roland Mumford with mumford.law. I said in my last video that I done today that that would be my last video from here in Paris, France. We're doing using a portable setup and we appreciate your patience. Well, I guess I lied because I just learned that America's most hated cop, Matthew Furman, has been sentenced to 6 months and 3 years of probation.
The judge in the video was very harsh.
However, I don't believe 6 months was enough for this. This should have been 2 to 3 years if not more. Let me know what you think in the comments. So, let's get into this. What happens when the person wearing the badge completely forgets the law they swore to uphold? You get the case of Melvindale Police Lieutenant Matthew Furman. He's no longer with that police department. He was fired by the new police chief. He has been called a textbook bad apple and a Michigan judge just told him his time on the street is officially over. Wayne County Circuit Judge did not hold back at sentencing, telling Furman he brought absolute dishonor to the uniform. However, while he may have been verbally harsh on Furman, the 6 months was a light sentence, in my legal opinion. The sentence handed down is 6 months in the Wayne County Jail, followed by 3 years of probation. Here's the video we're going to play. This is the news story on the matter.
>> All right, now to a former police lieutenant once trusted to protect his community. Well, tonight he is headed to jail.
>> Matthew Furman was convicted of assault and accused of years of excessive force.
>> It's 7 investigators first brought Furman's abuses to light more than a year ago, leading to these charges and new leadership in the chief's office.
>> In court today, a Wayne County judge dressed down the former lieutenant whose law enforcement career is officially over.
>> Here is 7 investigator Ross Jones.
>> You have brought great dishonor, great dishonor, to those people who wear the uniform and the badge.
>> Matthew Furman will sleep in a jail cell tonight. The polarizing former Melvindale lieutenant, convicted last month of misconduct in office and assault and battery, was sentenced to 6 months in the Wayne County Jail and scolded by the judge who put him there.
>> You swore an oath, sir, to serve and protect.
But this court believes that at the end here, that you took up an oath of terrorize and injure citizens of the state of Michigan.
>> Furman was convicted of assault stemming from this 2024 traffic stop of Drakkar Williams, a man he pulled over for a traffic offense.
>> Sir, your driver's license?
>> I don't.
>> Williams did not have a valid license, and the scene quickly escalated with Furman using his taser on Williams again and again with small children sitting in the backseat.
>> Hands behind your back. YOU DO >> HE GOT ME.
>> TURN AROUND.
>> AS MR. WILLIAMS screamed out in pain, CONTINUED TO TASE HIM.
>> COOPERATE.
>> WHAT AM I DOING? WHAT AM I DOING?
>> COOPERATE.
>> WHAT AM I I'M NOT DOING ANYTHING.
>> AND the court saw no reason for that tasing.
>> The judge reprimanded Furman for later pulling Williams' head into the back of a fire truck while he was handcuffed.
And for a separate use of force he was charged over in 2021, where Furman was seen stomping on the leg of a man who had led police on a high-speed chase after he was subdued. Furman pleaded no contest to assault and battery.
>> He stomped on his leg eight times.
Eight times.
>> Furman's law enforcement career was a costly one for the city. Multiple lawsuits were filed over his alleged excessive force. A case filed by Williams settled for a million dollars.
Another filed by a woman he tased in a school parking lot settled for 1.5 million. The city's insurance carrier dropped the small town as a result of the litigation.
After Firman was charged, a new chief was brought in to clean things up. Chief Chris Egan would fire Firman earlier this year. He was in the courtroom today. Three rows behind him, a former chief who tried to fire Firman a decade ago and lost his job instead.
>> He did what he wanted because he was uh empowered by the city to do what he want.
>> Chad Hayes said he tried to fire Firman over excessive force in 2016, but that city officials kept him in part due to the revenue he brought in through towing fees. The city denied that claim. Hayes was pleased by the judge's sentence and says to any other police department with bad apples like Firman in their ranks, they should learn from Melvindale's mistakes.
>> Or the lesson should be that eventually your actions are going to catch up with you.
