Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 996572 times)

illuminati

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3125 on: September 29, 2016, 01:54:18 PM »
The "brave heroes" shot dead a 6 year old kid in "self defense"... #kidlivesmatter? Where is the outrage for this killing? Even though it happened almost a year ago it has been hardly mentioned in the news.

Louisiana Cops Shoot into Car, Killing 6-Year-Old Jeremy Mardis

Body cam footage showing Louisiana cops shooting into a car and killing a 6-year-old boy sitting in the passenger seat of his father’s car was released earlier today, showing no evidence that the cops were in fear for their lives as they have been claiming since last year.

After all, not only does the video not show Christopher Few using his car as a weapon by ramming his car into their cars.

His car is not even pointed in their direction.

What it does show is Few sitting in his car with both hands out the window as his car is angled perpendicular to the two Marksville City Marshals who pull up in their cars, step out and start shooting.

The incident took place November 3, 2015 after marshals Derrick Stafford and Norris Greenhouse Jr. claimed they tried to pull Few over for an outstanding warrant.

But it turned out, there was never a warrant for Few’s arrest. Nor was there a gun in the car.

But his son was in the car, a 6-year-old boy named Jeremy Mardis who had been diagnosed with autism. He was shot five times.


At the time, there was talk that perhaps the deputies had a personal vendetta against Few but that has not been talked about since.

The video, which is what led to murder and attempted murder charges against the two cops, captures their surprise when they realized they had just killed a child.

“I never saw a kid in the car, man,” Stafford tells Greenhouse according to the Associated Press, which has not published that part of the video yet.

“I never saw a kid, bro.”

But ballistics indicate he fired his gun 14 times, striking the child at least three times.

Greenhouse fired four times, but they have not determined if his bullets struck anybody.

The footage is from a body cam worn by a third cop, Marksville Police Sgt. Kenneth Parnell, III, who did not fire his gun, although it certainly looks that way from the video.

The video was released today by a judge during a hearing for the two cops. Local media says it has much more footage but much of it is gruesome, so they are deciding what is appropriate to release.

There is no audio for the first 30 seconds of the video, which indicates Parnell turned it on as the other cops were shooting Few, resulting in the half-minute buffer with no audio also being recorded.

Both face second-degree murder and second-degree attempted murder charges.

As is the case with many cops we write about, both cops had a history of violence and unchecked abuses, especially Stafford, who was once charged with aggravated rape, so if only they would have fired him from the get-go, little Jeremy Mardis would be alive today.





https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/09/28/watch-louisiana-deputies-shoot-into-car-killing-6-year-old-jeremy-mardis/









2nd degree murder  ::) Fcuk that.
It should be 1st degree

Big tough cops with guns & No Brian's
Take there Badges & Guns away they'd Crap Themselves.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3126 on: September 29, 2016, 02:27:00 PM »
Being responsible for your firearms? Only applies to citizens..

Police might not know where their guns are, and the law says that's OK

http://www.ocregister.com/articles/police-730005-weapons-guns.html


Use a safe or strongbox bolted through the inside into trunk, and keep a hidden killswitch on the ignition system (good idea even without a gun).

LE get weapons stolen regularly, and innocent people die as a result.  It happened a couple times just recently.

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3127 on: September 30, 2016, 12:01:46 PM »
This sounds equal parts odd and ridiculous. Once again, criminals hiding behind "qualified immunity".

Insane Cop Attacks Innocent Woman, Tasers Her for No Reason Then Gives Her a ‘Sorry I Tased You’ Cake

Pensacola, FL – A Florida deputy is being accused of excessive force, and adding insult to injury by baking his victim a “sorry I tased you” cake. According to victim Stephanie Byron,  deputy Michael Wohlers showed up at the building where she worked for no reason. He then began bullying  her and other employees that were present.

The lawsuit states that the officer “used his apparent law enforcement authority to intimidate, harass, and threaten plaintiff … about her personal life. Because Wohlers did not like how Plaintiff failed to respond to his show of authority, Wohlers became increasingly aggressive toward employees at the apartment complex’s office, including with Ms. Byron.”

Ms. Byron says that the officer then took a Sweet Tea that was sitting on her desk and refused to give it back to her. When she attempted to get her drink back, the officer tased her in the throat and chest and then jumped on top of her when she fell to the ground, placing his knees firmly on her chest and forcefully removing the taser prongs.

The official statement from the police department and from deputy Wohlers report suggests that this was a simple occurrence of “horseplay.” However, Byron says that this issue was no joke and that there was no “play” on her part whatsoever. She was randomly bullied and attacked by a corrupt officer, who had no official business at the location where the incident occurred.

