Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 991833 times)

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3750 on: April 08, 2018, 07:43:03 PM »
NYPD chief’s son keeps job as cop despite getting busted for groping woman at Atlantic City casino

A rookie cop whose dad is an NYPD chief avoided getting fired after an off-duty arrest for groping a woman at an Atlantic City casino, police sources told the Daily News.

The department’s handling of Officer Joseph Essig’s case raises questions among police sources who suspect high-ranking officers and those close to them are treated with kid gloves in discipline cases.

Just 15 months into his brand-new NYPD career — on Oct. 8, 2015 — Essig was arrested at Harrah’s Casino in Atlantic City on a felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct.

New Jersey authorities downgraded the charge to a health code violation. Essig pleaded guilty, was ordered to stay away from the victim, and paid a $1,000 fine.

Officers facing similar charges with less than two years on the force are typically fired, say sources.

But Essig remains on the job. A police source said that’s “shocking.”

“Other probationary cops have been fired for way less,” said the source.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-chief-son-busted-groping-woman-job-article-1.3921217

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3751 on: April 08, 2018, 07:54:55 PM »
NYPD chief’s son keeps job as cop despite getting busted for groping woman at Atlantic City casino

A rookie cop whose dad is an NYPD chief avoided getting fired after an off-duty arrest for groping a woman at an Atlantic City casino, police sources told the Daily News.

The department’s handling of Officer Joseph Essig’s case raises questions among police sources who suspect high-ranking officers and those close to them are treated with kid gloves in discipline cases.

Just 15 months into his brand-new NYPD career — on Oct. 8, 2015 — Essig was arrested at Harrah’s Casino in Atlantic City on a felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct.

New Jersey authorities downgraded the charge to a health code violation. Essig pleaded guilty, was ordered to stay away from the victim, and paid a $1,000 fine.

Officers facing similar charges with less than two years on the force are typically fired, say sources.

But Essig remains on the job. A police source said that’s “shocking.”

“Other probationary cops have been fired for way less,” said the source.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-chief-son-busted-groping-woman-job-article-1.3921217


That’s the way to in still a sense of confidence & honesty into the public

1 rule for them - and a different rule for public

Not good not good at all.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3752 on: April 08, 2018, 07:59:22 PM »

That’s the way to in still a sense of confidence & honesty into the public

1 rule for them - and a different rule for public

Not good not good at all.

A felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct downgraded to a "health code violation"..

More from the article:

Quote
The NYPD did not publicize his arrest. For reasons not clear, the department only releases the names of officers arrested within the five boroughs.

Deputy Commissioner Phil Walzak, the NYPD’s top spokesman, did not address the question about alleged special treatment.

“The case was thoroughly reviewed and the officer in question was severely punished for his violation, in full accordance with department guidelines and regulations,” Walzak said in a statement.

Walzak wouldn’t say what the penalty was or where the officer is now assigned.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3753 on: April 08, 2018, 08:09:24 PM »
A felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct downgraded to a "health code violation"..

More from the article:




Quote
The NYPD did not publicize his arrest. For reasons not clear, the department only releases the names of officers arrested within the five boroughs.

Deputy Commissioner Phil Walzak, the NYPD’s top spokesman, did not address the question about alleged special treatment.

“The case was thoroughly reviewed and the officer in question was severely punished for his violation, in full accordance with department guidelines and regulations,” Walzak said in a statement.

Walzak wouldn’t say what the penalty was or where the officer is now assigned.



How the police chiefs can behave like this is staggering
Theyre A bunch of Criminals

Double standards & hypocrisy
If this is happening on a regular & large scale
( Witch it appears to be )
Is it any wonder society is crumbling

Those charged with LE enforcement
Are flouting it  ::)

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3754 on: April 10, 2018, 11:28:58 AM »
Not surprising but of course it's ironic that cop unions criticize this statement but there are elections coming up and they want their own goon to win. Also this statement would've made more sense if cops actually paid out of their pockets (or the union coffers who usually support cops when they shoot or kill someone) instead of the bill being sent to the taxpayers.

Sheriff: It's 'financially better' for cops to kill suspects than injure them

A California sheriff who's trying to beat his chief deputy and win re-election is fighting back after the release of a 2006 video in which he says it's "financially better” for cops to kill suspects than injure them.

Sheriff Donny Youngblood, of the Kern County Sheriff’s Office, told KBFX Eyewitness News Monday the 12-year-old statements were misquoted.

"I stand by the intent of what I was trying to get across -- that just because someone doesn't die doesn't mean we escape with less money or unharmed," Youngblood said. "Do I wish I would've said it differently? Absolutely. When you listen to the verbiage, it doesn't sound good. But I think the people of this county know that's not what I mean."

He went on to say the department’s officers are trained “to shoot to stop the threat -- not to kill.”

The video was recently discovered by the Kern County Detention Officers Association and was posted to Facebook. The union said in the post the department “was in desperate need of positive changes” and urged people to vote for a different sheriff.

The video shows Youngblood, who was a challenger for the office then, sitting at a table during an interview with the Kern County Detention Officers Association, arguing it was financially better for the department to kill a suspect rather than injure them.

“You know what happens when a guy makes a bad shooting on somebody and kills them? Three million bucks and the family goes away after a long back and forth,” Youngblood said.

