Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 996151 times)

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2675 on: January 04, 2016, 01:56:37 PM »
It's Good to see Texas are Doing the right thing in this particular case.

If only all state police departments would do the right thing when
Dealing with their wrong doing cops.

There would be less Disrespect, Distrust & a better standard of Policing.

Can't argue with that

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2676 on: January 04, 2016, 02:12:41 PM »
Can't argue with that




 :o  :o   Wow Can you Repeat that Please.
Jeez is it the Start of a New Year or Something.
 :) Ha.


All the Best.

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2677 on: January 04, 2016, 02:16:08 PM »
 ;)

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2678 on: January 04, 2016, 02:26:05 PM »
;)





We may often be on very different sides of the fence.
It's Good to Stand back & be able to share a laugh.
Life on this planet is after all is just a mere blip in Time.

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2679 on: January 04, 2016, 02:42:51 PM »




We may often be on very different sides of the fence.
It's Good to Stand back & be able to share a laugh.
Life on this planet is after all is just a mere blip in Time.

So true. Life is too short. Case in point, one of my former Corporals died Saturday from cancer. 47 years old, had everything going for her and a total sweetheart. There are more important things in life than arguing a point all the time. Plus, in spite of our consistent disagreements, I enjoy the banter.       

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2680 on: January 04, 2016, 03:13:33 PM »
How much lower can they stoop entrapping an autistic friendless kid? And the veiled threat by the DA's office at 21:29..


illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2681 on: January 04, 2016, 05:54:59 PM »
So true. Life is too short. Case in point, one of my former Corporals died Saturday from cancer. 47 years old, had everything going for her and a total sweetheart. There are more important things in life than arguing a point all the time. Plus, in spite of our consistent disagreements, I enjoy the banter.       






Me too I enjoy The Banter.

 “I may well disapprove of what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
 :)

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2682 on: January 06, 2016, 01:40:52 AM »
This "honorable hero" was sentenced to a mere 4 1/2 years for lying under oath about police torture but got time off for good behavior. Once again the taxpayers have to pay for this cop's crimes-and his $4000/month pension.

Govt Pays Millions in Reparations to 57 Victims of Worst Cop in History – Who Still Receives a Pension

Former Chicago Police Commander received 13 commendations and a letter of praise from the DOJ before his termination for torturing over 200 citizens.

Chicago, IL — Responsible for torturing more than 200 people to obtain false confessions, former Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge has cost the city and Cook County over $100 million in legal fees and settlements. On Monday, the city of Chicago paid out $5.5 million in reparations to 57 of Burge’s victims, while the corrupt former police commander continues to receive his $4,000 monthly pension from the city.

Between 1972 and 1991, Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge and his men tortured hundreds of people to extract forced confessions from them. Up to 200 torture victims have accused Burge of using cattle prods on their genitals, plastic bags to cause suffocation, phone books to strike their heads, burning them on radiators, and forcing guns into their mouths during interrogations. Suspended from the department in 1991, Burge was fired two years later after the Police Department Review Board ruled that he had tortured hundreds of people.

In 1973, Burge and his men arrested Anthony Holmes before torturing him at the police station. After hooking him up to an electrical box and placing a bag over his head, the officers repeatedly electrocuted Holmes until forcing a false homicide confession from him. Holmes spent 30 years in prison for a murder that he did not commit because Burge tortured a confession out of him instead of tracking down the real killer.

Due to the fact that the Cook County District Attorney’s Office and the Chicago Police Department both turned a blind eye to Burge’s human rights violations, the statute of limitations allowed him to get away with torturing 200 people. During his two decades on the force, Burge received 13 commendations and a letter of praise from the Department of Justice before his termination.

In October 2008, the Justice Department finally charged Burge with two counts of obstruction of justice and one count of perjury. Because U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald could not charge him with 20 years of torture, Burge was eventually convicted of providing false statements in a civil lawsuit alleging his use of torture. Although he was sentenced to four and a half years in federal prison, Burge continues to collect his $4,000 monthly pension from the city.

Last spring, the City Council agreed to make Chicago the nation’s first major city to pay reparations 44 years after the first known instance of torture committed by Burge and his men. After Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced the creation of a $5.5 million city fund for Burge’s victims, the former police commander condemned the decision by stating, “I find it hard to believe that the city’s political leadership could even contemplate giving `Reparations’ to human vermin.”