To add insult to injury, Wohlers later attempted to apologize to Byron by baking her a cake with the image of a police officer tasing a person, with the words “sorry I tased you.”

Despite the complaints against him and the admission of guilt, Wohlers has received “qualified immunity” in the case, which means he has been shielded from legal penalties and lawsuits as a result of the incident because he happens to be a government agent.

According to Wohler’s attorneys, his actions “reflect, at worst, mere negligence,” and that the officer did not act in “bad faith, or with malicious purpose, or in a manner exhibiting wanton and willful disregard of human rights, safety or property.” As a result of this immunity, the Sheriff’s Department, and the taxpayers will foot the bill for any damages won in a lawsuit.

Wohler has since resigned from the department as he was being investigated for misconduct — a common move among cops who want to escape punishment.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-bakes-innocent-woman-tased-cake/


Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3128 on: September 30, 2016, 12:04:30 PM »
Disturbing Dashcam Shows Raging Cop Shatter His Windshield With Handcuffed Man’s Face

Lorain, OH — (RT) An Ohio officer slammed a handcuffed man’s face into a police cruiser with so much force that it broke the windshield, causing the glass to shatter, newly released footage shows. Despite the violent impact, the local police chief is defending the officer.

Dash cam video obtained exclusively by NBC affiliate WKYC shows Pele Smith being escorted to the squad car while handcuffed in Lorain, Ohio.
Instead of opening the car door for Smith and placing him in the backseat, the officer escorting him throws him against the windshield so hard that the glass shatters.



Smith was treated at Mercy Regional Medical Center for facial injuries following the incident.

The arrest took place while police were investigating drug complaints in Smith’s neighborhood.

According to a statement released by Lorain Police Chief Cel Rivera on Wednesday, Smith tried to destroy drug evidence by placing it in his mouth and “physically resisted officers” as they tried to retrieve the evidence.

However, the video merely shows Smith calling out to his mother to look after his son.

Smith was ultimately charged with tampering with evidence, obstructing official business, and resisting arrest. As part of a deal with prosecutors, he pleaded guilty and received probation.

Last month, Smith filed a civil rights lawsuit against the city and the four officers involved, citing excessive force. The 32-year-old is seeking unspecified damages.

The suit specifically mentions Zachary Ferenec, the officer who walked Smith to the cruiser and pushed him into the windshield. It also states that the other three officers did not intervene.

The filing also alleges that one officer, Michael Gidich, got into the back of the car and “began to taunt and insult the bleeding [Smith]”while he was being taken to the hospital for treatment.

But Rivera defended the officers’ actions, and says the department denies all allegations in the lawsuit. He insists the video can easily be“misunderstood” by the public.

“I would caution observers to not rush to judgment relative to the actions of the police officers on scene. Although it is not easy to watch, police officers explain all of their actions in their police reports,” Rivera wrote in the Wednesday statement.

Despite the police chief calling Smith a “violent drug trafficker” who was known to police, he has no felony convictions for violent crimes such as assault or robbery, according to the Lorain County Clerk of Courts. He has prior convictions for drug offenses and possessing a firearm.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/52599-2/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3129 on: September 30, 2016, 02:43:17 PM »
Once again the "fearless heroes", "fearing for their lives", murdering innocent people and not facing any real consequences.

Dept Claims Cop Had to Shoot Unarmed Autistic Man as He Ran Away Because He ‘Feared for His Life’

Hays, KS— Over a month has passed since 36-year-old Joey Weber, who had autism, was shot dead in broad daylight following a traffic stop by a Hays, Kansas, police officer — but the explanation for the shooting is a tired and familiar farce.

Joseph Nathaniel Weber was described by his community, family, and those who knew him as full of life and excitement, had to die, because Sgt. Brandon Hauptman — specifically trained to recognize and interact with people who have special or different needs — feared for his life.

Before Hauptman stopped Weber, he had never had trouble with police — in fact, the ebullient man had learned to embrace his autism, and was a valuable, active participant in community programs and was a member of the Knights of Columbus at his church.

Weber joined activities and took advantage of services offered by New Age Services to members of the community who have mental disabilities. The owner of New Age Services also employs participants at his company, Joe Bob Outfitters, as he did for Joey Weber.
Weber’s life, by all accounts, was promising and fulfilling.

So, what egregious crime caused Hauptman to stop Weber — and ultimately cut his life short?

According to Ellis County Attorney Tom Drees, who came under fire for being tight-lipped on the August 18 fatal shooting until now, Hauptman attempted the traffic stop over an improperly displayed tag and expired decal — but Weber, likely confused and frightened, failed to initially stop for the officer.

