Tamon Robinson, via Facebook
The letter with the bill, which is owed for “property damage to a vehicle owned by the New York Police Department,” also threatened legal action against the family if they didn't pay. “Isn’t there respect for the dead?” asked John Torrence, the victim’s uncle. Dobbinson’s lawyer, Sanford Rubenstein, has filed a notice of intent to sue the city, calling the bill a “disgrace.” “In my 40 years of practicing law in this city I have never seen anything as heartless as this,” he said.
Robinson was loading the stones into his truck around 5:30 a.m. on April 12 when police responded to a call that he was stealing them—Robinson began running to his nearby apartment when the car struck him. Dobbinson said her son ran a side business collecting stones, bricks and other building materials from construction sites and selling them to scrap dealers for small sums—and he had permission from his building management to take those stones that morning.
She added that police have mistreated her family from the moment her son was hit by the car: cops kept him shackled to his bed under police guard in the hospital, even though he was brain dead (and she was only allowed to see him for 20 minutes, even with permission from NYPD). Then, on the day of Robinson’s funeral, cops broke down the door of the family’s apartment...and later acknowledged they had executed a search warrant at the wrong location.
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