“Which way do you think is better financially – to cripple them or kill them – for the county?” he asked. A person, who was not seen, replied “kill them.”

“Absolutely,” Youngblood replied. “Because, if they’re crippled, we get to take care of them for life. And that cost goes way up.”

Youngblood is being challenged by his chief deputy, Justin Fleeman, who has been endorsed by all three unions at the Kern County Sheriff’s Department.

Chris Ashley, the director of Kern County Detention Officers Association which posted the video, told The Guardian the group was “disgusted” by Youngblood’s comments.

“But we have been disgusted with Donny Youngblood’s leadership for more than a decade,” Ashley said. “Our personal feeling is that [Youngblood] doesn’t care about our families, and it has taken a toll on all of us...We’re exhausted. We can’t take it anymore.”

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3755 on: April 10, 2018, 11:35:15 AM »
Let's see if this criminal will face any real consequences or if he will be cleared as it usually happens. However, why didn't the other cops who were present actively restrain him or arrest him when he attacked the kid instead of letting him abuse her and only report him after he attacked? They should be treated as accomplices.

Video of Cop Beating 13-Year-Old Girl So Horrific, His Own Cops Turned Him In

Gloucester Township, PA — Body camera footage of a Gloucester Township police officer was recently released which captured the disturbing assault of a small 13-year-old girl by a massive cop. The attack was so deeply troubling that the officer has actually been suspended and subsequently charged—after his own cops turned on him.

The incident began on March 8 and was captured on another officer’s body camera. It shows Gloucester Township police officer John Flinn repeatedly punching and attempting to choke a small 13-year-old girl as he places her in handcuffs.

According to prosecutors the attack was entirely unprovoked as the girl was complying with the officer, yet he began attacking her anyway. Camden County prosecutors said the juvenile followed police instructions and allowed Flinn to handcuff her, but the crazed cop “struck her twice on the side of the face, causing her to cry out in pain.”

Police originally said they were responding to a disturbance call in the Camdem County township. However, no more details on why they contacted the 13-year-old girl have been released.

As the video shows, when the police are attempting to apprehend the young girl, she originally tells them to get off of her. However, she then quickly complies and lays down on her stomach.

As the girl calmly lays there, allowing Flinn to place her in cuffs, for no reason, he yells at her to stop resisting and begins punching the 13-year-old in the face. He then grabs her by the neck, doles out multiple knee strikes before shoving his 250-pound knee in the back of her neck. All the while, the girl is screaming in agony.

After the brutal beating caught on Flinn’s fellow officer’s body camera, the girl was taken to an area hospital to be evaluated and treated for injuries sustained during the attack. Not that there would be justification for a grown man to ever savagely beat a non-violent 13-year-old girl, however, to illustrate just how unnecessary the attack was—the girl was not charged with any crime.

What stands out about this case—aside from the obvious child-beating cop—is the fact that his conduct was reported, not by the victim, but by a fellow officer.

According to a statement obtained by the Free Thought Project, the Gloucester Township Police chief, Harry Earle explained that it was the officer’s supervisor who turned him in for the beating first, not the 13-year-old girl.

The incident occurred on March 8th, and it was initially investigated that evening by the officer’s supervisor who immediately recognized as what he believed behavior that was inconsistent with the training and values of the Gloucester Township Police Department. The supervisor contacted higher level police command who initiated a full internal affairs investigation under my authority. It is important to know that the initial supervisory review and subsequent internal affairs investigation were generated by the officer’s supervisor and not as a result of any civilian complaints.

Chief Earle went on to to explain that the subsequent investigation led to the officer being suspended on March 15 and finally to charges last week.

“I am proud that any employee of the Gloucester Township Police Department well understands that they must report any improper conduct. It is clear that all members of the department have the confidence that allegations of conduct that are improper, unlawful, or that do not meet the standards of our guiding principles of Honor, Integrity, Compassion, Respect, Fairness, and Courage will be thoroughly investigated and dealt with swiftly,” said the chief.

Chief Earle then went a step further and posted two email addresses at which citizens can follow up with complaints about any other officers or give the department feedback.

“Anyone who has a concern about an officer’s performance or actions may report that issue to Internal Affairs at professionalstandards@gtpolice.com. Officers also greatly appreciate positive feedback regarding their every day hard work and dedication and such messages may be sent to police@gtpolice.com,” read the statement.

As TFTP has reported countless times, police officers protecting their own by refusing to charge abusive and corrupt cops is what leads to the problem with policing we see today. The proactive nature of the Gloucester Township police department is what fixes this problem.

Normally, TFTP would ask our readers to contact the department and demand the officer be held accountable. However, that appears to be unnecessary this time and it is a positive sign. Now, if we can just figure out a way to stop cops from brutally attacking small girls—before it happens.

Below is the video that is so horrendous, cops crossed the thin blue line to go after one of their own. Warning, it contains graphic content.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/watch-good-cop-crosses-blue-line-to-report-fellow-cop-who-savagely-beat-13-year-old-girl/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3756 on: April 11, 2018, 01:15:29 PM »
Maybe the judge should start punishing this gang for contempt of court instead of tolerating this BS.