Hauptman pursued the vehicle into an alley, and Weber finally stopped; but as Drees explained, the man didn’t comply with the officer’s commands. Hauptman then attempted to arrest Weber for eluding law enforcement, but when additional patrol cars arrived at the scene, he again drove away.

“He was pursued by three law enforcement vehicles,” Drees described, as quoted by KSN. “He eluded the officer for several minutes and stopped in the 2300 block of Timber Drive.”
As The Free Thought Project previously reported, “Timber Drive happens to be the street on which New Age Services is located. As he was startled by the officers, it is apparent Weber tried to make it to a safe space; somewhere he knew he would be okay.”

People who have autism can become overwhelmed by excessive external stimulation — such as the flashing lights on a patrol car and shouted commands by officers — and might be too frightened or confused to be capable of compliance. Weber’s family previously explained he had low verbal skills and simply didn’t know what to do in this situation.

So when Weber arrived at the place he felt he could be understood, and officers continued barking orders, his stress and confusion worsened.
Drees told KSN Hauptman ordered Weber to the ground at gunpoint — but didn’t explain why the officer would have any need to pull a deadly weapon on an unarmed man in the first place.

At that point, “Weber fled on foot from Sgt. Hauptman towards a residence. Sgt. Hauptman gave chase and attempted to force Weber to the ground,” Drees continued.
After the cop successfully tackled the frightened man to the ground, Drees claimed Weber attempted to wrestle Hauptman’s gun away from him.

“Sgt. Hauptman, fearing for his life, pushed the barrel of the gun into the chest of Weber and fired one shot. Weber died from the gunshot wound,” Drees asserted, according to KSN. “Sgt. Hauptman reasonably believed that shooting Weber was necessary to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself.”

Perhaps there’s a reason it took Drees more than an entire month to concoct this ridiculously plain version of events. Consider Weber, who never had negative interactions with police prior to Hauptman’s stop, and whose autism made communication difficult, and flashing lights, yelling, and an altogether unfamiliar situation just too much to cope with — so he did the one thing most instinctual in that situation. He fled to the comfort of familiar people and places.

Further, when the officer caught up to Weber, he pointed his pistol at the man and commanded him to the ground — it’s possible, in fact, quite likely, Weber had not encountered a firearm before then, and now one was pointed in his direction. People who have no idea what it’s like to have autism often react with fear in such a situation — so when Hauptman tackled Weber, the man must have been rightly terrified for his life. It’s arguable he wasn’t trying to wrest the gun away from Hauptman at all — but merely wanted to ensure it wouldn’t be pointed needlessly in his direction a second time.

Hauptman, who remains on paid vacation (administrative leave) until a separate investigation concludes, will not be charged for killing Joey Weber because ‘no crime occurred,’ insisted Drees — the officer ‘was acting in self defense.’

Drees had announced after the fatal shooting that no video footage of the incident existed, and although he backtracked in this announcement, saying both body and dash cam video recorded the encounter, Weber’s family requested it not be released publicly so that he won’t be remembered only for how he died.

Weber’s killing is a tragic addition to an already-lengthy list of victims who met their fate as a result of non-violent — and in this case, non-criminal — violations of petty laws. The tag on Weber’s vehicle had expired — was it truly necessary for Hauptman to pursue the man, considering he had the license number and a ticket could be sent through the mail?

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/52611-2/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3130 on: October 01, 2016, 05:05:53 PM »
This case was posted about a week ago. When will those criminals, as well as the criminal organizations who support them, face actual consequences for their crimes?

Cop Resigns After Video Exposes Her Role in Mistaking Innocent Man for a Thief Leading to His Beating

One day after the public release of body-worn camera footage showed excessive and altogether unnecessary force against a Greensboro, North Carolina, resident sitting on his own front porch led to the permanent suspension of one officer’s law enforcement certification, the second officer involved has tendered her resignation.

Officer Charlotte N. Jackson resigned this week, according to Greensboro Police spokesperson Susan Danielsen cited by Triad City Beat, likely due to public outcry over the female cop’s role in the harassment, intimidation, and assault on resident Dejuan Yourse.

On June 17, Yourse waited for his mom to meet him at the house he’s intermittently shared with her for a decade, and because he did not have a current key, she asked him to wait on the front porch in the quiet neighborhood.

An unidentified person who did not recognize the man thought he was a prowler and called police to report a possible case of breaking and entering. Responding officers Cole and Jackson approached Yourse under the assumption the caller — not the man relaxing calmly in broad daylight on the front porch where anyone passing by could clearly see him — must be correct.