On Monday, 57 of Burge’s torture victims each received $100,000 from the city of Chicago. Since a few victims had already received previous settlements, those amounts were deducted from their shares. Family members of deceased Burge victims were ineligible for financial reparations but were still eligible for non-financial reparations, including prioritized access to senior care services, health services, job training, small business assistance, and specialized counseling services.

Besides formally apologizing and paying the reparations, the city has also agreed to begin teaching students about Burge’s legacy of corruption in Chicago’s public schools. Beginning this school year, eighth- and tenth-grade students will examine Burge’s crimes in U.S. History in regards to police brutality and the violation of constitutional rights.

Instead of showing an ounce of competence, Burge and his officers forced confessions out of innocent people resulting in numerous overturned convictions. Although he failed to protect the streets of Chicago, Burge did inadvertently cause many police departments to adopt the policy of mandated video interrogations. Although most government employees are not required to wear cameras and record their actions, cops have proven over and over again that they simply cannot be trusted.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chicago-pays-5-million-57-victims-worse-cop-history-receives-pension/

http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/7/71/527850/burge-breaks-silence-condemns-5-5-million-reparations-fund

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2683 on: January 12, 2016, 11:41:33 AM »
Chicago Cops Frantically Fight to Destroy Misconduct Records Before Homan Square Investigation


Chicago, IL — Handcuffed to a wall inside a cell with no windows, Deanda Wilson was forced to urinate on himself after a police sergeant allegedly held a knife to his throat during an interrogation at Homan Square. Falsely charged with the manufacture and distribution of heroin, Wilson and his co-defendants were imprisoned for 15 months before a judge found them not guilty.

As the Cook County Commissioner and a state representative both call for a federal investigation into the CIA-style black site known as Homan Square, Chicago police union officials are fighting to incinerate decades of police misconduct records. Although the city, an investigative journalist, and a University of Chicago law school professor have battled in court to preserve the misconduct records, police unions argue that red-flagged officers should not be judged by their marred past.

While Cook County Commissioner Richard Boykin and the Board of Commissioners prepare to address a resolution on Wednesday calling on the DOJ to expand its investigation into Homan Square, leaders of the Chicago NAACP and state Rep. La Shawn Ford are working to prevent the Chicago Police Department from destroying any police misconduct files older than five years.

“My understanding is it’s simple: don’t destroy the records. Keep them forever. In today’s time, it’s clear that we can do that,” asserted Rep. Ford. “The only people or organization that destroying the records would benefit would be the police.”

Last month, Spencer Ackerman, a reporter for The Guardian who exposed the Homan Square scandal, testified before the Cook County Commission revealing that more than 7,000 people had disappeared within the black site between August 2004 and June 2015. Instead of formally arresting suspects at Homan Square, Chicago cops are accused of shackling suspects to the wall for hours without bathroom breaks while violating their constitutional rights by threatening and beating them without the presence of an attorney.

In a lawsuit filed in October, Deanda Wilson alleged that Chicago Police Sgt. Frank Ramaglia held a knife to his throat during an interrogation. After Wilson repeatedly asked for his lawyer and bathroom privileges, he was later forced to urinate on himself while officers ignored his pleas for help. Transported to Cook County jail and incarcerated for 15 months awaiting trial, Wilson and his co-defendants were found not guilty after Judge William O’Brien determined the state failed to meet its burden of proof.

On October 20, 2012, CPD officers detained Angel Perez at Homan Square to convince him to turn into a police informant. According to a lawsuit filed by Perez, officers Jorge Lopez and Edmund Zablocki anally raped him with a gun to coerce his cooperation.

In September 2011, Jose Martinez was allegedly cuffed to a bench for nine hours at Homan Square without food, water, or the use of a restroom before being booked at an actual police station. In August 2006, Estephanie Martinez had to relieve herself in a Homan Square interrogation room when a guard repeatedly refused to take her to the bathroom. On February 6, Calvin Coffey defecated on the floor of an interrogation room after guards refused his requests to go to the bathroom for over two hours. According to his lawsuit, Coffey was ordered to clean it up with his skull cap.

Although John Hubbard entered Homan Square on February 2, 2013, he never walked out of the secret facility. Hubbard was later pronounced dead inside an interrogation room of an apparent heroin overdose. Officers at Homan Square have also been accused of injecting suspects with heroin to force confessions.