Judge says police stalling in release of Las Vegas shooting records

“I’m very frustrated, because I think that gamesmanship is going on here,” District Judge Stefany Miley said in the contentious hearing. “It’s now months since the shooting occurred, and it’s still the same: delay, delay, delay. If one technique doesn’t work, then you switch to another one. That’s very concerning for the court.”

https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/judge-says-police-stalling-in-release-of-las-vegas-shooting-records/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3757 on: April 12, 2018, 01:39:31 PM »
How did the student die? Aside from the seat crushing him, maybe it also has to do with the incompetence of 911 dispatchers and cops who went there twice and claimed they couldn't find anyone in a van.

How did student die in Seven Hills parking lot? Prosecutor Joe Deters launches full investigation

Quote
Just after 3 p.m. Tuesday, 16-year-old Kyle Jacob Plush called 911 panicking. Over the course of a three-minute call in which he gasped, cried repeatedly for help and struggled to communicate with the operator, he relayed that he was trapped inside his car in the parking lot of Seven Hills School.

"I probably don't have much time left, so tell my mom I love her if I die," he said.

The call ended; when officers checking out the scene attempted to call back, it went to voicemail.

A deputy sent to the scene soon after called in to report that he couldn't find anyone trapped in a van. He questioned if the call had been a prank.

Plush was there. He called again.

"This is not a joke," he said. "I am trapped inside a gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of Seven Hills. ... Send officers immediately. I'm almost dead."

https://www.wcpo.com/guy-found-dead-on-seven-hills-campus

Here's a timeline of what unfolded:

3:16 p.m. Plush calls 911
3:23 p.m. Call ends, and dispatcher assigns first unit to respond
3:26 p.m. First unit arrives on scene
3:37 p.m. Officers call back Plush’s phone and got voicemail; their assignment is marked complete
3:48 p.m. Deputy checks again
8:56  p.m. Passerby calls 911
8:58  p.m. Duplicate calls come in*
8:59 p.m. Dispatch advises a missing child was found in a vehicle -- Police and ambulance requested
9:11 p.m. Hamilton County officials put up crime scene tape
9:42 p.m. Officials direct traffic away from scene
11:55 p.m. Cincinnati Police Department closes incident
12:19 a.m. Criminal Investigations Section clears scene

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3758 on: April 13, 2018, 10:04:49 AM »
Police state in the UK? The surprise...

Police use Experian Marketing Data for AI Custody Decisions

https://bigbrotherwatch.org.uk/all-media/police-use-experian-marketing-data-for-ai-custody-decisions/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3759 on: April 18, 2018, 01:10:07 PM »
This cop and the others who conspired to cover this up need to rot in prison. Or maybe, per the cop's suggestion, ride the lightning. But as usual, if anything happens, the taxpayers will have to foot the bill.

Worker claims he was ‘railroaded’ by Walnut Ridge police

WALNUT RIDGE, Ark. – A railroad worker claims in a lawsuit he was physically assaulted by a police officer in Walnut Ridge for simply doing his job – and when he tried to file a complaint, he was charged with two crimes.

Now, the man is suing the City of Walnut Ridge, its police chief, mayor, and two officers involved. Meanwhile, city officials are unable to respond to requests by NEA Report for comment until discussions with legal counsel can take place.

[...]

At the intersection of Highway 63 and Highway 91 in Walnut Ridge, Finley was stopped by WRPD officer Matthew Mercado. Mercado asked Finley why he was working on the railroad crossing. Finley was in an unmarked white work truck but had all of his work equipment on including an orange work coat and badge. The BNSF employee explained he worked for the railroad. This is when the lawsuit says Mercado took issue with Finley’s attitude and asked him to step out of the vehicle.

Mercado then allegedly pushed Finley into the door, handcuffed him, and did so while cursing at him. He was eventually un-cuffed and released but not before Mercado told him he would “ride the lightning,” next time.

Finley went to Walnut Ridge Police Department to file a complaint right after this but that’s when he claims he was once again treated unfairly. He said he was interrogated by Chief of Police Chris Kirksey and Officer Matt Cook and following that, cited by Cook for refusal to submit and obstructing governmental operations.

The lawsuit calls this an attempted by the three law enforcement officers to “cover their actions” by charging Finley with two misdemeanor offenses.

Mercado left the department on Feb. 7, 2017.

On April 3, 2018, Finley was acquitted of all charges in Lawrence County District Court.




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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3760 on: April 18, 2018, 04:58:34 PM »
Just 10 days in prison? How many people were endangered or maybe even injured/killed because she hung up?

911 operator who hung up on emergency calls is sentenced to jail



A former 911 operator who hung up the phone "thousands" of times on people attempting to call in emergencies in Harris County, Texas has been sentenced to jail time.

Crenshanda Williams, 44, was found guilty of interference with emergency telephone calls Wednesday after "systematically" hanging up the phone on residents of Harris County, KTRK reported.

She was sentenced to 10 days in jail and 18 months probation.

Williams reportedly had an unusual number of "short calls," which were no longer than 20 seconds. Prosecutors, according to the Houston Chronicle, determined she hung up on "thousands" of calls.

In one instance, emergency caller Jim Moten told KTRK he called 911 in 2016 after he spotted two vehicles speeding on a highway where people had been killed from speeding weeks earlier and thought his call had dropped after a few seconds.