Although the encounter didn’t begin badly, the situation quickly unravels when it becomes apparent the feckless cops don’t actually want the truth, but would rather arrest a cooperative and  innocent man who had literally done nothing wrong.

Jackson, whom police did not immediately identify, first walks to the porch and briefly interviews Yourse to assess the situation, and learns he’s waiting for his mother. Cole, dead set on prowler scenario, then walks to the porch, saying,

“What are you doin’ breaking into your mom’s house?”

“I’m not breaking in here,” Youse replies, laughing.

Their exchange continues, with Yourse showing impressive restraint and remaining unflustered by the officer’s obvious skepticism he isn’t a robber. Although the man did not have his ID, had Cole employed even a smidgen of logic — Yourse was fully cooperative, sitting on a chair on the front porch of the home, with his own car parked in the driveway — the disturbing events that followed might never have happened.

At one point, Yourse attempts to call his mother, handing the phone to Cole to prove he isn’t lying — but, as footage indicates, learning the truth about Yourse’s presence was likely never the goal for either officer.

When his mother doesn’t answer, Yourse points to and names neighbors who would be glad to clear up the misunderstanding if one of the pair of cops would simply inquire.

None of Yourse’s attempts to placate the cops work, and eventually, Cole decides it’s time to play tough guy — poking the man as he stands up, saying, “I said sit down.”

“Hey, man, why are you doing this?” Yourse asks, finally showing a bit of frustration with the needless harassment.

Cole shoots back with the ridiculous assertion Yourse is acting ‘animated,’ which was not the case until the thug cop escalated the encounter from harassment to intimidation.

Determined to prove he isn’t out of place on the front porch of his own home, Yourse begins to call someone to the residence to prove his identity — but Cole, becoming the robber he assumed Yourse to be, snatches the man’s phone from his hands.

“Hey, man, you can’t grab my phone like that!”

But the bully cop has already decided to arrest the black man for being out-of-place in his own neighborhood, on his own front porch — truth be damned.

Body cam footage shows Cole grab Yourse, knocking him to the porch floor as he tries to cuff his wrists. Several times, the officer bellows at the man to stop resisting, but video clearly shows — despite the wholly unjustified arrest — he never does.

Jackson joins the ‘struggle,’ and Cole punches Yourse in the eye before the two finally figure out the man’s size would require two sets of cuffs. They then drag Yourse through his front yard to a waiting patrol car, at one point slamming him on his chest.

“Sit right here! Do NOT fuckin’ move. Don’t say another damned word,” Cole threatens the innocent man. “This is not working out, apparently.”
“Be an adult,” Jackson patronizingly adds for no reason.

“What did I do?” the perplexed man demands fruitlessly.

“Be an adult. Be an adult.”

Before body cam footage was released, Yourse faced a litany of charges — documents cited by Triad City Beat said Jackson accused the man of “using his shoulder to press her wrist against a door frame” — but they have all since been dropped.


Greensboro City Council voted unanimously last week to permanently suspend Cole’s law enforcement certification, which is perhaps the most fitting disciplinary action, considering many violent cops terminated from one department are free to move on to join another. In fact, Cole attempted to stave off such a move by resigning August 16th ahead of a disciplinary hearing, despite the District Attorney having found he did not commit a crime.

Now Jackson has resigned — although many residents wondered whether she should have faced the same fate as Cole.

But police association attorney William Hill, reported WFMY, claims the public release by the city of Jackson’s body cam video violated the N.C. Personnel Privacy Act — which is a misdemeanor — and trampled her rights to due process.

Asked if Jackson or the police association plan to file a lawsuit in the matter, Hill had no comment.

When people who support police without question claim the cops are ‘just doing their jobs’ and are keeping law and order, they ignore the growing number of cases like this.

Yourse had not done anything illegal. He wasn’t  disrespectful or noncompliant. He did not escalate the situation. He did not become violent.

He did, however, try to sit peacefully on his own front porch waiting for his mom — in a police state.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-resigns-video-beating-innocent-man/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3131 on: October 02, 2016, 12:05:41 PM »
Arkansas State Rep. Who Pushed for Law to Film Cops — Arrested for Filming Cops

Little Rock, AK — (RT) An Arkansas politician who helped pass state legislation protecting people who film the police, has been arrested for… filming the police.
Representative John Walker was arrested by Little Rock police on Monday for filming the arrest of a driver and his passenger following a traffic stop and charged with “obstruction of government relations”.