On Monday, the leaders of the Chicago NAACP along with Rep. La Shawn Ford called for the Chicago Police Department to retain their misconduct records, as the police unions seek to destroy the documents. Attempting to gain access to police misconduct records dating back to 1969, Rep. Ford, journalist Jamie Kalven, and University of Chicago Law School Prof. Craig Futterman have been fighting to release the files to the public instead of burning them like a furtive stack of banished books.

Allowed to take a tour of Homan Square, Cook County Commissioner Richard Boykin was informed that the facility was mainly used for undercover organized crime and narcotics work. Although he noted several cameras in the interrogation rooms, Commissioner Boykin did not observe any security cameras in the lockup facility. On Wednesday, Boykin and the Board of Commissioners will address a resolution calling for the Justice Department to investigate Homan Square because the Chicago Police Department cannot be trusted with investigating the allegations against its tainted department.

Earlier this month, the city of Chicago paid out $5.5 million to victims tortured by former Police Commander Jon Burge. Between 1972 and 1991, Burge and his men forced confessions out of more than 200 people by torturing them with suffocation, beatings, and genital electrocution. After costing the city over $100 million in legal fees and settlements, Burge continues to receive a $4,000 monthly pension from the city.

Last month, Chicago police officers were caught tampering with the Burger King surveillance videos that recorded the death of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. Although Officer Jason Van Dyke accused McDonald of lunging at him with a knife, police dashcam video revealed the teenager had been walking away before Van Dyke repeatedly shot him. Van Dyke was charged with murder after a court ordered the release of the suppressed dashcam video.

Former Chicago homicide detective and Guantanamo Bay interrogator, Richard Zuley, faced multiple lawsuits alleging he coerced confessions, threatened suspects’ family members, planted evidence, and committed torture. After retiring from the department, Zuley was placed in charge of the interrogation of Guantanamo detainee, Mohammedou Ould Slahi. According to Slahi’s testimony, Zuley tortured him, subjected him to mock executions, and threatened to bring Slahi’s mother to Guantanamo to rape her.

Notorious for defending crooked cops, police unions cannot be trusted with the decision to incinerate the misconduct files of officers still wearing a badge and gun. To prevent further unjustified killings, cops must be held accountable for their actions. Especially when officers are allowed to operate in a black site where unofficial detainees have their civil rights incessantly violated.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/chicago-police-fight-destroy-misconduct-records-launch-homan-square-investigation/

Las Vegas

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2684 on: January 12, 2016, 11:58:17 AM »
Quote
police unions argue that red-flagged officers should not be judged by their marred past.

Yes, let's be reasonable.  I'm sure all future victims will understand.

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2685 on: January 12, 2016, 10:04:02 PM »
All these Thug Psychopath Scumbag Cops Running Around
In America, And Some People Trying To Find Any Little
Excuse To Defend & Justify Their Behaviour.
Says A Lot About Them People Also.

'To Protect & Serve'  Yes Themselves!!!

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2686 on: January 13, 2016, 12:13:03 PM »

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2687 on: January 13, 2016, 12:17:11 PM »
Bigot Cop Pulls Gun on Asian Man, Accuses Him of Being “an ISIS” and Beats Him

Lewis and Clark County, MT — A sheriff’s deputy with Lewis and Clark County was arrested Monday morning after allegedly pulling a gun on a man at a party and assaulting him.

On December 4, Philip Jay Clark, 49, showed up to a bonfire party “super intoxicated,” according to the victim, identified as C.F. in court documents.

“He (C.F) said Clark, ‘Got a little bit violent and a little bit aggressive right away.’ He said it seemed like Clark wanted to fight. He said after shaking Clark’s hand Clark, ‘pulled out his gun, pointed it at me and then laughed, handed it to somebody else like we were about to fight …,'” according to documents.

According to court records, Clark began hitting C.F. before asking him to name the capital of Thailand and punched him in the groin, yelling “Bangkok.” The drunken bigot cop then walked away.

As C.F.’s friend was telling him that it would probably be a good idea for him to leave, Clark became aggressive once again. He then pulled out his pistol, with his finger on the trigger, shoved it in C.F’s face and began referring to his non-Muslim Asian victim as “an ISIS.”

“[I was] 100% positive he was gonna start shooting,'” C.F. said, according to the documents.

Clark has since retained an attorney, Mathew Johnson, who claims that Clark was acting in self-defense when he interacted with C.F. Apparently resorting to schoolyard bully tactics of asking the capital of Thailand before punching him in the groin, was a means of deterring an attack from C.F.