Court documents, according to the news station, stated that Williams had taken Moten's call and, before he could finish explaining his emergency, she reportedly said: "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real."

The dispatcher also hung up on a caller who tried to report a violent robbery, according to the Chronicle.

Williams reportedly spent a year and a half at the Houston Emergency Center taking 911 calls. She was caught in August 2016 and fired.

"The citizens of Harris County rely on 911 operators to dispatch help in their time of need," Assistant District Attorney Lauren Reeder said in a statement. "When a public servant betrays the community's trust and breaks the law, we have a responsibility to hold them criminally accountable."

Williams' attorney, Franklin Bynum, argued that his client "was going through a hard time in her life" when she hung up on the emergency calls, and said "punishing her doesn't do anything to fix the problems that still exist at the emergency center."

It's unclear what problems at the center Bynum was referring to.

The "state-of-the-art" center was opened in 2003 as a consolidation of Houston's three emergency communication centers.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/18/911-operator-who-hung-up-on-emergency-calls-is-sentenced-to-jail.html

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3761 on: April 19, 2018, 05:22:54 AM »
My fng lord 

Just 10 days in prison? How many people were endangered or maybe even injured/killed because she hung up?

911 operator who hung up on emergency calls is sentenced to jail



A former 911 operator who hung up the phone "thousands" of times on people attempting to call in emergencies in Harris County, Texas has been sentenced to jail time.

Crenshanda Williams, 44, was found guilty of interference with emergency telephone calls Wednesday after "systematically" hanging up the phone on residents of Harris County, KTRK reported.

She was sentenced to 10 days in jail and 18 months probation.

Williams reportedly had an unusual number of "short calls," which were no longer than 20 seconds. Prosecutors, according to the Houston Chronicle, determined she hung up on "thousands" of calls.

In one instance, emergency caller Jim Moten told KTRK he called 911 in 2016 after he spotted two vehicles speeding on a highway where people had been killed from speeding weeks earlier and thought his call had dropped after a few seconds.

Court documents, according to the news station, stated that Williams had taken Moten's call and, before he could finish explaining his emergency, she reportedly said: "Ain't nobody got time for this. For real."

The dispatcher also hung up on a caller who tried to report a violent robbery, according to the Chronicle.

Williams reportedly spent a year and a half at the Houston Emergency Center taking 911 calls. She was caught in August 2016 and fired.

"The citizens of Harris County rely on 911 operators to dispatch help in their time of need," Assistant District Attorney Lauren Reeder said in a statement. "When a public servant betrays the community's trust and breaks the law, we have a responsibility to hold them criminally accountable."

Williams' attorney, Franklin Bynum, argued that his client "was going through a hard time in her life" when she hung up on the emergency calls, and said "punishing her doesn't do anything to fix the problems that still exist at the emergency center."

It's unclear what problems at the center Bynum was referring to.

The "state-of-the-art" center was opened in 2003 as a consolidation of Houston's three emergency communication centers.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/18/911-operator-who-hung-up-on-emergency-calls-is-sentenced-to-jail.html

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3762 on: April 19, 2018, 01:17:58 PM »
Just 5 days in prison. The man they killed spent 4 times that before he died and he wasn't even tried or convicted.

Officers sentenced to only 5 days in jail for dehydrating man to death and covering it up

Island County, WA — In 2015, Keaton Farris, 25, was accused of trying to cash a $355 check that wasn’t written out him. After failing to appear for his court date, he was arrested on March 20. He would not leave the jail alive.

Now, after three years of trying to hold the officers responsible for his death accountable, Washington state’s version of “justice” has been served. The officers responsible for his death have been sentenced for their crimes. However, it is a kick in the teeth to Farris’ family.

As HeraldNet.com reports:

On Tuesday, two former Island County jail guards were sentenced for forging safety logs to make it seem like they’d been checking on Farris more often than they did.

David Wayne Lind, 55, and Mark Edward Moffit, 61, pleaded guilty to false reporting by a public officer, a gross misdemeanor. They were sentenced to a year in jail with all but three months suspended, a Whatcom County Superior Court judge ruled. Five days must be served behind bars. The remainder can be community service, outside of a jail.

For causing the death of a presumed innocent man—in one of the most horrifying ways possible—these two former jail officers will only spend five nights in jail.

“If we were outside of the jail, and we cut off somebody’s access to water, and we were in control of their environment, and we didn’t feed them enough — there’s no question that’s going to be a serious crime,” Fred Farris, Keaton’s father said.

“It was many people,” Whatcom County prosecutor, Dave McEachran said in court Tuesday. “It was the whole system that just wasn’t working. … It was a total failure by the entire staff, by people who should have known better.”

Indeed, as the story below points out, everything that could’ve been done wrong, was.

As TFTP reported at the time, Farris had no prior criminal record but had struggled with a history of mental illness. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2013, but had improved with medication, according to family members.

20 days after being taken into custody, on April 8, Farris was found dead in his cell.

After his death, Island County Sheriff Mark Brown released a report apologizing for dehydrating and starving this young man to death.

“I am truly sorry for this tragic death,” Brown wrote in the report. “Our highest priority is the safety and well-being of our inmates and staff and this report describes a systematic breakdown of policies, procedures and communication that led to this tragedy.”

