Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 994415 times)

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2825 on: March 23, 2016, 04:51:16 PM »
88 Cops Dox and Stalk Fellow Officer Because She Arrested a Cop for Reckless Driving

After arresting a fellow officer for speeding over 120mph, a Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) trooper recently received a settlement connected to fellow cops illegally obtaining her personal information. Although 88 law enforcement officers were accused of illegally accessing her information over 200 times and threatening her, only two cops have been named in a settled lawsuit.

On October 11, 2011, FHP trooper Donna “Jane” Watts pulled over off-duty Miami Police Officer Fausto Lopez for driving through Broward County in his marked patrol car at speeds exceeding 120mph. Caught on Watts’ dash cam video, Lopez refused to stop his vehicle for several minutes before finally deciding to pull over on the wrong side of the highway.

After Watts cuffed and processed the reckless off-duty cop for speeding, at least 88 law enforcement officers illegally accessed her personal information over 200 times to retaliate against the female cop for breaking the thin blue line. Instead of upholding the law, dozens of disgruntled cops illegally accessed Watts’ home address, picture, Social Security number, date of birth, and detailed vehicle description.

According to Watts’ lawsuit, at least 88 cops from 25 jurisdictions illegally accessed her information, issued threatening phone calls, and lingered in police vehicles in front of her residence for no justifiable reason. Due to the fact that law enforcement officers regularly break speeding laws, a multitude of cops launched a covert psychological war against Watts for calling out one of their own. According to a three-month Sun Sentinel investigation, 800 cops from a dozen agencies have been caught illegally driving between 90 and 130mph on our highways.

On February 29, Hollywood officials mailed a $5,000 settlement to Watts after she accused officers Robert Gianino and Keith Wadsworth of accessing her driver’s license information three times for non-police-related reasons. Before Watts even filed suit, the city of Margate settled for $10,000 while the city of Lauderhill settled for $7,500 after their cops illegally accessed her info.

Pending cases include allegedly crooked cops from the Broward Sheriff’s Office, the cities of Miami, Orlando, Port St. Lucie, and 14 employees of the FHP, who illegally accessed Watts’ personal information. Instead of using a database to locate potential criminals, these reckless cops utilized that clandestine information against one of their own. Although the honest officer has received several settlements paid by taxpayers, no corrupt cop has received punitive damages for breaking the law and screwing over a fellow cop.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trooperlawsuitretaliateofficer/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2826 on: March 23, 2016, 04:54:06 PM »
Cop Who Filmed Himself Raping Children and Having Sex with a Dog Gets Measly Sentence

Shrewsbury, ENG — Officer Derren Tomlinson, 44, with the West Mercia Police department was sentenced to 11 years in prison this week for unspeakable crimes against children and animals. The allegations against this well-respected police officer of nine years shocked the town.
This model public servant was convicted of raping a girl under 13-years-old, sexual assault on a child, and bestiality. His offensively short sentence is likely due to the fact that he was a law enforcement officer.

When sentencing Tomlinson, Judge Robin Onions said he was “utterly unsuited to being a (police officer)” — an understatement, to say the least.
Tomlinson’s horrid acts took place last October. The department found out about them after looking through his phone which revealed a number of photos showing him raping a child. Also on the phone, was a video of Tomlinson engaging in sexual intercourse with a dog.
“He still struggles, feeling more sorry for himself than what he’s done,” the judge said of Tomlinson.

The judge was quick to respect the man’s uniform by saying these offences had “absolutely no link” to his job. However, a child rapist doesn’t magically morph in to a hero when donning a badge and a uniform. If this man had the opportunity to use his authority to act on his dark desires, he more likely than not exploited it. Every child — and dog, he came in contact with was in danger.

The evidence against Tomlinson was so strong, even his defense attorney was forced to renounce the man, but quickly noted that the officer was “remorseful.”
“I’ve not been instructed nor do I minimise the gravity of the offences,” attorney Dan White said. “He knows what he has done is deplorable and he is remorseful. He pleaded guilty immediately before the court and he was of previous good character.”

The ability to refer to a child rapist and dog despoiler as having “good character” is uniquely appalling and illustrates society’s tendency to idolize the uniform regardless of the vile human creature that occupies it.

The fact that people face significantly longer sentences for possessing drugs than this officer is facing is an insult to the term justice — however, it is par for the course in lax punishments doled out to the thin blue line.

Sexual misconduct is the second highest of all complaints nationwide against police officers, representing 9.3 percent in 2010, according to a study by the Cato Institute’s National Police Misconduct Reporting Project.

A cop in Plano, TX was arrested twice within a 3 week period for indecency with a child and possession of child porn.

We also reported on an officer in charge of a rape case who is accused of stalking and sexually harassing the victim.

Oklahoma made headlines with three serial rapists, in 3 weeks, all officers, as well as one police chief molesting children. Officer Daniel Holtzclaw was one of the worst serial rapists of all time and he was given authority over innocent people.

An ‘Officer of the Month’ brutally raped a young woman on the hood of his car, at gunpoint. He was later found not guilty after he merely claimed that the girl was asking for it.
A former New York Police Department officer convicted of planning to kidnap and rape women before killing and eating them was set to go free after a federal judge overturned his conviction.

Or how about the police officer that was found guilty of raping a girl with a pencil; she was 5!

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-filmed-raping-children-sex-dog-measly-sentence/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2827 on: March 25, 2016, 09:49:48 AM »
82-yo Grandma Hospitalized After Chicago Cops Wrongly Raid Her Home Looking for Drugs

Chicago, IL — Elizabeth Harrison, 82, used to tell kids to “respect the law.” Then on March 17, a gang of Chicago cops raided her home, busting down the door and holding her at gunpoint. Because of this trauma, Harrison had to be rushed to the hospital.

The great-grandmother said police must have had the wrong house, but they insist it was the correct address based on intelligence. No one believed her when she said she was a widow and lived alone. Harrison was made to sit in a chair, overwhelmed with anxiety, while they searched her home for drugs.

“They were there with the guns drawn: “Put your hands up! Put your hands up! Put your hands up!” Harrison said…
“They wanted me to produce this young man that they were looking for. And they would not take no for an answer that I didn’t know him,” she said. “I almost had a heart attack.”

As police swarmed the block, Harrison’s daughter who lives nearby rushed to the house.
“They had her sitting in a chair, and her breathing was like (heavy breathing sounds),” said Linda Channel, her daughter.”
The police were so incompetent, that the guy they were looking for showed up and said, “You all came to the wrong house. I live at 126, and this is 136.”

The cops found no drugs at Harrison’s home, of course. She described the ordeal to ABC7 while her heart rate was being monitored at Roseland Hospital. Now she questions the trust she had in police.
“I always tell my young people, ‘Respect the law,'” Harrison said. “But to have them come in and do what they did to me, something is wrong. Really wrong.”

The Chicago Police Department (CPD) maintains that they raided the correct address based on intelligence. Police are not apologizing to the traumatized great-grandmother, but they will pay for the broken locks and front door.

With stories like this, it’s no wonder Chicago racked up a $662 million police misconduct bill since 2004. As we reported a few days ago, that means taxpayers pay out $7,000 an hour, 24 hours a day, to compensate victims and their families.

