Flanny: Where Is He Now?

Severus Snape

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Defending other crooks, of course! :D

<script type='text/javascript' src='http://CBSLA.images.worldnow.com/interface/js/WNVideo.js?rnd=770291;hostDomain=video.losangeles.cbslocal.com;playerWidth=420;playerHeight=315;isShowIcon=true;clipId=7623679;flvUri=;partnerclipid=;adTag=News;advertisingZone=CBS.LA%252Fworldnowplayer;enableAds=true;landingPage=;islandingPageoverride=false;playerType=STANDARD_EMBEDDEDscript;controlsType=fixed'></script><a href="http://video.losangeles.cbslocal.com" title=""></a>

EAGLE ROCK (CBSLA.com) — A banking executive claiming he was brutally beaten by officers has filed a $50-million lawsuit against the Los Angeles Police Department.

Pictures which lawyers won’t release show gruesome injuries allegedly inflicted by officers on Deutsche Bank executive Brian Mulligan.

“We don’t really know how all this happened or why it happened,” according to Mulligan’s lawyer, Michael Flanagan.

The 52-year-old is a major player in the international finance and entertainment business.

“He is a sqeeky clean business executive,” Flanagan said.

The attorney spoke out on camera Thursday for the first time about what, he said, was excessive use on the part of LAPD officers.

Flanagan said his client suffered a tremendous blow to the face that left Mulligan with 15 fractures to his nose and required 54 stitches to close up the lacerations.

Mulligan filed a civil lawsuit claim against the LAPD this week with damages listed at $50 million.

“We’d like to find out what their motivation was — why did they do this?” Flanagan said.

According to the LAPD, two officers were responding to a radio call on May 15 at a Jack In The Box restaurant in Eagle Rock.

“The first call came in about….a man getting into cars at the drive-thru…” LAPD Lt. Andy Neiman said.


Mulligan appeared “out of it” and said he was tired,” Neiman said.

Officers said they found $5,000 in cash in Mulligan’s car. Upon his request, officers said they dropped the bank executive at the Highland Park Motel on York Boulevard.

“They give the motel keeper his keys and said do not give them back to him till tomorrow morning…why?” Flanagan said.

“They did what they felt was in the best interest of public safety. He was not in any condition to drive and transported him to a hotel,” Neiman said.

Flanagan said the husband, and father of two, was detained without probable cause.

“He is totally bewildered as to what happened,” said Flanagan, who said the experience was “very traumatic” for Mulligan.

Police told us hours later the same two officers responded to another call a few blocks away from the motel.

“He was in the middle of the street running through traffic, getting into vehicles,” Neiman said.

“He thought he was being set up…thought coast clear and went out and tried to get away from that place as fast as he could,” Flanagan said.

Police say he defied officers’ orders to get out of the street and went into a fighting stance, charging at them.

Neiman maintains that officers weren’t wrong for responding with force to Mulligan’s allegedly aggressive actions.

The officers’ reaction left Mulligan with injuries that Neiman admits required hospitalization.

Resident Gordon Huang lives near where the incident occurred. He said he remembers waking up to the commotion when he heard a “guy screaming, ‘Don’t beat me up’ and calling out for help.”

http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012...50m-suit-against-lapd-over-alleged-brutality/
 
Yes, it is. But at least he has the decency to keep his mouth shut regarding the Jacksons, unlike Chernoff, who has "commented." I don't like the Jacksons, but it's not Chernoff's place to comment.
 
Severus Snape;3692076 said:
Defending other crooks, of course! :D

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EAGLE ROCK (CBSLA.com) &#8212;

&#8220;We don&#8217;t really know how all this happened or why it happened,&#8221; according to Mulligan&#8217;s lawyer, Michael Flanagan.


&#8220;We&#8217;d like to find out what their motivation was &#8212; why did they do this?&#8221; Flanagan said.


&#8220;They give the motel keeper his keys and said do not give them back to him till tomorrow morning&#8230;why?&#8221; Flanagan said.

http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012...50m-suit-against-lapd-over-alleged-brutality/

Snape I see that Flanny is paid to ask the tough questions!! Waw!!!

OK let's see. A man was found with 5 thousand and he appeared "out of it." (To me, that is the nice way of saying the guy was under the influence of something, and had money to buy some more.) This man asked to be dropped at a motel. The officers did so and to keep him safe, told the staff to keep the keys until morning. (To me, that is the nice way of saying look people who are high on something may become disoriented and get up and wander off, fight, or harm others, so keep the keys until 24 hours when the drug has worn off). Next, the man got up and began wandering in the middle of the street and through traffic, (which shows why the officers wanted him to not have the car keys in the first place) and would not get out of the way when the police arrived.

(He probably put his hands up, stood up with legs widely apart as though he was a boxer about to make a deadly strike.) Of course the police tried to take him out of the traffic and he began to fight, which led to his injuries. I get the feeling that the police knew the man was someone with a big job and tried to cover up by bringing him to the motel to get over his high. If it was a regular citizen they would have arrested the person and requested some test. This will teach them not to show favoritism when they are called to keep the peace, because rather than the man thanking them for keeping his dirty business quiet, he turned around and sued them.
 
Flanny will do his usual stare and continue saying "we don't know why the police did that and we want to know why."

By now he and client have come up with a nice story that the police kidnapped said client, in the same way the Jackson children kidnapped their mother. Whereas the children sent mother to a spa, the police sent client to a motel. Flanny will add that maybe the police got the idea about the kidnap from the Jackson saga. He will continue by saying that unlike the granny, client was able to escape and seek the help of motorists, and that the police like true kidnappers rushed in the street and tried to take the client away, pretending that they were trying to keep him from being run down by cars.

Next, he will say that the story the police told was only a cover up, that client thought the police were taking him home but he found himself in a motel, that he did not know his wife and children were looking for him that night, and that as soon as he went home client met with his lawyer, and he Flanny, acting as legal counsel told client that he knew he was kept from spending the night with his wife and children due to the actions of third parties, in the same way the judge told granny that she was unable to provide guardianship of wards due to the actions of third parties.

Snape these Flanny and Chernoff pieces are providing great comic relief for me.
 
^You should contact Flanny and pitch him that idea. Send him my number, too. He might appreciate both. ;3

Listen when a person is so in love as you are, they should bolster up enough courage and say to the man "I admire you; I love everything about you; I want to spend time with you; Here is my number; Call me and let's do drinks in our underwear like you did in the documentary." What is the point of having all these pent up feelings, if you do not want to act on them? You may as well give those feelings to someone else for them to use.

I already contacted Flanny. He told me that was the idea he had and that is why I shared it with you. I did not want you to think that I was trying to get between you and Flanny and that we had secrets between us. I hope you appreciate my candidness.
 
Reckon he'd appreciate a visit? I'd do more than drinks with him in his undies. ;3

As for someone else, you must understand, Petra... there can never be room for anyone but Flanny in my heart. ? He will know how I feel, someday. Perhaps he already does, hence why he chose to show off a bit of chest by wearing his shirt slightly unbuttoned in that interview. In hopes I would see, LOL. ;D

380484_443025252409502_1637225061_n.jpg


Who wouldn't love such a charming little face? :3
 
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LMFAO!!! That's probably the case. Nah, I personally think he's just a druggie. Perhaps even sharing his product with Flanny himself! You know lawyers. :p

Haa, sounds likely. By the way, I love what you did with his lips.
 
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