“We are determined to do everything possible to minimize the chances of this kind of a tragedy from occurring in our jail ever again,” Brown said, adding he had met with Fred Farris, to express his condolences.

However, no apology will ever bring Fred Farris back his son.

What’s more, the “breakdown of policy” was actually a deliberate cover up of a man’s death in the custody of law enforcement.

In the days leading up Farris’ death, an incompetent system of brutality and neglect would come together to facilitate the killing of this young man.

Upon arriving at the Lynnwood jail, Farris pleaded with officers. He tried to tell them that he was off of his medication. His father even called in and told jail officials the same. However, these requests were ignored.

Instead of treating the obviously mentally ill and distressed man, Farris was met with force, tasers, and restraints. He would be transferred to multiple prisons as law enforcement officers refused to render aid.

He was moved to the Snohomish County Jail where staff made notes that Farris appeared “gravely disabled” and was displaying symptoms of psychosis, according to the Daily Herald.

The Herald reported at the time:

He arrived in Skagit County in a restraint chair and refused to speak. Jail staff were advised that he had been shocked with an electric stun gun while at the jail in Everett.

Skagit County corrections officers restrained him and requested he be seen by a designated mental health professional. That never happened because the request was too vague and there was a question about who had jurisdiction over the man.

He ended up at the jail in Coupeville because San Juan County doesn’t have a jail and uses Island County’s under a contract. When San Juan County deputies arrived in Skagit County to take custody of Farris he refused their commands to stand up, and he began to ramble.

During his stay at Coupeville, Farris had completely broken down. He then flooded his jail cell after putting his pillow in the toilet.

Instead of seeing this as the obvious mental condition that it was, officers simply cut the water off to his cell.

Jail policy is to check on an inmate in Farris’ condition once an hour, and according to their logs, jail officials did check on Farris. However, according to the surveillance footage, which doesn’t lie, they never checked on him.


Two days later, Farris would be found dead in his cell at 12:40 AM on April 8, 2015.

After his death, the system attempted to reform itself by hiring a new jail chief, Jose Briones, who has expertise in dealing with the mentally ill. Also, mental health professionals are now required to assess inmates daily and document their interactions.

After the sentencing, both officers expressed their remorse, but stopped short of taking the entirety of the blame and passed onto the culture of the jail at the time.

“I am so, so sorry for everything that happened here,” Lind said. “It’s unbelievable. When I found Mr. Farris deceased, I was stunned, I was shocked, I was in disbelief.”

“I agree with Mr. Lind. I was caught in the same trap that he was, in that jail,” said Moffit. He then turned to Keaton’s family and said through tears, “Most of all I want to apologize the family. To the mother, the father. I can’t even imagine. I accept whatever punishment they give me.”

As the Herald points out, Fred Farris has had a voice in the reforms at the jail. Yet he fears there will never be real justice for Keaton.

“At this point, if I had any control over this never happening to anybody again,” he said, “I’d do whatever it took to get there.”

https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-measly-5-day-jail-sentence-for-dehydrating-innocent-man-to-death/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3763 on: April 19, 2018, 01:43:51 PM »
Crazy

Just 5 days in prison. The man they killed spent 4 times that before he died and he wasn't even tried or convicted.

Officers sentenced to only 5 days in jail for dehydrating man to death and covering it up

Island County, WA — In 2015, Keaton Farris, 25, was accused of trying to cash a $355 check that wasn’t written out him. After failing to appear for his court date, he was arrested on March 20. He would not leave the jail alive.

Now, after three years of trying to hold the officers responsible for his death accountable, Washington state’s version of “justice” has been served. The officers responsible for his death have been sentenced for their crimes. However, it is a kick in the teeth to Farris’ family.

As HeraldNet.com reports:

On Tuesday, two former Island County jail guards were sentenced for forging safety logs to make it seem like they’d been checking on Farris more often than they did.

David Wayne Lind, 55, and Mark Edward Moffit, 61, pleaded guilty to false reporting by a public officer, a gross misdemeanor. They were sentenced to a year in jail with all but three months suspended, a Whatcom County Superior Court judge ruled. Five days must be served behind bars. The remainder can be community service, outside of a jail.

For causing the death of a presumed innocent man—in one of the most horrifying ways possible—these two former jail officers will only spend five nights in jail.

“If we were outside of the jail, and we cut off somebody’s access to water, and we were in control of their environment, and we didn’t feed them enough — there’s no question that’s going to be a serious crime,” Fred Farris, Keaton’s father said.

“It was many people,” Whatcom County prosecutor, Dave McEachran said in court Tuesday. “It was the whole system that just wasn’t working. … It was a total failure by the entire staff, by people who should have known better.”

Indeed, as the story below points out, everything that could’ve been done wrong, was.

As TFTP reported at the time, Farris had no prior criminal record but had struggled with a history of mental illness. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2013, but had improved with medication, according to family members.

20 days after being taken into custody, on April 8, Farris was found dead in his cell.

After his death, Island County Sheriff Mark Brown released a report apologizing for dehydrating and starving this young man to death.

“I am truly sorry for this tragic death,” Brown wrote in the report. “Our highest priority is the safety and well-being of our inmates and staff and this report describes a systematic breakdown of policies, procedures and communication that led to this tragedy.”