The family of Laquan McDonald received $5 million last year after video emerged of a Chicago cop ruthlessly gunning him down, repeatedly firing into his body as he lay on the ground.
CPD officers have a history of shooting men as they run away, then lying about it until video proves them wrong. Homan Square is nothing short of a black site, where 7,000 people have disappeared over the course of 11 years.

For Chicago cops, scaring the life out of a great-grandmother living alone is just another day on the job.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chicago-cops-hospitalize-great-grandmother/

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2828 on: March 25, 2016, 03:26:05 PM »
88 Cops Dox and Stalk Fellow Officer Because She Arrested a Cop for Reckless Driving

After arresting a fellow officer for speeding over 120mph, a Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) trooper recently received a settlement connected to fellow cops illegally obtaining her personal information. Although 88 law enforcement officers were accused of illegally accessing her information over 200 times and threatening her, only two cops have been named in a settled lawsuit.

On October 11, 2011, FHP trooper Donna “Jane” Watts pulled over off-duty Miami Police Officer Fausto Lopez for driving through Broward County in his marked patrol car at speeds exceeding 120mph. Caught on Watts’ dash cam video, Lopez refused to stop his vehicle for several minutes before finally deciding to pull over on the wrong side of the highway.

After Watts cuffed and processed the reckless off-duty cop for speeding, at least 88 law enforcement officers illegally accessed her personal information over 200 times to retaliate against the female cop for breaking the thin blue line. Instead of upholding the law, dozens of disgruntled cops illegally accessed Watts’ home address, picture, Social Security number, date of birth, and detailed vehicle description.

According to Watts’ lawsuit, at least 88 cops from 25 jurisdictions illegally accessed her information, issued threatening phone calls, and lingered in police vehicles in front of her residence for no justifiable reason. Due to the fact that law enforcement officers regularly break speeding laws, a multitude of cops launched a covert psychological war against Watts for calling out one of their own. According to a three-month Sun Sentinel investigation, 800 cops from a dozen agencies have been caught illegally driving between 90 and 130mph on our highways.

On February 29, Hollywood officials mailed a $5,000 settlement to Watts after she accused officers Robert Gianino and Keith Wadsworth of accessing her driver’s license information three times for non-police-related reasons. Before Watts even filed suit, the city of Margate settled for $10,000 while the city of Lauderhill settled for $7,500 after their cops illegally accessed her info.

Pending cases include allegedly crooked cops from the Broward Sheriff’s Office, the cities of Miami, Orlando, Port St. Lucie, and 14 employees of the FHP, who illegally accessed Watts’ personal information. Instead of using a database to locate potential criminals, these reckless cops utilized that clandestine information against one of their own. Although the honest officer has received several settlements paid by taxpayers, no corrupt cop has received punitive damages for breaking the law and screwing over a fellow cop.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trooperlawsuitretaliateofficer/








Not much hope for the few Honest Decent Cops.
This Just Highlights the Huge Problem in Policing.

Where is agnostic to comment - we seem to have lost him from
This thread.

Maybe just maybe he is seeing & accepting what we all already know.
And he seems like a 'decent good cop'.

It's got to be very tough to see & hear of so much evil,wrongdoing & corruption
All around you & be part of the Group responsible, when your a 'Good one'.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2829 on: March 25, 2016, 04:59:31 PM »







Not much hope for the few Honest Decent Cops.
This Just Highlights the Huge Problem in Policing.

Where is agnostic to comment - we seem to have lost him from
This thread.

Maybe just maybe he is seeing & accepting what we all already know.
And he seems like a 'decent good cop'.

It's got to be very tough to see & hear of so much evil,wrongdoing & corruption
All around you & be part of the Group responsible, when your a 'Good one'.

This story shows how these cops operated as a criminal organization and how their law enforcement capacity facilitated their mob tactics. No different than the mafia who would threaten and terrorize anyone who did not submit to their demands. Of course there is no personal accountability, the bill always goes to the taxpayers.

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2830 on: March 25, 2016, 06:36:41 PM »
This story shows how these cops operated as a criminal organization and how their law enforcement capacity facilitated their mob tactics. No different than the mafia who would threaten and terrorize anyone who did not submit to their demands. Of course there is no personal accountability, the bill always goes to the taxpayers.




Yes very true.
They ( cops ) are the biggest mafia gang in the country
With all the latest technologies to aid them.
That is why they loathe & try their hardest to destroy any other
Highly organised gang..
They Can't have their total control & domination threatened -- of course
They hide behind the mask of doing/ protecting For The Good of the Public.

As you have oh so very often posted it is Them Who Innocent People
Need protecting from.

Ha, yes the irony that then the Public Have to pay for their wrong doing.
Win win situation for the cops.

Deacon Jeschin

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2831 on: March 26, 2016, 09:59:31 AM »
88 Cops Dox and Stalk Fellow Officer Because She Arrested a Cop for Reckless Driving

After arresting a fellow officer for speeding over 120mph, a Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) trooper recently received a settlement connected to fellow cops illegally obtaining her personal information. Although 88 law enforcement officers were accused of illegally accessing her information over 200 times and threatening her, only two cops have been named in a settled lawsuit.

On October 11, 2011, FHP trooper Donna “Jane” Watts pulled over off-duty Miami Police Officer Fausto Lopez for driving through Broward County in his marked patrol car at speeds exceeding 120mph. Caught on Watts’ dash cam video, Lopez refused to stop his vehicle for several minutes before finally deciding to pull over on the wrong side of the highway.

After Watts cuffed and processed the reckless off-duty cop for speeding, at least 88 law enforcement officers illegally accessed her personal information over 200 times to retaliate against the female cop for breaking the thin blue line. Instead of upholding the law, dozens of disgruntled cops illegally accessed Watts’ home address, picture, Social Security number, date of birth, and detailed vehicle description.

According to Watts’ lawsuit, at least 88 cops from 25 jurisdictions illegally accessed her information, issued threatening phone calls, and lingered in police vehicles in front of her residence for no justifiable reason. Due to the fact that law enforcement officers regularly break speeding laws, a multitude of cops launched a covert psychological war against Watts for calling out one of their own. According to a three-month Sun Sentinel investigation, 800 cops from a dozen agencies have been caught illegally driving between 90 and 130mph on our highways.

On February 29, Hollywood officials mailed a $5,000 settlement to Watts after she accused officers Robert Gianino and Keith Wadsworth of accessing her driver’s license information three times for non-police-related reasons. Before Watts even filed suit, the city of Margate settled for $10,000 while the city of Lauderhill settled for $7,500 after their cops illegally accessed her info.

Pending cases include allegedly crooked cops from the Broward Sheriff’s Office, the cities of Miami, Orlando, Port St. Lucie, and 14 employees of the FHP, who illegally accessed Watts’ personal information. Instead of using a database to locate potential criminals, these reckless cops utilized that clandestine information against one of their own. Although the honest officer has received several settlements paid by taxpayers, no corrupt cop has received punitive damages for breaking the law and screwing over a fellow cop.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/trooperlawsuitretaliateofficer/

This is the true definition of a win-win scene.