“My client was very surprised that charges were filed without an investigator talking to him,” Johnson said, noting that Clark should have been given his special treatment due to his officer status.

According to Lewis and Clark County Sheriff Leo Dutton, after the party, a citizen called in to report Clark’s behavior. Dutton said that was when they launched the investigation.

Clark was booked on felony charges of assault with a deadly weapon and his bond was set at $50,000. However, likely due to his blue privilege, after appearing before the judge, Clark was released on his own recognizance.

The case has since been handed over to the Montana Department of Justice to avoid the conflict of interest of the Lewis and Clark County Sheriff’s Department investigating themselves.

The Free Thought Project’s request for the status of Clark’s employment was not immediately returned by the Lewis and Clark County Sheriff’s Department.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/bigot-cop-pulls-gun-asian-man-accuses-an-isis-beats/

avxo

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2688 on: January 13, 2016, 04:49:06 PM »
“My client was very surprised that charges were filed without an investigator talking to him,” Johnson said, noting that Clark should have been given his special treatment due to his officer status.

No need to comment further... this says it all.

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2689 on: January 14, 2016, 11:51:36 AM »
No need to comment further... this says it all.

Not that it really matters, but when I read that I thought it didn't sound right. What exactly did the attorney say vs what the author says he said... so I looked up the incident from a different source, one that didn't show obvious bias with "bigot cop" type headlines and it had;

 Clark's private attorney, Mathew Johnson, said the agent failed to speak with his client and other witnesses.

"My client was very surprised that charges were filed without an investigator talking to him," Johnson said.

Not sure where the other part that was in the article came from, but it wasn't apparent in the article from a real news source. No doubt cops do screwed up things.. but it really doesn't hurt to not accept every thing you read negative as gospel without considering the source and looking for verification.   

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2690 on: January 14, 2016, 11:58:31 AM »
Justice for the heroic cop who put his life on the line to save us from violent criminals.

Tragedy of Justice – Feds Dismiss Case Against Cop Who Paralyzed Innocent Grandfather on Video

Birmingham, AL — Although the governor of Alabama formally apologized to the Indian government last year and promised that justice would be served, a federal judge on Wednesday tossed out the civil rights case against the former cop responsible for partially paralyzing an innocent grandfather. Despite the fact that two separate police dashcam videos recorded the blatant use of excessive force on an elderly man, the judge dismissed the case because the officer’s two previous trials ended in hung juries.

At 9:00 a.m. on February 6, 2015, Sureshbhai Patel had been visiting his son’s family in Madison, Alabama, when he decided to take a morning walk through the neighborhood. Although the Indian grandfather had committed no crime, Madison Police Officer Eric Parker and his partner confronted Patel on the sidewalk in an attempt to question him. Unable to communicate with the officers or understand their commands, Patel tried to speak in broken English.

“He’s saying, ‘No English,’” Parker’s partner observed as they continued to interrogate Patel.

Parker later testified that Patel’s actions and appearance were “in sequence” with those of a burglar because the Indian grandfather did not answer questions and attempted to walk away during their encounter. Although Patel had not broken the law and was not carrying any weapons or burglary equipment, Parker suspected he was a burglar. At no point did he consider the possibility that Patel was visiting the country from India, struggling to communicate, and could not speak English.

Two police dashcam videos recorded Parker restraining Patel’s arms behind his back before suddenly sweeping the man’s legs out from under him while simultaneously slamming Patel face-first into the ground. With blood pouring down his face, Patel remained on the lawn unable to feel his arms and legs.

As another officer approached them, one of the cops acknowledged, “He don’t speak a lick of English.”

While recovering from surgery after doctors performed a cervical spinal fusion, Patel filed a lawsuit against the city and the two cops who initially confronted him. Since Patel does not have health insurance, his family launched a fundraising campaign at GoFundMe.com to accept donations towards his medical expenses.

Six days after the incident, Parker was charged with third-degree assault and later fired from the department. On March 26, 2015, a federal grand jury decided to indict Parker for use of unreasonable force. Even though Parker was caught on video clearly violating Patel’s civil rights, his two previous trials ended in hung juries.

In September, U.S. District Judge Madeline Haikala declared a mistrial after jurors failed to reach a unanimous decision. A second mistrial was declared two months later. Arguing on Wednesday that the prosecution did not eliminate reasonable doubt that Parker had used excessive force in his prior two trials, Haikala decided to throw out the case against the cowardly cop who felt threatened by an unarmed, innocent elderly man.