“I’m just making sure they don’t kill you,” said Walker to the driver being pulled over and subsequently arrested for an outstanding warrant, according to the police report.

“I ordered Walker several times to leave or be arrested. Walker replied ‘arrest me’ at which point I did,” wrote the arresting officer.

Walker’s associate, lawyer Omavi Shuker, 29, was also arrested at the scene for walking between the police vehicle and pulled over car.

LRPD released dashcam footage of the incident so members of the public could see how the situation unfolded.

By Tuesday, the Little Rock Police Department realized they had slipped up and dropped the charges against Walker, released a formal letter of apology and issued a full refund of his $1,000 bond. However, the charge against Shuker is still pending.

Walker rejected the city’s apology for their reluctance to recognize “pervasive racial bias in some quarters of the police department” and for their decision to uphold the charges against his colleague.
“It’s a mess,” said president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Tommy Hudson, to the Arkansas Times. “It’s a bad situation for everyone involved,” he added.

Hudson went to reiterate that members of the public are well within their rights to film law enforcement.

“There’s nothing you can do about it. You may not like it, but there’s nothing you can do,” he said.

Walker co-sponsored the passage of a 2015 bill protecting the right of citizens to film events in public places, Arkansas was the first state in the country to adopt such a legislation.



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/arkansas-state-rep-law-film-cops-arrested/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3132 on: October 03, 2016, 09:54:48 AM »
No free speech in the police state.

Library Worker Beaten and Arrested for Peacefully Defending Free Speech of Patron

Kansas City, KS — Since 9/11, the American police state has been constantly trying to outdo itself in the oppression of civil rights. From the Patriot Act to National Security Letters to warrantless wiretapping to militarized protest crackdowns, the State has been unable to hide its authoritarian desires.

The oppression of rights and free speech was put on full display recently at the Kansas City Public Library, where a senior library staff member was brutally taken down and arrested by police and private security officers — for peacefully intervening in the harassment of a library patron.

The armed guards were present as security detail for Dennis Ross, champion of the Israeli lobby and former Bush official who pushed for the Iraq invasion. Ross was giving a talk called “Truman and Israel.”
Steve Woolfolk, director of public relations at the library, became the victim of abuse when he tried to remind the security detail of library policy after an audience member was forcibly removed from the microphone during the Q&A session.

The library hosts several speaking events every month, and Woolfolk knew this would be one of the more controversial events where the library makes a rare exception allowing armed security guards. The library has conditions when security details are brought in for speakers.

According to the Bill of Rights Defense Committee (BRDC):
“First, nobody could be forcibly removed for asking an unpopular question. Second, nobody could be removed at all without consulting with the library staff, who would only allow an individual to be removed if staff concluded they were an imminent threat.”

Woolfolk had positioned himself near the stage where people ask questions, prepared to ask those who went on too long to give up the microphone for the next person. Jeremy Rothe-Kushel was first up.
According to an official statement from the Kansas City Public Library issued on September 30:

“The activist, Jeremy Rothe-Kushel, was first to the microphone when Ross’ presentation turned to Q&A, and his question inferred that the U.S. and Israel have engaged in state-sponsored terrorism. Ross responded and, when Rothe-Kushel attempted to follow up, he was grabbed by one of the private security guards and then by others in the private security detail. Steven Woolfolk, the Library’s director of programming and marketing, attempted to intervene, noting that public discourse is accepted and encouraged at a public event held in a public library.”

Woolfolk thought he had successfully defused the situation, noting that Rothe-Kushel said he would leave voluntarily, which he attempted to do.

But these off-duty police officers, along with private security guards from the Jewish Community Foundation (JCF), couldn’t stop themselves from initiating violence once they had caught the scent.
The BRDC describes how Woolfolk, seeking to keep the peace and the commitment to free and lively discourse, became the victim of brutality by agents of the State and the Israeli lobby.

“Woolfolk wanted to make clear that this was a public event at a public library and thus Rothe-Kushel was not trespassing. He went to find his supervisor, but before he could do so Woolfolk says an off-duty and out of uniform police officer grabbed him from behind and threw him against a pillar. Per Woolfolk, the officer never announced who he was or told Woolfolk he was under arrest, but just kept telling him to “stop resisting.” As Woolfolk told the Dissent NewsWire, he informed the officer, “I’d be happy to do whatever he wanted, and that all I was resisting was the urge to fall face first onto the floor.”  According to Woolfolk, a second police officer, this one in uniform, delivered several blows to Woolfolk’s knee, causing him to be diagnosed with grade 1 torn MCL. Eventually he was thrown over a chair and handcuffed. When he asked what he was being arrested for, the officer told him he didn’t know.”