Lowlife pigs fighting amongst themselves over treatment of another lowlife pig......

Must be great to go to work every day in that shit department.  Fuk em all........

Come on, you group of high school diploma owning, uniform wearing vermin, let's see a multiple murder-suicide story......


Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2832 on: March 26, 2016, 01:44:53 PM »
Texas Man Exonerated of False Charges by Home Video Camera Files Lawsuit Against Local Sheriff’s Office

Texas resident Lawrence Faulkenberry spent ten nights in jail on charges that he assaulted a Caldwell County sheriff’s deputy before footage from his home surveillance video camera proved he was the one attacked by deputies.

Now Fauklenberry is suing the Caldwell County Sheriff’s Office.

However, if it wasn’t for his video camera, he would probably be sitting in prison today for the January 2015 arrest.

The video, posted below, shows Fauklenberry standing outside his home when three deputies walk up with guns drawn, responding to a false report from his mentally ill son after a spat over homework, who had accused his father of being drunk and carrying a gun.

Not only does Faulkenberry not own a gun, he was not drunk.

The video, which contains no audio, shows Faulkenberry raise his arms as the deputies are attempting to arrest him.

It also shows Sergeant Dustin Yost use a judo-type leg sweep on Faulkenberry, causing him to fall down, even though he appeared to be fully cooperating.

Then all three deputies pile on top of him with one deputy punching him in the eye and another pushing him down with his knee.

At no point in the video did Faulkenberry assault Deputy Taylor prompting justification for use of force.

The suit claims deputies handcuffed Faulkenberry’s right hand “so hard he still bears the scars.”

Faulkenberry’s lawyers claimed, “The video plainly shows that at no point during the entire incident did the plaintiff offer any resistance or assault any of the deputies. The deputies in turn had no legal basis or justification whatsoever for assaulting the plaintiff who was defenseless.”

Faulkenberry’s lawsuit also claims Lockhart police lied in their report about the incident when he was arrested by Deputy Michael Taylor who filled out false affidavits to support the false charges. And by doing so, committed at least two counts of aggravated perjury.

Faulkenberry’s lawsuit also contends that Taylor swore under oath that he assaulted Sgt. Yost because he know that Yost was the one who actually attacked him and threw him to the ground without justification.

As is standard procedure,  Caldwell County responded with a general denial of Faulkenberry’s allegations, despite the existence of video evidence that supports his claims.

The lawsuit also argues the call that prompted police to show up to his property was a false report made by Faulkenberry’s son, who was angry at his father.

According to the suit, deputies cursed at him when he questioned if they had a warrant, which may have also angered them to the point of attacking him, then filing false charges against him.

After his arrest, Faulkenberry’s bond totaled $807,500. But after spending ten days in jail, Faulkenberry’s lawyer showed a magistrate the video and the magistrate lowered his bond to $5,000. The Lockhart County District Attorney’s Office later refused to prosecute him and he finally went home after posting his bail.

Faulkenberry’s lawyer, Trek Doyle, commented about the arrest,

"To me, the video is offensive. Law enforcement is supposed to serve and protect. In Caldwell County, they appear to have a different motto; “obey or suffer.” Citizens, especially those who have done nothing wrong, are entitled to ask questions of law enforcement so long as they do not illegally resist. They are not supposed to be thrown to the ground, pinned, and beaten. But what really got me fired up about this case was the decision to charge Larry with resisting arrest and assaulting Yost, a second degree felony. The video plainly shows that Larry did not resist much less assault Yost. These guys didn’t just rough Larry up and toss him in the can for the night. They were willing to throw his life away for no good or legal reason; just because they were pissed. If Larry had not happened to have video of the entire incident, he would likely be serving hard time in the Texas Department of Corrections as we speak."

He also stated his client may undergo serious back surgery caused during the incident.

In 2010, another civil complaint named the same Sergeant Yost from Faulkenberry’s arrest.

In that case, police alleged Eric Marino stole two trailers that were on his property. Yost charged him with theft and organized criminal activity. Marino had receipts for the trailers inside of his home, but Sgt. Yost, Sheriff Daniel Law and three other deputies wouldn’t let Marino retrieve the receipts from the house before they arrested him

A Federal Judge dismissed the claim after Yost was removed from the lawsuit.

Faulkenberry’s lawsuit is suing for an unspecified compensatory amount for civil rights violations as well as humiliation he went through after a Lockhart newspaper reported the outrageous bond amount and the serious criminal charges that were later dismissed.

Police did not know about the video until after the lawsuit was filed, according to a source close to Faulkenberry. The trial for the civil matter is scheduled to begin in September of 2017.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/19/texas-man-exonerated-of-false-charges-by-home-video-camera-files-lawsuit-against-local-sheriffs-office/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2833 on: March 26, 2016, 01:50:29 PM »
GRAPHIC: California Cops Kill Suspect in 8 Seconds, Holding Garden Hose Spray Nozzle

Two California cops blew away a 40 year old mentally-ill suspect only eight seconds after getting out of their car, claiming the man reached for his waistband in the video below.

Police arrived on the scene after receiving calls about a man with a gun in the area.

But Freddy Centeno did not have a gun.

Just a black spray nozzle.

The side-by-side, first person video, shows two Undercover Fresno police officers, Zebulon Price and Felipe Miguel Lucero, getting out of their unmarked vehicle,undercover car1 immediately drawing their sidearms and then loudly yelling at Freddy Centeno, “Get on the ground!!“

The two California cops fired nine times.

Seven rounds impacted Freddy Centeno.

From the time Officers Price and Lucero got out of their car, to the time they shot Centeno was 8 seconds.

Police never told him ‘You’re under arrest.’

Never told him to ‘put his hands in the air.’

It was comply or die.

Lawyers for the family of Freddie Centeno held a press conference today to release the graphic body cam video below, showing the two California cops shooting Centeno.

“The policies and customs behind shootings of civilians such as Freddy Centeno are fundamentally unconstitutional,” reads the lawsuit, “and constitute a menace of major proportions to the public.”

After Freddie Centeno was riddled with bullets on September, 3rd, 2015 officers Price and Lucero, bizarrely continued to tell him to put his hands up, even after he was mortally wounded.

Freddie Centeno was taken to the hospital, and survived 23 more days – all in a coma – after the savage shooting.

“As crazy as it sounds, they charged him with resisting arrest before he died,” said the Centeno family’s lawyer Humberto Guizar, “In an attempt to evade civil liability.”

Centeno died from his wounds on September 26th.

“We’ve been in possession of the video for some time, but it’s very rare for us to get video in these incident without going through all kinds of procedural pitfalls with requesting the information and filing motions,” said the lawyer Guizar in who filed suit in Federal court yesterday (brief below video), “When we did get it, they put a protective order on it so the public doesn’t get to see it. That’s why we held today’s press conference.”


“We want the public to see across the nation, I think this is a matter of public concern across the country, that law enforcement officers are able commit a commando-style execution against an unarmed man like that,” said the lawyer who is also representing Noel Aguilar’s family, the man shot in the back by two LASD cops, “They didn’t tell Freddy to freeze or warn him or anything like that.”