“We are determined to do everything possible to minimize the chances of this kind of a tragedy from occurring in our jail ever again,” Brown said, adding he had met with Fred Farris, to express his condolences.

However, no apology will ever bring Fred Farris back his son.

What’s more, the “breakdown of policy” was actually a deliberate cover up of a man’s death in the custody of law enforcement.

In the days leading up Farris’ death, an incompetent system of brutality and neglect would come together to facilitate the killing of this young man.

Upon arriving at the Lynnwood jail, Farris pleaded with officers. He tried to tell them that he was off of his medication. His father even called in and told jail officials the same. However, these requests were ignored.

Instead of treating the obviously mentally ill and distressed man, Farris was met with force, tasers, and restraints. He would be transferred to multiple prisons as law enforcement officers refused to render aid.

He was moved to the Snohomish County Jail where staff made notes that Farris appeared “gravely disabled” and was displaying symptoms of psychosis, according to the Daily Herald.

The Herald reported at the time:

He arrived in Skagit County in a restraint chair and refused to speak. Jail staff were advised that he had been shocked with an electric stun gun while at the jail in Everett.

Skagit County corrections officers restrained him and requested he be seen by a designated mental health professional. That never happened because the request was too vague and there was a question about who had jurisdiction over the man.

He ended up at the jail in Coupeville because San Juan County doesn’t have a jail and uses Island County’s under a contract. When San Juan County deputies arrived in Skagit County to take custody of Farris he refused their commands to stand up, and he began to ramble.

During his stay at Coupeville, Farris had completely broken down. He then flooded his jail cell after putting his pillow in the toilet.

Instead of seeing this as the obvious mental condition that it was, officers simply cut the water off to his cell.

Jail policy is to check on an inmate in Farris’ condition once an hour, and according to their logs, jail officials did check on Farris. However, according to the surveillance footage, which doesn’t lie, they never checked on him.


Two days later, Farris would be found dead in his cell at 12:40 AM on April 8, 2015.

After his death, the system attempted to reform itself by hiring a new jail chief, Jose Briones, who has expertise in dealing with the mentally ill. Also, mental health professionals are now required to assess inmates daily and document their interactions.

After the sentencing, both officers expressed their remorse, but stopped short of taking the entirety of the blame and passed onto the culture of the jail at the time.

“I am so, so sorry for everything that happened here,” Lind said. “It’s unbelievable. When I found Mr. Farris deceased, I was stunned, I was shocked, I was in disbelief.”

“I agree with Mr. Lind. I was caught in the same trap that he was, in that jail,” said Moffit. He then turned to Keaton’s family and said through tears, “Most of all I want to apologize the family. To the mother, the father. I can’t even imagine. I accept whatever punishment they give me.”

As the Herald points out, Fred Farris has had a voice in the reforms at the jail. Yet he fears there will never be real justice for Keaton.

“At this point, if I had any control over this never happening to anybody again,” he said, “I’d do whatever it took to get there.”

https://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-measly-5-day-jail-sentence-for-dehydrating-innocent-man-to-death/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3764 on: April 19, 2018, 02:03:33 PM »
Police state UK... Wait till they hear about the mugshot industry in the US...

'Too expensive' to delete millions of police mugshots of innocent people, minister claims

Millions of police mugshots of innocent people cannot be deleted because it would be too expensive, a government minister has claimed – despite a High Court ruling that the practice is unlawful.

The work would have to be “done manually” by local forces, making the costs “difficult to justify”, a committee of MPs investigating the controversy has been told.

The Home Office has also admitted it has no idea how many people have successfully asked for their mugshots to be deleted – amid suspicions that the figure is very low.

The revelations were quickly attacked by Norman Lamb, the chairman of the science and technology committee, who has warned the mass retention of facial images raises “fundamental civil liberty issues”.

They come just days after it was revealed the Home Office destroyed landing cards which could have helped Windrush arrivals prove their right to stay in the UK - allegedly to comply with data protection laws.

“Innocent people should rightly expect that images gathered of them in relation to a crime will be removed if they are not convicted,” Mr Lamb, a Liberal Democrat, said.

“This is increasingly important as police forces step up the use of facial recognition at high profile events – including the Notting Hill Carnival for the past two years.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/police-mugshots-innocent-people-cant-delete-expensive-mp-committee-high-court-ruling-a8310896.html

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3765 on: April 19, 2018, 03:20:54 PM »
Criminal gang. How many others like them that are not caught and extort, terrorize, steal, abuse of kill?

Affidavit: Police officers tried to sneak drugs into Memphis, caught during undercover sting



MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Two Memphis police officers are facing felony drugs charges after they were busted during an elaborate undercover sting, according to documents obtained by FOX13.

Kevin Coleman and Terrion Bryson are charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to manufacture, deliver, and sell – along with criminal attempt felony and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

In February, the Memphis Police Department’s Organized Crime Unit received information that officers Coleman and Bryson were stealing money and drugs during traffic stops, according to an affidavit of complaint.

Investigators said the officers conducted two traffics stops while on duty as MPD officers in which they stole money from an undercover officer.

https://www.fox13memphis.com/top-stories/affidavit-police-officers-tried-to-sneak-drugs-into-memphis-caught-during-undercover-sting/731754901

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3766 on: April 19, 2018, 07:49:55 PM »
NYPD chief’s son keeps job as cop despite getting busted for groping woman at Atlantic City casino

A rookie cop whose dad is an NYPD chief avoided getting fired after an off-duty arrest for groping a woman at an Atlantic City casino, police sources told the Daily News.