Last year, Alabama Governor Robert Bentley formally apologized to the government of India for the brutal assault. Referring to the use of excessive force, Governor Bentley assured the Indian government that justice would be served while expressing regret for Patel’s spinal cord injuries

“I wish to assure you and the government of India that we will see that justice is done,” Governor Bentley wrote last year. “I deeply regret the unfortunate use of excessive force by the Madison Police Department on Sureshbhai Patel and for the injuries sustained by Mr. Patel. I sincerely hope that Mr. Patel continues to improve and that he will regain full use of his legs.”

Instead of fulfilling Bentley’s promise, the U.S. justice system has once again failed an innocent person abused by an incompetent coward who should never have been given a badge and a gun in the first place.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/federal-judge-dismisses-excessive-force-case-cop-paralyzed-indian-grandfather-video/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2691 on: January 19, 2016, 10:38:26 AM »

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2692 on: January 20, 2016, 10:15:11 AM »
Maybe if they investigated themselves they would've found no wrongdoing.


Disgruntled Cop Forces Fellow Officers to Stalk Innocent Man to Give Him a “Revenge Beating”

Huntsville, AL – Accused of knocking an innocent man’s teeth out and choking him unconscious during a traffic stop, a former Madison County deputy initially pleaded not guilty to federal charges of civil rights violations and obstruction of justice. After his fellow officers informed the FBI that he had attempted to intimidate them, including placing a gun against a colleague’s head, the former deputy filed a motion on Tuesday requesting to change his plea.

In July 2012, Madison County Deputy Justin Watson was off-duty with his then-fiancée, now wife, at Billy’s Bar & Grill when Watson believed he heard Tennessee mechanic Robert Bryant say something to his fiancée. Instead of keeping his cool, the off-duty deputy engaged Bryant in a bar fight and ended up with a fat lip. Embarrassed and seeking revenge, Watson allegedly convinced his dispatcher to track down Bryant during her off-duty hours.

Dispatcher Amanda Billings later testified, “He said he was going to bring the entire SWAT team to Billy’s.”

According to Billings, Watson pressured her into conducting surveillance at the bar in order to locate Bryant. After making contact with Bryant’s girlfriend at another local bar, Billings managed to learn Bryant’s name, the type of vehicle that he drove, and that his vehicle still had Tennessee plates. As Billings handed over the information to Watson, she continued surveillance at the bar until spotting Bryant in August.

On August 4, 2012, Billings and Watson exchanged text messages in which the dispatcher informed Watson that Bryant was at the bar. In an attempt to seek revenge against Bryant, Watson pulled over a white pick-up truck with Tennessee tags. Due to the fact that he had pulled over the wrong guy, Watson let the driver go without issuing a ticket. Less than three weeks later, Watson reaped his vengeance.

On August 22, 2012, Watson reportedly pulled over Bryant shortly after leaving the bar at 10:50 p.m. After ordering Bryant to step out of his vehicle, Watson allegedly punched him in the face before beating Bryant with a police baton and knocking out several of his teeth. Bryant was later charged with felony assault of an officer after the deputy choked him unconscious.

Following the unprovoked beatdown, Bryant filed a lawsuit against Madison County Sheriff Blake Dorning, Watson, and seven other deputies involved in his wrongful arrest. In August 2014, Bryant was awarded a $625,000 settlement. Watson quit the Madison County sheriff’s department in April 2015.

On August 4, 2015, Watson was placed under arrest after being charged with two counts of civil rights violations and three counts of obstructing justice. Charged with deprivation of rights under color of law for the brutal assault, Watson was also accused of violating Bryant’s civil rights by conducting an unlawful traffic stop. According to his indictment, Watson committed witness intimidation by threatening at least two of his colleagues and lying under oath.

In her testimony to the FBI, Billings recalled Watson instructing her to “Keep your mouth shut” during the course of the investigation. According to Deputy Jake Church, Watson aimed his unloaded gun at Church’s head and pulled the trigger in an attempt to intimidate him. Watson allegedly threatened his fellow deputy after Church discovered that Watson had cut out his head from a staff photograph. When Church asked why the photo had been altered, Watson reportedly responded, “When did you talk to the FBI?”