“We think it’s a clear cut case of excessive force,” he said, “I’ve been a civil rights attorney for 29 years, and I’ve never seen a police shooting this bad.”

The Fresno Bee reported that the California cops had already dealt with Freddy Centeno recently, and that the agency was aware of his mental health condition too:

Shortly after the shooting, Centeno’s brother, Roger, told The Bee that his brother was bipolar, schizophrenic and abused drugs. Roger lived with Freddy and their parents, and he questioned the need for such force.

The department was aware of Centeno’s mental illness, but Price and Lucero were not, Fresno police Lt. Mark Salazar said at the time. Centeno had been issued a misdemeanor citation in February 2015 for interfering with police, and officers had been called out to his home in March for a disturbance. They learned he was off his medication and had him evaluated by medical health personnel. He was arrested for allegedly possessing methamphetamine two days later.

The Centeno family’s attorney concluded that, “the video looked like something from a war, but that even in war you don’t shoot an unarmed person approaching without giving them a chance to surrender.”

The cops did render CPR to Centeno, but it didn’t help at that point.

PINAC News investigator Felipe Hemming reports that the Fresno District Attorney investigation of Freddy Centeno shooting death is “still open” and they offer no comment.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/24/graphic-california-cops-kill-suspect-in-8-seconds-in-chilling-body-cam-footage/

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2834 on: March 28, 2016, 09:24:44 AM »
Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer defended the shooting, saying the video depicts Centeno reaching in his pocket for something that appeared to be a gun. It turned out to be a black hose attachment with a trigger-style nozzle.

Dyer played the video frame-by-frame, pointing out a spot where Centeno appears to be reaching for his pocket and an object is in his hand.

"Which clearly appears to be a handgun," Dyer said. "And then the next one, and he begins to raise it, and that's when the officers feared for their life and fired their weapons."

Dyer also played the 911 call which first alerted police to Centeno in which a woman says he came to her door, pulled a gun and claimed he was a federal agent.



Not one I would hang my anti police hat on..

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2835 on: March 28, 2016, 10:52:04 AM »
Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer defended the shooting, saying the video depicts Centeno reaching in his pocket for something that appeared to be a gun. It turned out to be a black hose attachment with a trigger-style nozzle.

Dyer played the video frame-by-frame, pointing out a spot where Centeno appears to be reaching for his pocket and an object is in his hand.

"Which clearly appears to be a handgun," Dyer said. "And then the next one, and he begins to raise it, and that's when the officers feared for their life and fired their weapons."

Dyer also played the 911 call which first alerted police to Centeno in which a woman says he came to her door, pulled a gun and claimed he was a federal agent.



Not one I would hang my anti police hat on..

You only have a pro-police hat...

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2836 on: March 28, 2016, 11:04:23 AM »
Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer defended the shooting, saying the video depicts Centeno reaching in his pocket for something that appeared to be a gun. It turned out to be a black hose attachment with a trigger-style nozzle.

Dyer played the video frame-by-frame, pointing out a spot where Centeno appears to be reaching for his pocket and an object is in his hand.

"Which clearly appears to be a handgun," Dyer said. "And then the next one, and he begins to raise it, and that's when the officers feared for their life and fired their weapons."

Dyer also played the 911 call which first alerted police to Centeno in which a woman says he came to her door, pulled a gun and claimed he was a federal agent.



Not one I would hang my anti police hat on..









Hello Agnostic ,
Was starting to think you had left this thread.

And what would you say about the cops targeting one of their own
For Her honest policing.

Are they no working as an organised criminal gang ??

Any other group of people would be labelled as such.
Yet they all get away with that behaviour --
Zero tolerance it should be...
If they Stamped out / came down hard on all the Smaller Non
life Threating Corrupt cop Behaviour ( That alone would no doubt take a very long time )
These Gang member Thugs Mite just get the message & Fcuk Off.

Hang which one of your Hats On That.
 ;)

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2837 on: March 28, 2016, 03:01:33 PM »
You only have a pro-police hat...

Life would be easier if I did, that's for sure.

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2838 on: March 28, 2016, 03:22:14 PM »







Hello Agnostic ,
Was starting to think you had left this thread.

And what would you say about the cops targeting one of their own
For Her honest policing.

Are they no working as an organised criminal gang ??

Any other group of people would be labelled as such.
Yet they all get away with that behaviour --
Zero tolerance it should be...
If they Stamped out / came down hard on all the Smaller Non
life Threating Corrupt cop Behaviour ( That alone would no doubt take a very long time )
These Gang member Thugs Mite just get the message & Fcuk Off.

Hang which one of your Hats On That.
 ;)

I read about that. I don't know that it rises to organized crime. But it is a shame that officers looked up her information and thought it funny to have pizza delivered to her house. That some apparently drove by her house or idled outside is a concern. I wonder if she called in to report the suspicious vehicles when it was happening. If one of my officers stopped a speeding police car for going upwards of 120 mph through traffic with no lights and  siren and no reason to be driving in such a hazardous manner I would be supportive of her. I can't speak for the mind set or culture of Miami or Broward County but here it is not unheard of to arrest even a fellow officer from the same department so I would expect a different reaction. The handcuffing.. might be a bit much and that might have pissed some off but that was cool of her to stop the vehicle and hold him accountable   

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2839 on: March 28, 2016, 05:12:52 PM »
I read about that. I don't know that it rises to organized crime. But it is a shame that officers looked up her information and thought it funny to have pizza delivered to her house. That some apparently drove by her house or idled outside is a concern. I wonder if she called in to report the suspicious vehicles when it was happening. If one of my officers stopped a speeding police car for going upwards of 120 mph through traffic with no lights and  siren and no reason to be driving in such a hazardous manner I would be supportive of her. I can't speak for the mind set or culture of Miami or Broward County but here it is not unheard of to arrest even a fellow officer from the same department so I would expect a different reaction. The handcuffing.. might be a bit much and that might have pissed some off but that was cool of her to stop the vehicle and hold him accountable   








Thanks for your reply.
It's good to hear there are some areas with good cops.

She probably cuffed him as She Was In Fear Of Her Life...
What with him having a Gun.

As for the criminal Organised Gang Element -- Working Together --
Illegally Accessing Her Info -- Stalking / Intimadating etc etc
I'd Say if another group of individuals did that they would be likely
Called that & charged.

Yet Again No Charges  ::)
Great way to bolster public opinion & suport.

Ahh it's ok they cops.. Fuck them they ain't above the law.
I'm Wrong They Clearly are & Condoned by their equally corrupt
Management.

Sack the Bastard lot of them & start again.
 ;)

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2840 on: March 29, 2016, 09:04:55 AM »







Thanks for your reply.
It's good to hear there are some areas with good cops.

She probably cuffed him as She Was In Fear Of Her Life...
What with him having a Gun.

As for the criminal Organised Gang Element -- Working Together --
Illegally Accessing Her Info -- Stalking / Intimadating etc etc
I'd Say if another group of individuals did that they would be likely
Called that & charged.

Yet Again No Charges  ::)
Great way to bolster public opinion & suport.

