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WAFB 844 Government Street Baton Rouge, LA 70802 (225) 383-9999
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More stories to check out before you go
BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) - In body camera video obtained by the 9News Investigators, a Baton Rouge police officer can be seen strip-searching a 16-year-old and his older brother during a traffic stop in broad daylight.
The body camera video is uncomfortable to watch in parts, as officers grab the genitals of the 16-year-old and his older brother, Clarence Green. As Green tells the officer he’s not allowed to grab him in that way, the officer is heard saying, “I can.”
One of the officers can then be seen doing the same to the 16-year-old, pulling up his shirt and snatching down his underwear while they grab around.
Baton Rouge police officers were looking for drugs on New Year’s Day in 2020 when they stopped the two men.
An attorney for the Green family told WAFB’s Scottie Hunter the officers stopped the young men in front of what the officers identified as a “known drug house” in initial incident reports.
Officers then showed up at Green’s home to take the teen to his mother. The attorney identified one of the officers as Sgt. Ken Camallo. The attorney said Camallo and other officers entered the home with guns drawn and without a warrant. The attorney said the mics on the body cameras were muted.
Outside, the video shows officers try to convince the mother to get a DNA swab from the teen. As Green tells his mother to call an attorney, officers pick a fight.
“If you don’t shut the f---k up, I’m going to come in and I’m going to f----k you up,” one officer can be heard yelling at Green.
“I’m talking to my mama,” Green responded.
“No, you’re causing a disturbance. You think I’m playing with you? I will f—k you up,” the officer said.
Green was locked up for a gun officers found during the search. He sat behind bars for several months until the charges were dropped. Legal expert Thomas Frampton represents the family. He calls just about everything the officers did during the traffic stop, “troubling.”
“In the course of about 90 minutes, these officers commit at least a half-dozen criminal offenses themselves,” said Frampton.
Frampton was able to fight for the family in court by filing a federal lawsuit against the city, the Baton Rouge Police Department, and the officers involved. That case was dismissed last week after the city paid the family a $35,000 settlement.
Frampton said that’s still not enough.
“I think that the family really wants accountability, and accountability is never going to come through money alone,” said Frampton.
State Representative Ted James also weighed in, saying while the family was able to get compensated for what happened, he believes the problem lies with what’s called qualified immunity. Under that provision, officers do not pay settlement fees. Instead, taxpayers will have to pay up. James weighed in on a bill introduced by Representative Edmond Jordan during the 2021 legislative session to change that.
“Officers escape liability and what happens is we, the community, continues to have to pay those lawsuits,” said James. “And without consequences, it’s just like my little girl. If I don’t establish some type of consequences, she’s not going to correct that behavior and right now, we have a culture in our state, in our city, and across the country where largely officers are escaping any type of responsibility.”
The 9News Investigators reached out to leaders at the Baton Rouge Police Department to inquire if Sgt. Camallo or any of the other officers involved have been disciplined. A spokesman said the case is still under review.
The spokesman also confirmed Sgt. Camallo remains on the force and has not been placed on leave pending the outcome of that review.
Frampton said even though this case has been settled, taxpayers will continue to be on the hook if something like this is allowed to happen.
“The fact that you are here in May [of] 2021, after the city has already paid out a civil rights settlement, and nothing has happened is deeply concerning. I didn’t learn until your news report at noon today that Sgt. Camallo is still walking the streets and frankly that does worry me. The Metro Council is more than happy to use taxpayer funds to make civil rights lawsuits go away but it’s deeply disturbing that when it comes to actually taking action against the wrongdoers involved, there seems to be a lot greater reluctance,” Frampton explained.
“We have ignored this systemic problem for far too long,” said James.
BRPD spokesman Sgt. L’Jean McKneely, Jr. says, in light of this incident, the department is reviewing its search policy to see if any changes need to be made.
“We will continue to do pat-downs but the extent of further searching is under review,” said McKneely.
The spokesman said the department’s Internal Affairs Division investigated the incident to determine whether any of the officers involved should face disciplinary measures. That investigation is complete but the findings are still being reviewed by BRPD Chief Murphy Paul, the spokesman said. McKneely said, prior to the search of the private parts of the two young men, officers found narcotics on the younger male and a weapon in the waistband of the older male.
Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome issued the following statement Wednesday evening:
“Today, the very disturbing footage of an encounter between BRPD and citizens of our community was released and has justifiably raised the eyebrows of many in our community.
I stand by the federal judicial ruling in this case and the explicit and detailed judgment that was cast concerning the officers involved and their actions. While the involved individuals have received a civil remedy in this matter, the officers involved must be held accountable.
Chief Paul has briefed me that BRPD initiated an investigation when the complaint was first received. The matter is in the administrative process. We take all actions of this sort very seriously. We cannot go down a path that continues to tear at the fabric of trust between law enforcement and citizens. Transparency and accountability are a must. This week, Chief Paul plans to publicly address this case and the disciplinary path forward.”
Copyright 2021 WAFB. All rights reserved.