One can only imagine how other members of the audience felt as they watched this shameless assault by armed security on a library worker who did nothing more than peaceably calm down a volatile situation.
Woolfolk was charged with interfering with the arrest of Rothe-Kushel, who was himself charged with trespassing and resisting arrest. Library director Crosby Kemper says the arrests were unwarranted and “an egregious violation of First Amendment rights.”

“The First Amendment’s protection of the rights of free speech and assembly is cherished by all Americans but particularly by libraries and their patrons,” he says. “An overzealous off-duty police officer violated the rights of one of our patrons at Ambassador Ross’ talk in the Library and doubled down by arresting Steve Woolfolk, who was trying to explain the Library’s rules to the officer.

In defense of the freedom of speech, the Library stands fully in support of Steve.”

“For someone to be assaulted and then arrested for asking a question, in a public library of all places, is abhorrent. The library should be a place where people of all points of view can feel safe and welcome,” said Woolfolk. “Nobody, be it an individual or an agent of the state, should be able to take it upon themselves to silence a point of view simply because they disagree.”

The security detail for Dennis Ross – who held important diplomatic positions in the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations – was certainly tapped into the surveillance state and most likely knew about the activism of Rothe-Kushel. He and an associate were the only ones searched before being allowed to enter, according to Rothe-Kushel.

Ross has a notorious history in pushing the “statecraft” behind America’s military hegemony focused on the Middle East. He worked under neocon war-monger Paul Wolfowitz early in his career, and signed two letters in March 2003 by the Project for a New American Century supporting an invasion of Iraq.

Ross served in various “special” roles involving the Middle East and Southwest Asia under three presidents and is a “distinguished fellow” at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which is funded by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Considering this background, it’s no wonder Ross didn’t stop his jackboots from pouncing on a peace activist challenging the narrative, or assaulting a member of the library staff who dared defend free speech. Stifling dissent is crucial to the message that invading countries and drone bombing women and children is necessary to secure the peace.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/library-worker-beaten-arrested-defending-free-speech/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3133 on: October 03, 2016, 09:37:11 PM »
Perverted criminal gang. Throw them in prison for life (and leave them in the general population).

Michigan Cop Forces Fingers into Man’s Anus After Discovering Suspended License

A Michigan cop forced his fingers into a man’s anus, then fondled the man’s genitals after arresting him for driving with a suspended license earlier this year.

Something he can only do with a valid search warrant and a valid medical license, according to the man’s attorney.

The incident was caught on video, prompting a federal lawsuit against Allen Park police officer Daniel Mack, who can be heard on video telling Kevin Campbell he has every right to probe his anus with his fingers.

According to WXYZ-TV, the local news station that obtained the video:

You can’t do that,” says Kevin Campbell on video captured inside the police lock-up on June 7, 2016.

“Yes, I can. Yes, I can,” says Allen Park Police Officer Daniel Mack.

“Why you putting your fingers in my [expletive]?? Why you feeling my [expletive],” says Campbell in the video.

“Cause you got [something] tucked into your [expletive],” said Mack.

But Campbell had nothing tucked into his anus.

And Mack not only did not have a warrant, he is not a licensed medical professional. And Michigan law states both are necessary before a cop can legally probe a citizen’s anus, according to Campbell’s attorney, David Robinson.


The incident took place June 7, 2016 after Mack pulled Campbell over for not having a visible license plate.

Campbell said he had just purchased a minivan for his wife, so the car still had a temporary license plate, which was taped to the window.

During the stop, Mack discovered Campbell was driving with a suspended license, which was when he was arrested.

Once he was handcuffed in the patrol car, Mack then had a police dog search through the car for drugs which he can only do with probable cause and a search warrant, Robison said.

But even after the dog didn’t find anything, Mack still was not satisfied, so he ordered Campbell to drop his pants after placing him in a jail cell at the police station.


“Your pants [are] unzipped. I’m gonna find it one way or another, alright? So we can do this the easy way or the hard way,” said Mack on the video. “What you got in your drawers,” said Mack.

After Campbell is put in the holding cell, Officer Mack appears to become irate.

“Drop ‘em,” said Mack.

“Drop what,” asked Campbell.

“Your drawers,” said Mack.

“You want me to get naked,” asked Campbell.

“Yeah, you’re getting naked. You’re in a holding cell, you’re getting naked,” said Mack.

Two other officers entered the cell to ensure Campbell drop his drawers and allow himself to be sodomized.

Mack made no mention of the cavity search in his report.