Facing a maximum sentence of 11 years in prison for the two civil rights charges and 60 years in prison for the three obstruction counts, Watson initially plead not guilty to the federal charges. But on Tuesday, Watson filed an order asking U.S. District Judge Karon Bowdre for a hearing to change his plea. He is scheduled to appear before the judge on Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. at the U.S. Courthouse in downtown Huntsville and is expected to change his plea to guilty.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/deputy-pleads-guilty-charged-revenge-beatdown-witness-intimidation/

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2693 on: January 20, 2016, 02:41:37 PM »
Yet more unfounded writings about The Saintly Police
Who Never Do Wrong, We must not jump to Conclusions
When Reading These Very Unjust & Bias News Articles.
It is very well know That it is all lies & exaggeration
When writing about The Beloved Good Cops.

The papers & news articles plus the police Always Tell
The Truth When Writing or Speaking About The Public &
Scumbags They Arrest... Then you can Believe Everything.
 ::) ::)

And I have a bridge for sale.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2694 on: January 20, 2016, 08:28:10 PM »
"Edwards said he could not have stopped the kick because he “already had the muscles fired” in his right leg."


After Video Shows Raging Cop Run Over and Kick a Compliant Biker, He’s Promoted to Captain

Eugene, OR — Last week, a Eugene man was awarded $180,000 by a jury after being run over and attacked by an Oregon State Police officer.

The dashcam video from the attack was also released along with the ruling. In the video, Capt. Rob Edwards, with the OSP, is seen chasing down Justin Wilkens, running his bike over, and then kicking the man so hard that he broke his collarbone.

As the dashcam video begins, Edwards, who is driving an unmarked Chevrolet Camaro, is passed by Wilkens. Wilkens was seen passing cars in a no-passing zone, which was a poor decision. However, an even poorer decision was for Edwards to do the same thing in his vehicle that is several times wider than a motorcycle.

Luckily, Edwards didn’t plow his police vehicle head-on into a minivan full of children while engaging in such a dangerous pursuit.

Once Wilkens realized he was being followed, he pulled off, at which point Edwards rammed his vehicle into the motorcyclist. Edwards then exits the vehicle with his gun drawn and front kicks the entirely peaceful and compliant Wilkens in the chest so hard that it broke his clavicle and fractured his ribs.

During the civil trial, Edwards made the assertion that his force was entirely justified against Wilkens.

“Based on the aggressive driving and speeds, I believe he was attempting to elude me,” Edwards said. Running over a compliant driver, according to Edwards, is fine and dandy, as long as you believe they were trying to elude you.

According to the Register-Guard, Wilkens, 41, denies trying to escape from the veteran state trooper. He claims he didn’t recognize Edwards’ unmarked Chevrolet Camaro as a police vehicle and did not realize he was being followed until moments before he pulled the motorcycle to the side of the road and stopped.

Before being run down by the crazed cop, Wilkens testified that he thought he was about to get a well-deserved speeding ticket. Instead, he got a hospital visit, a damaged motorcycle, towing fees, and medical bills.

In a laughable testimony, Edwards admitted that Wilkens was complying with his commands prior to unleashing the kick, but that he couldn’t stop his kick as he “already had the muscles fired” in his right leg.

As if claiming his leg has a mind of his own wasn’t bad enough, Edwards then attempted to tell the jury that the same thing happened to his brakes, which is why he ran over Wilkens. In spite of the video clearly showing no attempt to brake prior to his car ramming Wilkens, Edwards claimed that he “accidentally bumped” the motorcycle as a result of “brake fade” — a term to describe overheated brakes on older model vehicles.

Had Edwards actually experienced “brake fade,” Wilkens could be dead.

Luckily the jury was not swayed by Edwards’ ridiculous testimony, and they listened to Wilkens’ lawyer, Lauren Regan when she reminded jurors that brake fade is exceedingly rare in modern brake systems.

After the verdict last week, State Police released a statement that said the agency “is disappointed with the (trial) outcome and feels the actions of our troopers clearly did not violate established procedures or tactics. In situations like these, officers have milliseconds to make what may be life-or-death decisions and those officers should be shielded from the liability of civil damages.”