WAFB 844 Government Street Baton Rouge, LA 70802 (225) 383-9999
A Gray Media Group, Inc. Station - © 2002-2022 Gray Television, Inc.
More stories to check out before you go
BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) - In body camera video obtained by the 9News Investigators, a Baton Rouge police officer can be seen strip-searching a 16-year-old and his older brother during a traffic stop in broad daylight.
The body camera video is uncomfortable to watch in parts, as officers grab the genitals of the 16-year-old and his older brother, Clarence Green. As Green tells the officer he’s not allowed to grab him in that way, the officer is heard saying, “I can.”
One of the officers can then be seen doing the same to the 16-year-old, pulling up his shirt and snatching down his underwear while they grab around.
Baton Rouge police officers were looking for drugs on New Year’s Day in 2020 when they stopped the two men.
An attorney for the Green family told WAFB’s Scottie Hunter the officers stopped the young men in front of what the officers identified as a “known drug house” in initial incident reports.
Officers then showed up at Green’s home to take the teen to his mother. The attorney identified one of the officers as Sgt. Ken Camallo. The attorney said Camallo and other officers entered the home with guns drawn and without a warrant. The attorney said the mics on the body cameras were muted.
Outside, the video shows officers try to convince the mother to get a DNA swab from the teen. As Green tells his mother to call an attorney, officers pick a fight.
“If you don’t shut the f---k up, I’m going to come in and I’m going to f----k you up,” one officer can be heard yelling at Green.
“I’m talking to my mama,” Green responded.
“No, you’re causing a disturbance. You think I’m playing with you? I will f—k you up,” the officer said.
Green was locked up for a gun officers found during the search. He sat behind bars for several months until the charges were dropped. Legal expert Thomas Frampton represents the family. He calls just about everything the officers did during the traffic stop, “troubling.”
“In the course of about 90 minutes, these officers commit at least a half-dozen criminal offenses themselves,” said Frampton.
Frampton was able to fight for the family in court by filing a federal lawsuit against the city, the Baton Rouge Police Department, and the officers involved. That case was dismissed last week after the city paid the family a $35,000 settlement.
Frampton said that’s still not enough.
“I think that the family really wants accountability, and accountability is never going to come through money alone,” said Frampton.
State Representative Ted James also weighed in, saying while the family was able to get compensated for what happened, he believes the problem lies with what’s called qualified immunity. Under that provision, officers do not pay settlement fees. Instead, taxpayers will have to pay up. James weighed in on a bill introduced by Representative Edmond Jordan during the 2021 legislative session to change that.
“Officers escape liability and what happens is we, the community, continues to have to pay those lawsuits,” said James. “And without consequences, it’s just like my little girl. If I don’t establish some type of consequences, she’s not going to correct that behavior and right now, we have a culture in our state, in our city, and across the country where largely officers are escaping any type of responsibility.”
The 9News Investigators reached out to leaders at the Baton Rouge Police Department to inquire if Sgt. Camallo or any of the other officers involved have been disciplined. A spokesman said the case is still under review.
The spokesman also confirmed Sgt. Camallo remains on the force and has not been placed on leave pending the outcome of that review.
Frampton said even though this case has been settled, taxpayers will continue to be on the hook if something like this is allowed to happen.
“The fact that you are here in May [of] 2021, after the city has already paid out a civil rights settlement, and nothing has happened is deeply concerning. I didn’t learn until your news report at noon today that Sgt. Camallo is still walking the streets and frankly that does worry me. The Metro Council is more than happy to use taxpayer funds to make civil rights lawsuits go away but it’s deeply disturbing that when it comes to actually taking action against the wrongdoers involved, there seems to be a lot greater reluctance,” Frampton explained.
“We have ignored this systemic problem for far too long,” said James.
BRPD spokesman Sgt. L’Jean McKneely, Jr. says, in light of this incident, the department is reviewing its search policy to see if any changes need to be made.
“We will continue to do pat-downs but the extent of further searching is under review,” said McKneely.
The spokesman said the department’s Internal Affairs Division investigated the incident to determine whether any of the officers involved should face disciplinary measures. That investigation is complete but the findings are still being reviewed by BRPD Chief Murphy Paul, the spokesman said. McKneely said, prior to the search of the private parts of the two young men, officers found narcotics on the younger male and a weapon in the waistband of the older male.
Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome issued the following statement Wednesday evening:
“Today, the very disturbing footage of an encounter between BRPD and citizens of our community was released and has justifiably raised the eyebrows of many in our community.
I stand by the federal judicial ruling in this case and the explicit and detailed judgment that was cast concerning the officers involved and their actions. While the involved individuals have received a civil remedy in this matter, the officers involved must be held accountable.
Chief Paul has briefed me that BRPD initiated an investigation when the complaint was first received. The matter is in the administrative process. We take all actions of this sort very seriously. We cannot go down a path that continues to tear at the fabric of trust between law enforcement and citizens. Transparency and accountability are a must. This week, Chief Paul plans to publicly address this case and the disciplinary path forward.”
Copyright 2021 WAFB. All rights reserved.