Ahh it's ok they cops.. Fuck them they ain't above the law.
I'm Wrong They Clearly are & Condoned by their equally corrupt
Management.

Sack the Bastard lot of them & start again.
 ;)

Accessing info without a valid reason  is a violation of policy for certain and may have other implications as well. Not typically dealt with as a criminal act, the discipline is internal. I don't know that they didn't receive consequences at that level. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't.

Mystery vehicles in the cul de sac.. how do you press charges on that?

Having pizza delivered to her house? Jail time? Do they know who did it? If they found out who did it I would expect them to be terminated. If they knew who and did nothing, that would be wrong.

   

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2841 on: March 29, 2016, 09:41:20 AM »
After Cops Beat a Man like “Rodney King” on Video — They’re Caught Bribing Witnesses Not to Talk

“San Francisco, CA – An investigation into the brutal beating of man in San Francisco’s Mission District has been launched by the Alameda County Sheriff after video showing the savage assault by police went public.
Pulling no punches, Public Defender Jeff Adachi said the encounter was “reminiscent of Rodney King,” and excessive force was clearly used by the two deputies. But excessive force is only part of their problem.
The video was released by the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office, after being contacted by witnesses to the vicious attack. Now, some of those witnesses have come forward with claims that the cops bribed them not to say anything and that the deputies took a “trophy photo” of their victim, Stanislav Petrov.

At the 7-minute mark in the video, you can see a deputy posing with the bloodied man for his “trophy” photo.

In the video, deputies Luis Santamaria and Paul Wieber are seen chasing Petrov down an alley when Petrov decidedly stops and surrenders. Petrov is then shoved to the ground and severely beaten about the head and body with police batons. His attorney, Mike Haddad, said that his client suffered a concussion and broke nearly every finger bone in his hands.

“This claim is going to put the county on notice that they’re facing a lawsuit for their deputies outrageously beating and attacking Stanislav Petrov,” said Haddad. Haddad said Petrov is a mechanic and can no longer use his hands to work.

When speaking about the homeless witnesses who were bribed by the cops to remain silent, Haddad said, “We’ve learned from witnesses that they stole a valuable gold necklace from Stanislav and then they gave it to these witnesses who saw what happened to basically bribe them and silence them.”

Jerome Allen and his wife Haley Harris were living in a tent on the corner during the beating that night.

KTVU reports:

“They came up to me and the first thing they said was did you like the show?” said Allen. Allen said two deputies approached him. One of them handed him some items that belonged to Petrov. “The other cop came around the corner and said, ‘Hey, I found something: don’t spend it all in one spot.’ And he passed me a very nice gold chain with a large medallion cross on it, with diamonds, Turkish gold.”

Harris drew KTVU Fox 2’s Tara Moriarty a picture of the medallion which the couple hawked for $1,500. They said they spent the money on food, clothes and shoes. We found what appears to be the missing necklace on Petrov’s Facebook page.

Allen said he was taken aback by the deputy’s offering. “At first I look around, ‘Is this being recorded or something?’ You know, like they were trying to set me up or something? And I’m like, well, they want me to be quiet; they want me to not say something about that ass whooping they just gave him.”

Aside from the man’s jewelry, the deputy gave the homeless couple money, crystal meth, and some Newport cigarettes.
After the department found out about the bribe, the officer in question was suspended.

“This is absolutely unacceptable, if true, it will not be tolerated,” Sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. J.D. Nelson told reporters at a Monday evening news conference. “They are no better than the criminals they arrest, if these allegations are true.”
“Nobody bribes witnesses when they’re innocent,” said Haddad. And judging from when the officers wrote their reports, they are clearly not innocent.

Haddad noted that the deputies obviously wrote their reports after they had seen the video so they could get their stories straight.
“The deputies waited four days to write their reports,” said Haddad, “when their policy requires the reports to be completed by the end of shift.”

Deputies Luis Santamaria and Paul Wieber both wrote in their reports that they were “exhausted and dizzy” yet Wieber is the department’s fitness champion and can be seen on the agency’s Facebook page with trophies, posing with Sheriff Greg Ahern, reports KTVU.

It is important to note that Petrov was witnessed in a stolen car and led police on a low-speed 30-minute chase before he was beaten. He also rammed a police cruiser in the process. However, he had surrendered prior to this assault.

The deputies attempted to justify their actions by saying their adrenaline was rushing after this chase, but their brutal force on a surrendering man was over the top.
“The problem with that argument is that this is America and this is not a country where the government can get away with beating someone with steel batons on their head without any due process,” Haddad said, pointing out the flawed justification used by these officers.

There is also the existence of another video that is the subject of the investigation. In spite of both officers turning off their body cameras prior to the beating, one of them accidentally started recording during the assault, and the officer had no idea.

“That body cam was inadvertently put on when Deputy Wieber tackled Mr. Petrov,” explained Sgt. Ray Kelly, “and it was not discovered until after those reports were written.”

According to the department, both videos are now being investigated by San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon for possible criminal charges.
“It tarnishes my badge, it tarnishes everybody’s badge and we don’t like it,” declared Sgt. Nelson.

This is what due process looks like in the Land of the Free.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-beat-man-rodney-king-video-caught-bribing-witnesses-talk/


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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2842 on: March 29, 2016, 09:50:44 AM »
NYPD Officers Arrest US Postal Worker On Duty Delivering Packages Who Criticized Them

The video going viral of a New York City postal worker was arrested while on duty by NYPD after objecting to their driving in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn has just surfaced, as you can see below.

UPDATE: “Our agency is aware of the incident,” says Matt Modafferi of the United States Postal Service Office of the Inspector General, “We have an investigation that’s ongoing, at this point, that’s all that I can comment on.”

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams held a news conference on Tuesday to denounce mailman Glenn Grays’ arrest on March 17th.

Doubtless, the two NYPD undercover cops may be getting a visit from the United States Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) to discuss the arrest which may have violated one of the laundry list of federal crimes enforced by the oldest American police agency, founded by THE Ben Franklin in 1772.

Eric Adams stated that mailman Grays exited his vehicle after to deliver a package to a near by home, when plain clothes NYPD officers who were offended by Grays’ protest of their driving skills demanded his identification.

In a video that is sure to go viral below, NYPD officers surround the postal worker as he objects saying “You want my ID, my ID right there on the side of the truck”, referring to his official USPS vehicle double parked legally while he dropped off a package.

Officers continue to press him for his identification and start grabbing at his arms to cuff him. When Grays’ allegedly stiffened up arm after four officers surround him and up his as an officer can be hear saying, “You’re going to get hurt if you don’t give me your fucking hands”.

An unseen by stander who is off camera is heard saying, “Lawsuit, man, lawsuit,”.

Court records indicate that Grays has yet to be charged with a crime, but Adams said mailman Grays was given a summons to appear in court.

The New York cops hauled Grays down to the 71st Precinct station where he was held for a prolonged period and later released with a ticket for resisting arrest.

The infamous Supreme Court ruling Terry vs. Ohio authorized “stop and frisk” fishing expeditions like those NYPD is famous for launching, and unwisely deployed on this law abiding postal worker.