>> Firman was taken into custody immediately. In addition to his jail sentence, he'll be on probation for the next 3 years.
In the newsroom, I'm Ross Jones. 7 News Detroit.
>> Ross Jones on the case and >> If you were thinking that 6 months seems light for police misconduct and assault, you are hitting on the exact friction point that lights up legal comment sections everywhere, which I'm doing now. Let us look at the actual facts that landed Firman in a Jones suit, because this was not an isolated mistake. It was a pattern. The court conviction stems from a traffic stop in July 2024. Firman pulled over a driver named Jacar Williams for bypassing a traffic barricade. When Williams could not produce an identification card, Firman ordered him out of the car.
Williams complied perfectly, placing his hands flat on the roof of the vehicle.
Despite that compliance, Firman deployed his department-issued taser straight into Williams' back and kept tasing him.
Once Williams was down on the pavement, another officers arrived to help handcuff him. Firman took it a step further, planting his foot directly on Williams' ribs. Later, while Williams was on the scene being treated by medics, a verbal argument flared up.
Instead of de-escalating the situation, Firman grabbed the man by his shirt and his hair, shoving him violently against the fire truck. We've done a previous video on this, please go look at it.
Where prosecutors revealed this was part of a broader systemic habit of excessive force. Firman actually faced a web of charges spanning three completely separate traffic stops. First, there was a separate incident from July 2021 where Firman joined the pursuit. While other officers were successfully handcuffing a suspect, Firman repeatedly kicked the man in the leg and ankle eight times.
The judge made a point of that as you see in this news video. He ultimately pleaded no contest to the misdemeanor assault and battery for that event. He also faced separate charges for an April 2024 stop where he allegedly used a taser on a woman in a school parking lot while trying to forcibly yank her from her car. When the dust settled at trial, the jury handed down a split verdict. On the May 2024 case involving Williams, they convicted him of misconduct in office, which is a five-year felony in Michigan, and misdemeanor assault and battery. However, they acquitted him of the heavier charge of felonious assault.
The jury got it wrong. And he was completely acquitted of all charges related to the April 2024 school parking lot incident. I don't know what's going on with Michigan juries. Let us talk legal strategy here. Why did the prosecutor pursue misconduct in office instead of just standard assault charges? In Michigan, misconduct in office is is a common law felony. It applies specifically when a public official acting under the color of law commits an unlawful act or abuses their discretionary power with a corrupt intent. And by securing a conviction on this specific felony, Wayne County prosecutor achieved a major goal. Furman is now legally barred from ever being a certified law enforcement officer in the state of Michigan again. So, let's say bravo to the prosecutor. From a litigation standpoint, the 6-month jail sentence is a compromise based on the standard calculations. However, the judge did have discretion to give more.
Judges look at a clean prior record when determining sentencing guidelines because Furman did not have a prior criminal convictions on his record before this trial. Getting actual jail time for a first-time non-violent felony conviction is a significant statement by the court. Not enough time, sorry judge.
Judge Slavens made it clear that the badge is a shield to protect, not a license to bully. While Furman is sitting in a jail cell, the city of Melvindale is left holding a massive financial and structural bill. The city has already paid out a $1 million settlement linked to a prior taser incident involving Furman. On top of that, they are facing at least four separate civil lawsuits filed over the last 24 months alleging systemic conduct within the department. What's going to be interesting is to see if the insurance carrier is going to cover this because a lot of times in their policies, they don't cover criminal conduct even if the conduct was within a context of performing law enforcement duties under the color of law. Things got so bad that the city council had to hire an investigator just to figure out how internal accountability failed this spectacularly. Let's also remember the insurance carrier dropped the city from any future coverage. The case is a stark reminder of why civil rights litigation and internal police transparency matter.
When agencies fail to police themselves, the taxpayers pay the financial price and the community pays the human price.
What do you think about the judge's sentence? Is 6 months in jail enough to deter police brutality, or did the justice system go too easy on one of its own? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below, and hit that subscribe button, turn on the notifications, and I'll see you next time here on the channel. Thank you for your time.
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