Published August 9, 2022 5:09pm EDT
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Authorities are trying to locate a 16-year-old California girl who mysteriously vanished from a campground party over the weekend.
A massive search effort was underway Tuesday morning for the missing California 16-year-old Kiely Rodni , who vanished after telling family she was going to head home from a high school graduation sendoff early Saturday.
The Placer County Sheriff’s Office has said they were investigating a possible abduction because the girl’s SUV was also unaccounted for. Rodni graduated from high school two years early, and it is unlike her to run away or fail to come home, according to her mother, Lindsey Rodni-Nieman.
A spokesperson told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that investigators were still "exploring all possibilities" and confirmed that teens were using alcohol and drugs at the party.
Rodni had enough drinks to become drunk, according to her friend and another recent graduate, Sami Smith, who added that she did not believe the teen would have driven under the circumstances.

Kiely Rodni shown in two undated photos
(findkiely.com)
"At the point when I left, I thought she was going to stay there," said Smith, who departed the campground just a few minutes before Rodni was last seen. "Everybody was camping. It was late enough that she should have stayed. She’s not the type to go and drunk drive or anything."
Smith said she spent most of the night with Rodni.
"For the amount of drinks we both had together, she’s not that dumb," she added. "I remember we were partying together. She was having fun. She seemed really happy — she was like normal, just on an adrenaline rush. Saying ‘Hi’ to everybody.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
But Rodni-Nieman says her daughter texted her around 12:15 a.m. Saturday and said she was heading home. The family lives about 10 miles away from the campground at a lodge south of town.
Smith, 18, said that there were plenty of attendees whom she had not previously met but none who seemed suspicious, gave unwanted attention or followed the pair around.
She said she didn’t notice anyone much older and that the party consisted mainly of teens, recent graduates and some college students from the surrounding areas. Some came from as far away as San Francisco , she said, but that was not unusual because the area is a summer vacation town.

Authorities brief a search-and-rescue team ahead of Tuesday morning's search for missing Kiely Rodni near Lake Tahoe.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
"We met a few strangers together," she said. "We both tended to trust people. I say ‘tended to’ because now I don’t think I will continue to trust people. But she’ll give anyone the benefit of the doubt."
Search crews and police from multiple counties scoured through the area beginning early Tuesday morning.
They started by searching Lake Prosser by boat as the land-based search party gathered on the shoreline.
The search also included several aircraft, including helicopters and airplanes flying in formation above, and all-terrain vehicles, including four-wheelers, trikes and dirt bikes. There were search dogs present and at least 100 members of law enforcement visible, including members of the FBI, who initially focused their attention on Campsite 4.
Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party. (Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party. (Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party. (Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
Crews pulled the boats from the water around noon and FBI agents were seen knocking on doors in the area. The FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
"Right now, we are currently searching many areas," said Angela Musallam, the Placer County Sheriff’s public information officer.
The party, which stretched from Friday night into Saturday morning at the Prosser Family Campground in the Tahoe National Forest , involved dozens or hundreds of kids from a handful of nearby communities in the rural area, including Truckee and North Lake.
Around 12:15 a.m., she texted her parents that she was heading home. However, according to her mother, no one has come forward to say they saw her leave, no one was with her at the time, and nobody could remember when she left or see her car drive away.
Her phone, which last pinged at the party, has been turned off. Authorities say her vehicle, a silver 2013 Honda CRV with the California license plate 8YUR127, is also unaccounted for.
Authorities are urging teens who were at the party to come forward, and the community announced a "Teen to Teen" information gathering event from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. PT at the Tahoe City Save Mart in an effort to get attendees talking.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
"We have had a lack of reach out from many Tahoe kids who were at the party or may know any information," the announcement reads. "We are only looking for information such as who was at the party that you may have seen [and] the times you came and left."
Rodni’s mother is asking anyone who attended the party and their parents to look through their photos, social media posts and videos for any signs of Rodni. Home and business owners in the surrounding area are also asked to check their surveillance cameras for signs of the girl on Aug. 5 and Aug. 6.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)
Storefronts and signposts in the surrounding area and as far away as Reno have been plastered with missing-person flyers.
Rodni is described as 5 feet, 7 inches tall and around 118 pounds. She has blonde hair and hazel eyes. She has a tattoo on her ribs of the number "17."

Kiely Rodni was last seen at a rural campground near the border of California and Nevada around 12:30 a.m., Saturday, according to local authorities.
(Placer County Sheriff)
She was last seen wearing green Dickies pants, a black tank top and jewelry, according to authorities. She has a nose ring and several other piercings.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Placer County Sheriff’s Office’s dedicated tip line at 530-581-6320. Callers can remain anonymous.
The California Highway Patrol is
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