As we’ve seen with many officers who violate the Constitutional rights of citizens, Mack has a history of abusing his power.

Last year, he arrested and abused a man for speeding in a Dodge Challenger when witness video show he had actually clocked another Dodge Challenger for speeding.

Robison, the attorney representing Campbell, is also representing Arthur Chapman, the man in the above incident.

Sexual abuse seems to be a common and accepted among officers at the Allen Park Police Department considering earlier this year, a female police officer named Tracie Brown filed a sexual harassment suit against a male officer named Sergeant Daniele Cerroni, whom she accuses of pulling out his penis and forcing her down, ordering her to perform oral sex on him.

Brown also accused Cerroni of using both hands to choke her when she refused his sexual advances.

When Brown filed an internal complaint, the chief assigned Allen Park Lt. Dave Williams to investigate.

But Brown said he also sexually harassed her while investigating the allegations.

When the local news reported on Brown’s lawsuit, a man named Matt Tracer came forward with his own lawsuits against the department, claiming he had been roughed up by Allen Park cops, then arrested when he tried to complain about it at the city council meeting.

Tracer settled the first suit for $75,000, and the second suit for $58,000, according to Fox 2 Detroit.

Campbell’s lawsuit, which you can read here, lists Mack, a cop named P. Morris and an “unknown officer.”

Mack is seeking qualified immunity, claiming he had no idea that penetrating a man’s anus would be a violation of his Constitutional rights.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/03/michigan-cop-forces-fingers-into-mans-anus-after-discovering-suspended-license/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3134 on: October 03, 2016, 09:47:23 PM »
Another child dead because the scum "was visiting" and left the child unattended for 4 hours. Tragically ironic that cops will arrest parents who leave children in the car unattended even for minutes but somehow it appears that it's different if someone is a cop. As of yet, no arrests of course.

2 Mississippi officers on paid leave after child left in patrol car dies

KILN, Miss. –  Two police officers in Mississippi are on paid leave after a 3-year-old daughter of one of the officers died unattended in a patrol car.

Hancock County Chief Deputy Sheriff Don Bass said Long Beach police officer Cassie Barker's daughter died Friday after the child was left in the car for four hours while her mother was visiting with Long Beach patrolman Clark Ladner. Both officers were off-duty at the time.

Long Beach Police Chief Wayne McDowell told The Sun Herald that Barker and Ladner were placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation.

Hancock County Sheriff Ricky Adam said the car was running and the air conditioning was on when investigators found the child, who died at a hospital.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/10/03/2-mississippi-officers-on-paid-leave-after-child-left-in-patrol-car-dies.html

http://www.sunherald.com/news/local/counties/hancock-county/article105649806.html

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3135 on: October 04, 2016, 10:00:46 AM »
Cop Caught on Video Threatening to Kill Two Kids, Plant Cocaine on Them Gets Vacation — Not Fired

Springfield, MA — Some residents and public officials of Springfield Massachusetts are wondering what it takes to get a police officer fired after a narcotics detective reportedly threatened to crush the skull of a juvenile joy ride suspect and plant cocaine on his body.

The incident took place in February when Detective Gregg Bigda interrogated two of three juveniles who were suspected of taking an unmarked police car left idling outside a pizza shop. Bigda has been a police officer for more than 20 years, with more than 12 years of service as a detective.

Bigda reportedly told one of the teens he’d crush his skull and plant a kilo of cocaine on his body, supposedly to make his death look drug related. The video recording of the interrogation was ordered sealed by a judge to protect the identities of the underage youth involved in the crime.

But word of the threats led to an investigation which ultimately found Detective Bigda guilty of having violated department policies. He was ultimately suspended without pay for 60 days as a result of an internal affairs investigation. But that punishment wasn’t enough for many residents and public officials who say his actions warranted his firing.

Springfield’s Mayor Domenic Sarno says he supports Police Commissioner John Barbieri’s decision to suspend Bigda, instead of firing him. He says that move would not have been successful because he would have likely won an appeal to the firing and the city would have been obligated to rehire Bigda.

“I am not happy about it. This is what was recommended,” Sarno said. “It’s a severe, most severe suspension of 60 working days without pay and retraining.” But Mayor Sarno and five other councilmen, in an apparent attempt to be transparent, are calling on the video, as much of it as possible, to be released to the general public and the media.

While the public and the media haven’t been privy to seeing the video and hearing Bigda’s alleged murderous threats, defense attorneys who represent accused criminals involved in drug cases of which Bigda was involved, have been given copies of the video. They’re now being permitted to use Bigda’s comments in defense of their clients, some of whom have already seen their sentences reduced. As a result, an alleged heroin dealer was released after having served only 3 years in jail awaiting trial, due in part to Bigda’s involvement as a potential witness in the court proceedings.