But only if the officers can articulate reasonable suspicion of an actual crime.

Criticizing the police isn’t a crime.

Glenn Grays has no prior criminal history, but now faces a criminal charge for exercising his 1st Amendment right of expression to NYPD officers who abused their authority and were caught on video doing it, without any apparent fear of criminal charges against themselves.

Officers allegedly also left packages Grays’ official USPS vehicle unsecured and unattended.

“It is not against the law to voice outrage after almost being struck by a vehicle,” Borough President Adams told the media, “This could have been another Eric Garner situation if Glenn hadn’t responded as calmly as he did. And if they would do that to Glenn in his uniform, they would do that to any person of color in that neighborhood.”

Adams as demanded a thorough review of the incident.

The NYPD has stated that they are already investigating themselves.

But those two NYPD officers shouldn’t be surprised if they get a single loud knock on the door at home, with a demand for their own submission to arrest by Federal Postal Inspectors.

Because it is only the postman who always rings twice, Federal law enforcement won’t be so forgiving.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/23/new-york-city-postal-worker-arrested-duty-delivering-packages/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2843 on: March 29, 2016, 02:41:51 PM »
Accessing info without a valid reason  is a violation of policy for certain and may have other implications as well. Not typically dealt with as a criminal act, the discipline is internal. I don't know that they didn't receive consequences at that level. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't.

Mystery vehicles in the cul de sac.. how do you press charges on that?

Having pizza delivered to her house? Jail time? Do they know who did it? If they found out who did it I would expect them to be terminated. If they knew who and did nothing, that would be wrong.

   








Well chosen words in your answer.
Avoiding some of the implications mentioned.

When cops talk about other people behaving in a similar
Manner to that group of cops they would not be quite so understanding
& forgiving.

Got to protect / look after your own.
That's what's so troubling.

Call any other group of people behaving that way & it would be..
Gang - organised - conspiracy - harassment - bullying -
Picking on female - etc etc.

Oh but none of that language for the cops.

Fucking Stinks.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2844 on: March 29, 2016, 11:46:00 PM »
NYPD Officers Arrest US Postal Worker On Duty Delivering Packages Who Criticized Them

[...]

UPDATE: “Our agency is aware of the incident,” says Matt Modafferi of the United States Postal Service Office of the Inspector General, “We have an investigation that’s ongoing, at this point, that’s all that I can comment on.”

I expected that Postal Inspectors would get involved as soon as I saw the video. Forget charges about attacking the carrier (18 USC 111). Fucking with the mail is a big, big nono. From 18 USC 1701: “Whoever knowingly and willfully obstructs or retards the passage of the mail, or any carrier or conveyance carrying the mail, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than six months, or both.” And that's just the start...

Some NYPD cops are going to be spending a lot of time wondering how badly their assholes will be violated in federal prison... and all because they were pompous, power-tripping arrogant asses.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2845 on: March 30, 2016, 12:17:52 AM »
Arizona Cop Fired For Killing Daniel Shaver, Who Prosecutors Admit “Didn’t Do Anything Wrong”

An Arizona prosecutor was caught on audio recording telling Daniel Shaver’s widow that he would suppress videos her beloved husband’s death, because she might share them with the media.

Mesa Police fired Phillip Mitchell Brailsford for killing Shaver and numerous other violations.

It was all caught on a body camera.

All of the investigative reports are below, but we still haven’t seen the video.

Laney Sweet has been devastated by the loss of her husband Daniel Shaver, a pest control specialist shot five times by Mesa officer Brailsford, who Arizona prosecutors admitted in a video which the widow recorded, and you can see below, that Shaver “tried to comply,” and, “didn’t do anything wrong.”

But Brailsford killed him anyway with five shots from his AR-15 that said accurately, “You’re Fucked” from just 12 feet away.


Sweet released the complete video of her conversation with prosecutors from March 14th, earlier today when they released the 911 calls and other information.

The Arizona cop indicated in his Internal Affairs interview, which you can see below, that he selected his personal weapon, the high powered Armalite Rifle for its long range.

“I can see his right hand go behind his back from my angle, um, so I perceive this as a threat” Brailford told police investigators, “He’s crawling towards us, trying to gain a position of advantage, urn, in order to gain, urn, a better firing position on us.”

It’s still not truly known why Brailford might imagine Shaver was gaining the advantage, since he was crawling to them on his hands and knees, exactly as told by Brailsford’s Sergeant.

Brailsford was charged with second degree murder earlier this month.

Not to worry, the Mesa District Attorney Bill Montgomery told Sweet that he would refuse to release the video to Lney Sweet, because she might run off and tell the press, at the 4 minute mark in the video below

But he released the Arizona cop’s side of the case yet, with 911 calls and Brailsford’s complete IA package and termination documents.

In the 911 call today, the AP described Shaver as begging, “Please don’t shoot me.”

And Shaver was wearing nothing more than gym shorts according to family lawyers from the Geragos & Geragos recent statement, which you can see below.

So, he didn’t even have a waistband to reach into.

Mark Geragos issued a statement last week when the officer was fired, noting that the prosecutor offered the perpetrator a deal, without consulting the family first.

Montgomery is offering Brailsford a sweet plea deal, that will likely leave the now-former Arizona cop facing zero jail time and a few years of probation in exchange for a negligent homicide conviction.

“The media will keep asking you questions until they get you to say something they want,” said Montgomery the prosecutor, explaining why it’s a bad idea to speak to the media, in his twisted mind seeking to protect Sweet from the likes of PINAC News, rather than his dangerous police officers because, “Quite frankly, they (the media) don’t give a rat’s ass about you or anything else.”

But the prosecutor is clearly showing how much he cares about Laney Sweet by trying to hand her husband’s killer a ‘Get out of Jail Free’ card and trying to keep her from talking to the media while he subverts justice to favor a cop who killed.

“The body camera video will show a cold blooded murder,” said Geragos lawyer Ben Meiselas, “and we expect the prosecution to show Brailsford no privilege for holding the badge when he fired the shots.”

“The public and the victim have the right to see this video.”

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/03/29/arizona-cop-fired-for-killing-daniel-shaver-who-prosecutors-admit-didnt-do-anything-wrong/

An update from Facebook:

Quote
After being charged with Second Degree Murder in the unjustified shooting of Daniel Shaver, they've offered officer Philip Brailsford a plea deal (off the record) after court today of 'Negligent Homicide'-- with the terms to be decided by the judge. If he pleads 'guilty' the minimum would be only PROBATION and the maximum would be 3.75 years in prison. Either one of those options is absolutely unjust for a second degree murder charge. Officer Brailsford murdered Daniel Shaver after failing to properly access a report that the Mesa PD received.

https://www.facebook.com/JusticeForDaniel/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2846 on: March 30, 2016, 10:33:04 AM »
Woman Reports Cop for Stepping On Her in the Donut Line, So He Smashed in Her Face

Philadelphia, Pa — An ex-transit cop has been found guilty of false imprisonment and official oppression stemming from a Christmas Day incident when he stepped on a woman’s foot and refused to apologize — after cutting in line at Dunkin’ Donuts in 2013. When the woman attempted to alert the officer’s superiors, he slammed her head into an ATM machine — and placed her under arrest.

