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NEWSLETTERS Receive the latest local updates in your inboxGraphic dashcam and bodycam video has been released showing a suburban man — allegedly high on PCP — punching and body-slamming Chicago police officers as they tried to handcuff him earlier this month. More than three hours of footage of the brutal incident were released Friday by the Chicago Police Department after authorities said a female officer who was beaten unconscious didn't shoot her attacker because she feared she might face backlash.Graphic Video of Suspect Attacking Female Officer ReleasedThe footage begins as two officers attempt to take Parta Huff, of Maywood, into custody after he allegedly crashed his vehicle into a liquor store. The officers in the 15th District were on patrol when they came across a traffic accident near the intersection of South Cicero Avenue and West Roosevelt Road, authorities said.Open Casting Call Seeks Star of New Steven Spielberg MovieA female officer is seen in the footage cuffing Huff's left wrist, but is heard shouting at him to stop fighting before she can get his right wrist cuffed. 
The officer is shouting at her partner to "Taser" the man as both officers continue ordering him to "stop fighting" and "get down on the ground."Popular Wis. Dells Resort Could be Coming to Chicago SuburbAt one point, Huff managed to get out of their grip and the three then disappear from the camera's view. When they return, Huff is seen falling on top of the female officer, where he continues to fight as other officers surround him. hoodie 3xltProsecutors reportedly claim during that Huff continued punching theofficer.‘majora hoodieIt Shook My World’: Mike Adamle Tells His StoryIn separate bodycam video released by police, Huff is seen being shot with a stun gun numerous times before he is cuffed and on the ground, his mouth bleeding. hoodie steelseries
Huff allegedly beat the female officer so hard she lost consciousness. Two other officers were injured while putting him in custody, officials said.Trump Blames Chicago Violence on Undocumented Gang MembersThe female officer remained in the hospital as of Friday. Huff, 28, was charged after the incident with attempted murder of a police officer and aggravated battery to a police officer and was ordered held without bond later that week. lululemon scuba hoodie purpleDog Food Recalled for Contamination With Euthanasia DrugHuff, a father of one, told a judge in court he had drugs in his system because he was in the hospital that morning, The Chicago Sun-Times reported.olaf hoodie toddlerHuff, who completed cosmetology school and currently works as a janitor and at a chocolate factory, also has another child on the way, the newspaper reported.the fault in our stars shirt nederland
Toby Keith Performing at Naperville Ribfest 'Not Political'The top Chicago police officer has used the beating as an example of how fallout from police-involved shooting controversies can put officers in danger."She knew that she should shoot this guy," Supt. Eddie Johnson said last week. "But she chose not to because she didn't want her family — or the department — to have to go through the scrutiny the next day."With Chicago headed toward a summer from hell, with gang murders breaking out just about everywhere and the total number of homicides headed toward the highest level in many years, what has new Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson just done?university of kentucky camo hoodieAnswer: Hire a batch of high-priced aides, notably including a well-known former TV news anchor, at a cool $150,000 a year.Could I make that up?That's right, folks—officially joining the staff of the Chicago Police Department next week in a newly created slot as special adviser for community affairs is Robin Robinson, who worked for 26 years as an anchor for Fox-owned WFLD-TV/Channel 32's 9 p.m. newscast.
After her contract was not renewed in 2013, she worked part time for WBBM-AM/780 and most recently has been volunteering her time with the CPD.So what will Robinson do for the department? Not media relations, I'm told."In order to make Chicago safer, we have to repair the relationship between the department and the community," said CPD spokesman Anthony Guglielmi. "And we have to make the department more transparent.” "Robinson is extremely well-represented in minority communities" where relations are the worst, Guglielmi said. "(Johnson) wanted an adviser, someone who can tell him how to make the department more transparent and try to develop relationships.”Robinson's initial task has been to set up a series of community forums Johnson has attended, something she's been doing on her own time, Guglielmi added. And while her position is new, the department will shift the needed funds from an unfilled administrative slot rather than on-the-street police, he said.Still, it's all green.
At $150,000, Robinson effectively will be worth two rookie officers who could be on patrol.And in case you'd like to know, Guglielmi has a staff of seven, including him. But Robinson will report to the superintendent, not Guglielmi's news affairs division.Other new hires, as first reported by WMAQ-TV/Channel 5, include a new chief of staff at $175,000 a year, a general counsel at $160,000 and a director of professional standards at $186,000. Only the third of those is a new position, but given the department's need to improve training, it's a defensible job in my view.As for Robinson: Presumably she got used to life under the hot lights in her previous gig. She'll certainly face some heat now.Update, 2:30 p.m. — I was able to catch Robinson on her cellphone, and she told an interesting tale.Robinson said she was out at brunch recently with two young friends, both community activists, and she looked up and saw Johnson, whom she'd never met, at the next table. "I didn't recognize him," Robinson said.
"I told him to be careful, or he'd be profiled; he was wearing a hoodie."The group talked and exchanged information, and Johnson later offered her a job, Robinson continued."I took the job because Eddie Johnson convinced me he's about radical change . . . improving relations” between the community and police. In her job as a journalist, "I didn't just do a story and walk away. I've been involved in every corner of the city. I am involved in community affairs just about every day."Asked for an example, Robinson told me what was on her calendar yesterday. Included were a meeting with a group seeking park improvements, a sit-down with the mother of a slain teenager and a session with a theater group that wants to stage a play about changing race relations."This city can't continue to look like two cities," concluded Robinson, who lives in the South Loop. Sometimes people look at police and see the enemy, and police look at a young person and see a threat. "We need to change perceptions."