The department’s handling of Officer Joseph Essig’s case raises questions among police sources who suspect high-ranking officers and those close to them are treated with kid gloves in discipline cases.

Just 15 months into his brand-new NYPD career — on Oct. 8, 2015 — Essig was arrested at Harrah’s Casino in Atlantic City on a felony charge of criminal sexual misconduct.

New Jersey authorities downgraded the charge to a health code violation. Essig pleaded guilty, was ordered to stay away from the victim, and paid a $1,000 fine.

Officers facing similar charges with less than two years on the force are typically fired, say sources.

But Essig remains on the job. A police source said that’s “shocking.”

“Other probationary cops have been fired for way less,” said the source.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/nypd-chief-son-busted-groping-woman-job-article-1.3921217

This is exactly what I talk about when I say there needs to be zero tolerance for this kind of behavior. And the fact he is related to an asst chief just smells of favoritism. This is a clear sign this guy is a problem and will continue to be a problem. I have been intoxicated many times and easliy avoided groping strange females. This is a guy who will be a cancer to the department. and it certainly points out the police department isn't where it needs to be. 

Slapper

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3767 on: April 21, 2018, 04:29:07 AM »
This cop and the others who conspired to cover this up need to rot in prison. Or maybe, per the cop's suggestion, ride the lightning. But as usual, if anything happens, the taxpayers will have to foot the bill.

Worker claims he was ‘railroaded’ by Walnut Ridge police

WALNUT RIDGE, Ark. – A railroad worker claims in a lawsuit he was physically assaulted by a police officer in Walnut Ridge for simply doing his job – and when he tried to file a complaint, he was charged with two crimes.

Now, the man is suing the City of Walnut Ridge, its police chief, mayor, and two officers involved. Meanwhile, city officials are unable to respond to requests by NEA Report for comment until discussions with legal counsel can take place.

[...]

At the intersection of Highway 63 and Highway 91 in Walnut Ridge, Finley was stopped by WRPD officer Matthew Mercado. Mercado asked Finley why he was working on the railroad crossing. Finley was in an unmarked white work truck but had all of his work equipment on including an orange work coat and badge. The BNSF employee explained he worked for the railroad. This is when the lawsuit says Mercado took issue with Finley’s attitude and asked him to step out of the vehicle.

Mercado then allegedly pushed Finley into the door, handcuffed him, and did so while cursing at him. He was eventually un-cuffed and released but not before Mercado told him he would “ride the lightning,” next time.

Finley went to Walnut Ridge Police Department to file a complaint right after this but that’s when he claims he was once again treated unfairly. He said he was interrogated by Chief of Police Chris Kirksey and Officer Matt Cook and following that, cited by Cook for refusal to submit and obstructing governmental operations.

The lawsuit calls this an attempted by the three law enforcement officers to “cover their actions” by charging Finley with two misdemeanor offenses.

Mercado left the department on Feb. 7, 2017.

On April 3, 2018, Finley was acquitted of all charges in Lawrence County District Court.





I fucking HATE cops dude.

There's a reason people lose faith in our government, and these pigs are the main culprit.

Slapper

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3768 on: April 21, 2018, 04:40:24 AM »
If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3769 on: April 21, 2018, 12:22:44 PM »
If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.


Jeezus that a huge sum of money !!
You would’ve thought something would be done about that
More than likely that $ amount is paid out of the public / taxpayers pot
Not the Brutal Thugs pockets who should be paying

Soul Crusher

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3770 on: April 21, 2018, 01:09:29 PM »
If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.

Until these sums are paid by the cops themselves or the union nothing will change

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3771 on: April 21, 2018, 01:13:03 PM »
If people don't think police brutality ISN'T an issue, riddle me this: Why are cities like New York doling out more than ½ billion dollars every year now to settle out of court police brutality and misconduct cases?

If you don't think this ISN'T an issue, it's ok. Some day, companies will have to list "settlement of police brutality/misconduct cases" in the deductions section of your paycheck.

The usual excuse for criminal cops and their apologists is that greedy people abuse the system with baseless lawsuits and that nothing really happened (after all the cops “investigated” themselves and consequently cleared themselves of any wrongdoing) but they deem it’s cheaper for the city to pay the “greedy” victims to shut up while of course not admitting any wrongdoing or accepting responsibility. Maybe things would be different if those involved in the abuse pay out of their pockets and actually get punished instead of getting paid vacation and sending the bill to the taxpayers. Start paying all these abuse cases with money from the pockets of the cops involved or from the police department’s payroll or pension fund or from the union coffers and maybe then things will change, a little.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3772 on: April 21, 2018, 01:18:55 PM »
The lazy bums didn't even get out of their car yet still claim they "investigated". They must be held responsible for this kid's death.

Body camera footage shows police never got out of cruiser to check for Ohio teen crushed by minivan seat

Body camera footage from two Cincinnati officers showed they never left their patrol car to investigate the 911 calls about a teen being stuck in a minivan last week.