Douglas Ioven, a former officer with the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transit Authority (SEPTA), cut in line on Christmas in front of Muibat Williamson, a nurse at Einstein Medical Center, who was on her way home from a night shift. When Ioven was leaving, with coffee and doughnuts in hand, he stepped on Williamson’s foot.

In testimony about the 2013 row, reported philly.com, Williamson said she confronted the officer and demanded he apologize — but Ioven refused. An argument ensued, and an unnamed witness said she even inserted herself between the pair to remind them of the holiday. She overheard Ioven tell Williamson,

“Next time, move out of the way.”

Williamson decided to file a complaint and knocked on the SEPTA police station door. But, as she testified, Ioven — attempting to prevent his superiors from finding out what had happened — cursed at and then chased her. Williamson said the officer banged her head against an ATM machine as he tried to place her in handcuffs to arrest her for disorderly conduct.

Defense attorney Joseph Silvestro Jr. tried to place blame for the entire incident on Williamson, telling the jury, “This all happened because Muibat Williamson decided that her value system had to be imposed on Doug Ioven.”

Assistant District Attorney Andrew Wellbrock countered that all Williamson wanted from Ioven was an apology and “some basic human decency.”

“Does ‘next time, move out of the way’ sound like somebody who didn’t do anything wrong?” he asked.

In fact, according to philly.com, “Ioven’s face reddened as the verdict was announced” — and for good reason. The cop’s indignant rush for doughnuts could land him behind bars for up to four years — though sentencing guidelines recommend probation.

This incident could best be characterized as Blue Privilege at its ugliest and most ironic — a rude cop falsely arresting a woman because his craving for doughnuts was that urgent.

Perhaps the true spiteful nature of that Blue Privilege came in testimony from a retired SEPTA police sergeant. After the incident, Ioven told him,

“I think I screwed up because I thought she was a homeless person, but she was a regular person.”

Indeed, that speaks volumes.

Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/doughnut-cop-foot-stomper/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2847 on: April 01, 2016, 10:14:15 AM »
North Carolina Deputy Lied in Court; Now He Is Fired And His Cases Will Be Thrown Out

Cops even have a word for it: Testilying.

How far will a lie or two get you?

Well, lies is what got a Raleigh Sheriff’s Deputy fired along with 175 cases thrown out of court in which the deputy was a witness for.

Deputy Robert Davis of the Wake County Sheriff’s Department caused 175 traffic and DWI cases to be dismissed because he failed to be honest.

Now, the Wake County District Attorney is livid because the cases can’t be prosecuted– prosecutions are the backbones of a prosecutor’s career.

“He [Davis] violated the defendants’ rights,” said District Attorney Lorrin Freeman, “He was untruthful on the stand.”

It all transpired when District Court Judge Jacqueline Brewer discovered that Deputy Davis lied in three cases.

In one case Davis arrested Katrina Weaver in August 2014 for DUI, there was no witness in the breathalyzer room when Ms. Weaver was supposed to submit to her breathalyzer test.

However, in court Deputy Davis said that there was a witness present.

It should be to no surprise that cameras are in the breathalyzer room.

The judge saw the video.

Deputy Davis was lying.

There were absolutely no witnesses present in the breathalyzer room.

Judge Brewer said simply, “Deputy Davis has shown a pattern of providing false statements and false testimony.”

Apparently the phone lines were not working, and Ms. Weaver was not able to contact a witness.

After 15 minutes with no phone connection at the jail, Deputy Davis filed an additional charge on Ms. Weaver, for not complying with the breathalyzer test.

North Carolina DUI law cites that witnesses are allowed in the breathalyzer room.

Also DUI arrestees are given a full 30 minutes of legal consultation and telephone witness requests prior to taking a breathalyzer test at jail intake.

Deputy Davis was fired after his court lies came to light.

Testilying is nothing new.

The Washington Post’s Radley Balko covered American cops’ predilection to lie in court, by publishing a nearly 50 year old court manuscript.

So many cops lie about their professional duties as public servants, that there’s even a list of them each prosecutor must keep known as the Brady List.

The landmark Supreme Court decision in Brady v. Maryland requires prosecutors to disclose any evidence which may lead to a citizen’s innocence.

Brady Lists do that by disclosing that a police agency is lying, cheating, and dishonest cops.

Name one other profession that keeps all of their worst scoundrels on the job, and just keeps a list in case anyone asks while the liars make life altering decisions about random citizens every day.

Davis was on the force for 18 years, let it be known that a lot of lies can be told in 18 years– perhaps there are more that no-one knows about.

In a different incident that’s come to light, Deputy Davis tasered a woman that he’d arrested twice, before taking her to the jail intake area.

Davis’ suspect made a phone call to her attorney.

But before  her full legal 30 minutes of legal consultation was over, Deputy Davis had already noted in official records that the woman never did make that phone call, but instead that she refused to submit to a breathalyzer test.

In March 2015, Davis again arrested a different woman for DUI and did not give her the full 30 minuets of consultation.

Similarly, in that miscarriage of justice Davis also noted the woman as not making a phone call, and then refusing to submit to the breathalyzer test, only because she questioned him for not allotting her the full 30 minutes.

In total, 104 potentially serious cases of driving while impaired were dismissed along with 71 traffic cases.

It will be the District Attorney’s decision on whether to file perjury charges on Davis.

Convicting the deputy of lying on the stand won’t be too difficult, but perhaps the lawman will claim selective enforcement as his defense.

Because the District Attorney could prosecute a great many more cops if more careful attention was made to the numerous statements they must make, and do make, each day under oath.

And a great many deputies demonstratively do break their oaths.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/01/north-carolina-deputy-lied-court-now-fired-cases-will-thrown/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2848 on: April 01, 2016, 04:43:02 PM »
Horrifying Video Shows Sadistic Judge Order Cop To Torture Peaceful Man in Courtroom for Talking

Greenbelt, MD – A man representing himself in a Maryland court was shocked with 50,000 volts of electricity by the judge because he continued to speak when the judge ordered him to stop.

Judge Robert Nalley pleaded guilty in February to depriving the defendant of his civil rights and video of the horrific incident was released this week.

Nalley was facing up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $100,000 after pleading guilty. However, since he is subject to a different set of rules because he is a judge, he won’t see a single day in jail, and he will only pay a $5,000 fine.

The charge against Nalley was also weak, as he did not simply deprive a man of his civil rights, but he tortured him. Under any other circumstances, Nalley’s actions would have been considered torture, but since he did it under the sanction of his place in government, he was given a pass.

The weak charge stems from an encounter between the judge and victim Delvon King in July of 2014, when King was appearing before Judge Nalley to face gun charges. King had a shocker anklet attached to him, which was supposed to be used in case of an emergency situation, or if King were to attempt to escape or hurt anyone.

In the court, King attempted to make his case but was constantly interrupted by the judge who repeatedly told him to be quiet. When King continued to make his case to the court, Judge Nalley told the court deputy “Mr Sheriff, do it… use it,” at which point 50,000 volts of electricity were sent through King’s body, causing him to scream in pain. The court transcript read, “DEFENDANT SCREAMS.”