Edwards was never suspended for this incident, and only received a written reprimand for failing to report his use of force. In true blue privilege fashion, Edwards, who was a lieutenant at the time of this stop, has since been promoted to Captain and now he sits at the head of the entire OSP at their headquarters in Bend.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-shows-raging-cop-run-kick-compliant-biker-promoted-captain/

http://registerguard.com/rg/news/local/33955359-75/federal-jury-rules-in-favor-of-speeding-motorcyclist-against-oregon-state-police-trooper.html.csp

http://registerguard.com/rg/news/local/33951768-75/oregon-state-police-captain-defends-self-in-court-during-excessive-force-trial-in-eugene.html.csp

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2695 on: January 22, 2016, 09:34:20 AM »
Georgia Police Officer Indicted for Murder of Unarmed Black Man

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/22/us/georgia-police-officer-robert-olsen-anthony-hill-shooting.html

"Although Mr. James had announced this month that he would seek an indictment, prosecutors faced an especially complex challenge because of the legal protections that are guaranteed to law enforcement officers in Georgia. Those safeguards, which are among the country’s most extensive, give accused officers access to the grand jury’s meeting, as well as the opportunity to address the panel without the threat of cross-examination or a rebuttal by prosecutors."

 “The grand jury has to hear, without a doubt, the reasonable, subjective views of the officer and the reason why a law enforcement officer would act,” Lance LoRusso, a defense lawyer who works with the Georgia division of the Fraternal Order of Police, said this month. “Private citizens don’t get paid to use deadly force; law enforcement officers do.”

avxo

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2696 on: January 22, 2016, 11:49:45 AM »
Georgia Police Officer Indicted for Murder of Unarmed Black Man

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/22/us/georgia-police-officer-robert-olsen-anthony-hill-shooting.html

"Although Mr. James had announced this month that he would seek an indictment, prosecutors faced an especially complex challenge because of the legal protections that are guaranteed to law enforcement officers in Georgia. Those safeguards, which are among the country’s most extensive, give accused officers access to the grand jury’s meeting, as well as the opportunity to address the panel without the threat of cross-examination or a rebuttal by prosecutors."

 “The grand jury has to hear, without a doubt, the reasonable, subjective views of the officer and the reason why a law enforcement officer would act,” Lance LoRusso, a defense lawyer who works with the Georgia division of the Fraternal Order of Police, said this month. “Private citizens don’t get paid to use deadly force; law enforcement officers do.


Interesting statement. Shows everythign that's wrong with the system.

avxo

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2697 on: January 26, 2016, 09:59:54 PM »
According to the Union President, Sargent Uppercut this is an unfortunate incident but we need to keep in mind that "[a]lthough in this case, it turned out Mr. Squirrel was only carrying a nut, we cannot let this incident detract from two important points: if Mr. Squirrel hadn't run away from the Officer while simultaneously running towards him brandishing a weapon, he would be very much alive today since the Officer would have only had occasion to use his Taser and administer a controlled beating to ensure compliance. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Officer, who at this very moment is having ice cream with the rest of the force at the local Dairy Queen."

 ;D

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2698 on: January 27, 2016, 09:40:51 AM »
“Gotta Cover Our Ass” Illegally Confiscated Cellphone Records Cops Framing an Innocent Man

Hartford, CT — On September 11, 2015, journalist and police accountability activist, Michael Picard was illegally detained for lawfully open carrying and filming police on public property. During the illegal detainment, Connecticut state troopers confiscated his gun and his camera. However, the trooper who took the phone went on to make a critical mistake — he left the camera rolling while fabricating a story to falsely charge Picard.

The resultant footage provides a rare, behind the scenes look at what officers are capable of doing to people with whom they disagree. It is nothing short of jaw-droppingly infuriating.

On that September night, Picard and a friend were on public property and warning drivers of a DUI checkpoint ahead. They were several hundred yards from the checkpoint and not interfering at all when troopers drove up, without lights on, and against the flow of traffic, to begin harassing the two gentlemen.

Trooper First Class John Barone, Sergeant John Jacobi, and Trooper Jeff Jalbert falsely claimed that Picard was waving his gun around and pointing it at people. However, Picard was holding a sign the entire time and did not touch his gun. Also, as you will see below, the officers admit that they were lying.

Had Picard actually been waving a gun, these troopers would have approached the situation in an entirely different manner, with guns drawn and possible SWAT backup. However, they did no such thing, because there was clearly no threat from the activists.

The fact that they were no threat did not stop the subsequent assault, though.

Two troopers approached Picard while forcefully removing his gun and then grabbing his camera, falsely claiming it is illegal to film. When Picard informs the officer can legally film here, the officer ignorantly asserts that “It’s illegal to take my picture. Personally, it is illegal.”