Kyle Plush, 16, called 911 twice on April 10, 2018, from inside a minivan begging for help and providing a dispatcher with a description and location of the vehicle in a school parking lot. Plush suffocated after he became trapped under the third-row seat that flipped and pinned him while he was trying to reach his tennis equipment. Police said Amber Smith, the 911 operator who answered Plush’s second call, failed to relay information to the additional officers who were at the scene.

During the call, Plush explained to Smith the call was not a joke.

"I am trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of the Seven Hills...Send officers immediately," Plush pleaded. "I’m almost dead.”

Smith, who has been a 911 operator for four years, returned to work this week after being put on administrative leave. She told supervisors her computer froze and she was unable to put information into the system. She also told her supervisors she didn't hear the teenager, according to a police quality review report obtained by FOX19.  

The footage showed Officers Edsel Osborne and Brian Brazile driving their cruiser around the parking lot but not leaving the vehicle, WCPO reported. Music appeared to be playing in the background.

"I don't see nobody, which I didn't imagine I would,” one of the officers was heard saying.

“I’m going to shut this off,” one of the officers was heard saying.




Records showed officers were at the school for about 11 minutes.

The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the footage also shows the officers did not check all the school's parking lots.

Osborne and Brazile were not placed on administrative leave, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

Tiffany Hardy, a spokesperson for the Cincinnati Police Department, said the footage was “the entirety of what was recorded.”

A Hamilton County deputy who was directing traffic also looked for the teen but did not find anything.

Another officer was told to respond to the scene later in the day but thought the call was a joke.

"I think somebody's playing pranks. It was something about they were locked in a vehicle across from the school, we never found anything. But we'll respond and see what else we can find," an officer was heard saying in the radio transmission.

Plush was found dead hours later by his father.

Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac has called for an internal investigation into the teen’s death and why first responders failed to help him.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/21/body-camera-footage-shows-police-never-got-out-cruiser-to-check-for-ohio-teen-crushed-by-minivan-seat.html


Soul Crusher

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3773 on: April 21, 2018, 04:05:57 PM »
Sickenimg.    Tha poor father.

The lazy bums didn't even get out of their car yet still claim they "investigated". They must be held responsible for this kid's death.

Body camera footage shows police never got out of cruiser to check for Ohio teen crushed by minivan seat

Body camera footage from two Cincinnati officers showed they never left their patrol car to investigate the 911 calls about a teen being stuck in a minivan last week.

Kyle Plush, 16, called 911 twice on April 10, 2018, from inside a minivan begging for help and providing a dispatcher with a description and location of the vehicle in a school parking lot. Plush suffocated after he became trapped under the third-row seat that flipped and pinned him while he was trying to reach his tennis equipment. Police said Amber Smith, the 911 operator who answered Plush’s second call, failed to relay information to the additional officers who were at the scene.

During the call, Plush explained to Smith the call was not a joke.

"I am trapped inside my gold Honda Odyssey van in the parking lot of the Seven Hills...Send officers immediately," Plush pleaded. "I’m almost dead.”

Smith, who has been a 911 operator for four years, returned to work this week after being put on administrative leave. She told supervisors her computer froze and she was unable to put information into the system. She also told her supervisors she didn't hear the teenager, according to a police quality review report obtained by FOX19.  

The footage showed Officers Edsel Osborne and Brian Brazile driving their cruiser around the parking lot but not leaving the vehicle, WCPO reported. Music appeared to be playing in the background.

"I don't see nobody, which I didn't imagine I would,” one of the officers was heard saying.

“I’m going to shut this off,” one of the officers was heard saying.




Records showed officers were at the school for about 11 minutes.

The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the footage also shows the officers did not check all the school's parking lots.

Osborne and Brazile were not placed on administrative leave, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

Tiffany Hardy, a spokesperson for the Cincinnati Police Department, said the footage was “the entirety of what was recorded.”

A Hamilton County deputy who was directing traffic also looked for the teen but did not find anything.

Another officer was told to respond to the scene later in the day but thought the call was a joke.

"I think somebody's playing pranks. It was something about they were locked in a vehicle across from the school, we never found anything. But we'll respond and see what else we can find," an officer was heard saying in the radio transmission.

Plush was found dead hours later by his father.

Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac has called for an internal investigation into the teen’s death and why first responders failed to help him.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/21/body-camera-footage-shows-police-never-got-out-cruiser-to-check-for-ohio-teen-crushed-by-minivan-seat.html



Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3774 on: April 22, 2018, 02:18:45 AM »
Listen to that scumbag... This is a "judge".. Would be better if she was locked up in a white padded room with a straitjacket. It happened in Broward County, that place must be a cesspit.

Wheelchair user dies days after 'tyrannical' judge ignores request for breathing treatment
Judge Merrilee Ehrlich resigns from current post after outcry


FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - Days after Broward County Circuit Judge Merrilee Ehrlich told an inmate her request for medical care was irrelevant, the woman died at home, relatives said Friday.

Ehrlich resigned late Friday from her current position after some in the legal community criticized the judge for her behavior that day.

Sandra Faye Twiggs, a 59-year-old wheelchair user with a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma, was arrested for domestic violence in Lauderhill April 13, according to the arrest report.



https://www.local10.com/news/florida/broward/wheelchair-user-dies-after-tyrannical-judge-ignores-request-for-breathing-treatment