King later described the situation to reporters, saying that he experienced “Excruciating pain then, and a burning sensation.”

“It burned the rest of the day. Messed me up mentally. I don’t really remember that part. Just next thing I know, I’m on the ground,” King added.

The U.S attorney said that Judge Nalley acted as if he was above the law, and that this conviction should be a message to other state employees that they should treat the people that they encounter as equals — some message, pay $5,000 and go to an anger management class and you can get away with torturing a man.

“It’s not about race. It’s about power. It’s about a judge who abused the power vested in him to order a defendant to be punished essentially before he was convicted of any crime,” the attorney said.

Witnesses at the recent trial noted that the judge did not show any signs of remorse.

According to Review Times, this is not the first time Nalley has been a defendant. In 2010, he pleaded guilty to tampering with a vehicle after he deflated the tire of a cleaning woman’s car that was parked in a restricted zone at the courthouse. As a result, he was fined, had to write a letter of apology and was suspended for five days without pay.
But, he was not fired.

Below is the video of this insane moment. Notice how the officer, without any hesitation, walks up to King and blindly follows the unlawful order. This video epitomizes the terrifying reality that stems from people just doing their jobs — as dictated by sadistic unaccountable tyrants.


http://thefreethoughtproject.com/horrifying-video-shows-sadistic-judge-order-cop-torture-peaceful-man-courtroom-talking/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2849 on: April 01, 2016, 04:50:01 PM »
Florida Cops Busted Lying, Beat Man to Pulp Costing $275,000 Legal Settlement

A Florida woman used her still camera to bring two cops to justice, and help her husband collect a $275,000 settlement after having his face bashed by lawmen.

A picture is worth a thousand words, and a Florida judge decided it’s worth a whole lot more than that.

After being arrested, Joe Florence looked like he’d been run over.

By a Mack truck.

The Florida man suffered a broken nose, broken jaw, a bruised face, and underwent three surgeries to re-set his shattered bones.

Joe Florence was pummeled by two Lakeland officers, after they accused him of trespassing.

Florence thought he’d done a good deed, when he mowed his neighbors lawn.

Now he’s $275,000 richer from the lawsuit that stemmed from being assaulted by the two cops.

Drama began to unfold when Heather Benthal and Nicholas Ivancevich received a call from dispatch about Florence’s neighbors saying that he was mowing and watering their lawn, so they showed up to investigate allegations that he was trespassing.

Allegedly, Florence wasn’t happy about the way his neighbors kept their yard.

According to the police’s version of events, Florence told the cops the grass in Roth’s yard was ‘overgrown’ and ‘dying’, so he was there mowing and watering.

After the officers investigated, they issued Florence a criminal trespass warning when he grew tired of speaking to the them and walked inside his home.

That’s when Florence said the two officers became upset, then attacked him and subsequently lied in police reports they wrote after arresting him.

“The officer got in my face very quick . . . he was aggressive.”

“And I put my hand on the door knob and that’s when the officer, the male officer, I don’t know who he is, went off on me,” Florence told the Orlando Sentinel.

Florence then recalled that during the beating the officers tased him several times and smashed his face into the sidewalk.

Florence believed officer Ivancevic didn’t like it when he walked back into his house after receiving the warning.

“He said, ‘you come here‘,” said Florence.

To make matters worse after the beating, in an effort to cover up their brutal assault against Florence, officer Ivancevich distorted events in his police reports to make it appear like Florence assaulted them and not the other way around.

Special:
Officer Ivancevich falsely charged him with two counts of battery to a law enforcement officer and resisting an officer with violence – as well as assault on a law enforcement officer, depriving an officer of communication – and resisting an officer without violence, according to The Ledger.

Ivancevich would have gotten away with it if it wasn’t for Florence’s wife’s quick thinking to use her camera to photograph the incident.

After reviewing the case evidence, prosecutors dropped all charges against Florence.

“They had no right to arrest me [since he had yet to violate the criminal trespass warning] and therefore they had no right to use any force.  Obviously any force would be excess force,” said Florence during an interview after his criminal charges were dropped.

However, a Lakeland Police Spokeswoman Sgt. Terri Smith stated, “A no-bill decision is not necessarily a finding of innocence. It is an indication that the prosecutor did not find that there was sufficient evidence to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.”

Florence contended police should have been charged for assaulting him.

He responded by filing a civil rights suit in 2013 that claimed the Lakeland police department violated his rights under the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Eighth amendments to the Constitution and that he suffered, and continues to suffer, great physical, mental, and emotional pain and distress as a result of these Taserings and beatings.

In it, he also named five defendants that included Lakeland Police Department, Police Chief Lisa Womack, former chief Roger Boatner as well as Heather Freeman and Nicholas Ivancevich.

It additionally alleged that Lakeland police failed to promulgate policy to train, supervise and control its officers and asked for ‘no less than $100,000 in damages.

Unbeknownst to Florence, Lakeland is a place where law enforcement prides itself on prosecuting every perceivable instance of trespassing, no matter how crazy the cops might look.

It’s better known to the rest of the world as the headquarters of Publix Supermarkets.

And while Lakeland Police don’t have much in the way of policy to safeguard citizens, they did promulgate the ‘secret police training manual’ discovered by PINAC contributor Michael Burns and reported late last year.

As is seemingly always the case, an internal affairs investigation into misconduct their own officer – by Lakeland Police – found neither of the officers was disciplined and they no violations of law or department policy.

Instead, they were rewarded for their crimes.

Police still haven’t apologized for the beating, although Florence said he’d like one.

So, Florida Middle District Court Judge Mary S. Scriven wrote her reasoning in justifying damages in the amount of $275,000 paid to Florence.

Judge Scriven cited a 1989 U.S. Supreme Court decision decided by former Chief Justice William Renquist,

“While some degree of force was needed to handcuff Plaintiff if his arrest can be justified, a jury could conclude on Plaintiff’s facts that the amount of force used was disproportionate under the circumstances. The Court is mindful that the Officers were facing a situation that was tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving.”

Since their criminal assault against Florence, both Benthal and Ivancevich were promoted within their department.

Ivancevich was hurt at work and now serves as a “background investigator.”

Benthal was promoted to detective.

Our readers should note that the department promoted both officers after they committed crimes, even when visual evidence of those crimes was captured on camera.

Police Chief Larry Giddens said he stands by the internal investigation’s findings [sic].

“I wish him the best,” said Gidens, “We want to recognize what has occurred in the past and move forward in a professional manner.”

“I hope we’re able to put this behind us.”

In the end, we have a story that simply doesn’t add up. Lakeland Internal Affairs found their officer did nothing wrong and its chief steadfastly supports that finding.

However, the courts saw enough merit in Florence’s claim to award him $275,000 in damages.

And only one of them can be right.

We think the photographs clearly show the real perpetrator of a crime in Lakeland.

It’s been said that “no good deed goes unpunished,” and here is the photographic proof of it.



Graphic image from "arrest".

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/01/florida-cops-busted-lying-beat-man-to-pulp-costing-275000-legal-settlement/