“Did you get any documentation that I am allowing you to take my picture”? asks the cop.

When Picard attempts to explain to the aggressive officer that he doesn’t need a permit because he is on public property, the trooper then makes the asinine declaration that, “No I’m not (on public property). I’m on state property. I’m on state property.”

State-owned roadways and right of ways are public property. The trooper’s assertion that it is illegal to film on his ‘state property’ was entirely false and in violation of Connecticut Bill No. 245, which “protects the right of an individual to photograph or video record peace officers in the performance of their duties.”

All this aggressive and unlawful behavior of these troopers, however, was about to come back to haunt them. After illegal confiscating the camera — the trooper forgot to stop it from recording.

What happened next was a behind the scenes glimpse of what it looks and sounds like when cops lie to charge innocent people with crimes.

The corruption starts as an unidentified trooper begins to search for anything that these gentlemen may have done to trump charges up on them. However, they were clean. At this point, Trooper first class Barone chimes in describing how they now have to charge these men with something to justify their harassment and subsequent detainment.

“Want me to punch a number on this? Gotta cover our ass,” explains the trooper.

“Let’s give him something,” says an unidentified trooper, pondering the ways they can lie about this innocent man.

“What are they going to do? Are they going to do anything?” says Sergeant Jacobi, noting that they are entirely innocent.

“It’s legal to do it,” he continues, describing how the actions of the two activists are completely legal, before going on to make up charges on them.

“I think we do simple trespass, we do reckless use of the highway and creating a public disturbance,” Jacobi says as he makes up these false charges against innocent people. “All three are tickets.”

Once they figure out the false charges to raise, the officers then brainstorm a story of lies to back them up.

“And then we claim that, um, in backup, we had multiple, um,” the unidentified trooper stutters as he makes up his fake story. “Um, they (the non-existent complainants) didn’t want to stay and give us a statement, so we took our own course of action.”

The corrupt cops had then solved their fake case, lied about a cover story, and were set to charge an innocent man with three crimes — all in a day’s work.

But there was just one more thing…. “Oh shit!” blurts out the cop as he realizes their entire scandalous corrupt conversation was just recorded. Apparently, however, the officer felt that it must not have recorded their conversation as the phone was returned.

The cops then gave the innocent man back his weapon, and it’s back to the DUI checkpoint for them — to harass and detain more innocent people.

In speaking with the Free Thought Project, Picard said, “Per my lawyer’s request, I have kept quiet until now.”

“My lawyer and I went to the first court appearance on Thursday, January 14th, 2016, where the prosecutor offered a $25 fine, in lieu of the original $300 fine, to make the case go away,” he said. “I rejected the deal because I did nothing wrong. As of now, the prosecutor has not dropped the case despite having video evidence of police misconduct.”

The trial is set for April 25th.

Watch the video below and remember that this can happen to anyone anywhere and at any time. All a corrupt cop has to do to ruin the lives of those they do not like, is make up a lie and get their fellow cops to corroborate that lie. Had the cop not left the video going, Picard’s situation would be much different and the world would think he’s a criminal.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/gotta-cover-ass-illegally-confiscated-cellphone-records-cops-framing-innocent-man/

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2699 on: January 27, 2016, 12:55:51 PM »
Tried to listen to the whole video. In more than one place the subtitles of what they say the cops said aren't accurate. For example.. it says "We'll claim" when the cop actually clearly says "we'll explain that".. Often times words are added that can't be made out.. like "Call the Hartford Lt and see if he has any grudges". I listened to that several times and there is no way to get "grudges" out of that.

Also, the allegation that they made up people complaining isn't substantiated by the video. Early on a cop tells them people were complaining. So when the officer says we'll explain there were several complaints and they didn't want to hang around, that could have been the case.

Having said all that... the cop was obviously wrong for stopping the taping. The person had the legal right to film or take pictures of the cops. The covering their ass part of getting a case number for the incident was legit as it would be likely these guys would complain and having it documented makes sense. What is chicken shit is having to come up with charges to make a point. They should have dusted them off after interviewing and determining they weren't a threat and moved on. What they did is part of the problem police are having with their reputation. Stop being such tight asses and causing people to go to court because you felt they bucked up to you. Grow some balls and accept the fact challenging authority has always existed and for good reason. They weren't out of line to the point they needed tickets