Katrina shooting: 5 officers get reduced sentences for gunning down unarmed residents - Action News
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Katrina shooting: 5 officers get reduced sentences for gunning down unarmed residents

Five former police officers who gunned down unarmed New Orleans residents on the Danziger Bridge in the days following Hurricane Katrina have been sentenced to far less prison time than they originally faced.

Original verdict thrown out over 'grotesque prosecutorial misconduct'

W.C. Johnson, of the group Community United for Change, protests outside Federal court in New Orleans on June 27, 2011, on the opening day of the trial for five current or former New Orleans police officers charged in deadly shootings of unarmed residents on the Danziger bridge in Hurricane Katrina's chaotic aftermath. Those five inmates have since pleaded guilty to reduced charges after the initial verdict was thrown out. (Gerald Herbert/Associated Press)

Five former police officers pleaded guilty Wednesday to a reduced number of charges in the deadly shootings on the Danziger Bridge in the days following Hurricane Katrina and were sentenced to far less prison time than they originally faced.

The officers were convicted by a jury in 2011 but U.S. District Judge KurtEngelhardtset aside the verdict two years later because of misconduct by federal prosecutors including anonymous online comments about the case.

Five former New Orleans police charged in the post-Katrina shootings, from left to right: Robert Faulcon Jr., Robert Gisevius Jr., Kenneth Bowen, Anthony Villavaso II, and Arthur Kaufman. They now all face reduced sentences. (The Associated Press)

Four of the former officers have been locked up for nearly six years while the fifth has been out on bond. Their original convictions called for them to serve anywhere fromsix to 65 years in prison. The plea deal calls for them to serve a range of three to 12 years.

Cover-up

On Sept. 4, 2005, days after the levees failed and water swamped the city, police gunned down 17-year-old James Brissette and 40-year-old Ronald Madison, who were both unarmed, and wounded four others on the Danziger Bridge. To cover it up, the officers planted a gun, fabricated witnesses and falsified reports, prosecutors have said.

Police said at the time the officers were responding to a report of other officers down when they came under fire.

Lorna Madison Humphrey, left, whose brother Ronald Madison was killed at the Danziger Bridge police shooting, hugs Sherrel Johnson, mother of James Brissette Jr. who was also killed, after the sentencing of former New Orleans police officers on April 4, 2012. The inmates now have reduced sentences after their original verdict was thrown out. (Sean Gardner/Reuters)

However, after hearing from five dozen witnesses and examining 400 pieces of evidence during a month-long trial, a federal jury convicted the officers for opening fire and trying to cover up wrongdoing.

Former officer Robert Faulcon was sentenced to 65 years in prison; ex-Sgts. Kenneth Bowen and Robert Gisevius each received 40 years; Anthony Villavaso got 38 years; and Arthur Kaufman, now out on bond, received a six-year sentence.

Free in 1-6 years

Under the new plea agreement, they will get credit for time served and most of them could be released from prison anywhere from the next one to six years.

A scandal involving Justice Department employees unraveled the convictions and sentences. In September 2013, the judge said the case had been tainted by "grotesque prosecutorial misconduct," including leaks to media and posting of anonymous comments by at least three government attorneys on a New Orleans newspaper's website.

Prosecutors have argued that there is no evidence the misconduct affected the verdict.