Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Convicted store owner says detective’s bigoted statements warrant new trial

- Bruce Vielmetti Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

The former owner of a Milwaukee convenienc­e store says a detective framed him for the near-homicide of an ex-employee because of her bigotry toward Pakistani men.

A jury in 2016 acquitted Syed Rizvi, 41, of attempted homicide, but found him guilty of reckless injury and aggravated battery. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

In a new motion in his 2014 case, Rizvi contends the conviction­s were a “manifest injustice” and should be thrown out given informatio­n that later came out about the lead detective’s bias.

Rizvi’s not relying on a private conversati­on, a tip or even the detective’s old social media posts for his claims about bias. He cites Det. Nicole Reaves’ own statements in court:

“Syed Rizvi is of the Pakistani culture. According to a 2011 poll of experts by Thomason [sic] Reuters Foundation Poll Pakistan is the third most dangerous country for women in the world... A certain mentality is deeply ingrained in strictly patriarcha­l societies like Pakistan. Poor and uneducated women must struggle daily for basic rights, recognitio­n and respect. They must live in a culture that defines them by male figures in their lives even though these women are often the breadwinne­rs for their families. This is strike one for me.

Additional­ly, for decades the law enforcemen­t entity in Pakistan has been either non-existent or greatly disrespect­ed by citizens .... This is strike two for me.

Lastly, [sic] has been no secret that a lot of Pakistanis have come to America and opened businesses like corner stores and convenienc­e stores in the inner city. We as African Americans that live in the inner city have complained for years of the ill treatment that we have gotten from the Pakistani personnel in these stores. We have been spat upon, beaten, raped, poisoned, stabbed, shot and killed by those of the Pakistani culture as both patrons and employees to them.

It’s been proven those particular Pakistani people feel that they are superior to the African Americans they come in contact with or are racist if not both. This is strike three for me.

Most Pakistanis find themselves in a predicamen­t where this is questioned.

They will deny it and say that they love black people. This is a blatant lie from them. It is clear that they only are in love with the African American’s green money and not black people, otherwise they would open their convenienc­e stores on the corners in the suburbs where the majority of the population is white people, not to mention that black people have been the number one consumers for everything for a very long time, will always spend their money[.”]

Reaves’ comments were part of her victim impact statement during Rizvi’s 2017 sentencing in a related case. At the end of the attempted homicide trial, in summer 2016, he made a gesture at Reaves. He later pleaded guilty to threatenin­g an officer, and was sentenced to 21⁄2 years, added to the 15 years he got in the main case.

Reaves, 51, also said Rizvi’s jail calls were monitored, that he was speaking Farsi and spelling her name and that she had to be put under extra security.

That was all a lie, Rizvi’s motion states. Public record requests to Milwaukee police turned up no evidence of any of Reaves’ claims. And Rizvi speaks Urdu, not Farsi, it states.

Numerous attempts to reach Reaves

for response, through the department, the union and by phone and email, were unsuccessf­ul.

Court records state the following:

Rizvi had fired then 17-year-old Tajerie “TJ” Davis from Annie’s Discount Tobacco, at North 40th Street and West Capitol Drive., because Davis couldn’t get along with a manager, Sherrone Thornton, 33.

On the evening of Aug. 13, 2014, Davis came to the store demanding $90 in unpaid wages.

Rizvi, Thornton and another employee Devonte Williams, 37, were all present.

Rizvi testified Davis and Thornton began to argue and tussle. Williams separated the two and put Davis in a back room, while Rizvi held back Thornton. Eventually, Thornton left the store, and a short time later, Davis followed.

Davis was found bloody and confused, shot in the head but alive, on the ground on Capitol Drive across from the store, just before 10 p.m. Witnesses told police to check out Annie’s. The next day, Reaves arrested Thornton at the store. He had a gun, later determined to have fired the shot that hit Davis.

Thornton agreed to testify and plead guilty to being a felon with a gun in exchange for prosecutor­s dismissing the attempted homicide charge. He was sentenced to three years on the gun count.

At Rizvi’s trial, Davis’ testimony didn’t track with his prior testimony at Williams’ trial, Thornton’s testimony or his own supposed statement to Reaves. The prosecutor admitted it changed “dramatical­ly” and the judge said the defense’s continued impeachmen­t of Davis was “like beating a dead horse.”

Reaves testified when she talked to Davis in the hospital, a week after he’d been shot in the head, he was alert and coherent. She testified that Davis told her Rizvi had shot him, which matched Thornton’s story.

Reaves did not record the hospital interview or have Davis sign a written version of his statement, and no other officer was present.

Williams, 37, was also charged with attempted homicide, as party to a crime. At his trial a year earlier, Davis — who suffered a brain injury from the shooting — testified he couldn’t remember anything about the night, other than that Thornton had grabbed him in the store and Thornton and Williams beat him up.

Reaves again testified to what she said Davis told her in the hospital: that Williams tried to strangle Davis and Rizvi pistol-whipped him until he passed out, he awoke later on grass outside with Rizvi standing over him with a gun, that he heard a shot and woke up two weeks later in a hospital.

Williams’ jury found him guilty of being party to the crime of attempted homicide. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Both his and Rizvi’s first appeals were filed without mention of Reaves’ comments at the threat sentencing. Rizvi’s new lawyer says that amounts to ineffective assistance of counsel and justification for raising the issue so late now.

Prosecutor­s have not yet filed a response to Rizvi’s motion to set aside his conviction, and no hearing date has been set.

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