Bigda’s actions, according to City Councilman Adam Gomes, have cost the city an untold amount of money as Bigda’s death threats and threats of planting evidence have called into question all of his involvement with alleged criminals and their cases. “It is a public safety issue with the opioid crisis and now some of these big dealers are going to be coming back to our communities,” said Gomez.  “We spend a lot of money trying to lock these people up and  now look at what we are going to do,” referring to being forced to let hardened criminals walk free.

Whether or not Bigda is a crooked cop, who goes around doing what he threatened he’d do to the teens is anybody’s guess. However, many politicians are already voicing their own outrage over commissioner Barbieri’s decision to let Bigda off the hook with what some are calling a slap on the wrist.

Springdale City Councilor Justin Hurst asked, “I think we have to ask when it comes to this case, at what point, at what standard is there when the commissioner feels a cop should be terminated?” The case against Bigda underscores how tolerant police departments are to their officers, while other professions, such as the teaching profession, may not be as lenient.

The Springfield Police Departments handling of Detective Gregg Bigda may lead many to question, once again, why it is that abusive police officers seem to be held to a lower standard that the rest of America’s workforce. For example, if a teacher was filmed on tape threatening to crush the skull of a student or threatened to falsely report to administrators he or she had found drugs on a kid, would that teacher be allowed to continue teaching, even after being suspended without pay for two months?


Bigda’s case has cost the taxpayer an untold amount of money, may very well have traumatized the young men involved, and may now serve to further illustrate the need for more effective police accountability.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/detective-threatened-kill-kids-suspended/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3136 on: October 05, 2016, 01:10:16 PM »
About time. Or how about allowing citizens to use ERAD against cops and police departments if the citizen files a complaint against them: they could seize the cop's and department's assets and money, even if there is no conviction or court decision. Now that's where you'd suddenly see the cops reacting and screaming about their "rights" and "due process".

Police Theft So Out of Hand, State Just Passed a Law Banning Cops from Robbing Innocent People

California — In a refreshing and unfortunately rare instance of reasonableness in policy, California Governor Jerry Brown recently signed into law a piece of legislation requiring police to secure an actual conviction before stealing people’s stuff in drug-related offenses.

Civil asset forfeiture has been rightly likened to state-sanctioned armed robbery, as it allows police to commandeer cash, vehicles, homes, or any property of value — even if the person is never charged with a crime — and then use or sell the items for profit for their departments.

Police in Oklahoma, for example, recently honed their thievery by rolling out nefarious Electronic Recovery and Access to Data machines, known as ERAD, which can scan your bank account and prepaid cards, and — if an officer believes any balances are tied to a crime — can wipe those accounts dry.

California’s new law, formerly Senate Bill 443, quashes this nightmarish policing-for-profit in the exact way advocates of civil asset forfeiture (CAF) reform have been demanding for years.

For police to keep cash stolen from people in amounts under $40,000 under the premise it has something to do with a drug-related crime, there must be an actual guilty verdict in court.
“The new law establishes some of the strongest property rights protections in the most populous state in the nation,” explained Theshia Naidoo, legal director of criminal justice at the Drug Policy Alliance, in a statement. “The reforms are a model not only because of the policy enacted, but also for how the legislative process should work to promote the best interests of Californians.”

California’s version of legalized armed robbery is particularly pernicious, as the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California pointed out, allowing some police departments to keep 80 percent of the proceeds from their CAF booty — well over the 65 percent cap mandated by state law.

In part, this is due to civil asset forfeiture’s evil twin — federal equitable sharing — a convenient workaround for strict laws protecting civilians from greedy cops.

“Unfortunately, California law enforcement has found a lucrative way to evade the state’s better-than-average laws: the federal government’s equitable sharing program,” wrote the Institute for Justice last year. “Indeed, a recent report by the Drug Policy Alliance noted that while state forfeiture revenue has remained flat, equitable sharing revenue has skyrocketed. Between 2000 and 2013, California agencies collected an eye-popping $696 million, or nearly $50 million each calendar year, through equitable sharing with the Department of Justice. A large majority of both assets seized and proceeds received resulted not from adoptions but from joint task forces and investigations with the federal government. This vehicle for equitable sharing will continue despite DOJ policy changes announced in January 2015. California law enforcement also hauled in almost $108 million from the Treasury Department’s equitable sharing program during fiscal years 2000 to 2013.”

As High Times noted, a report by the Drug Policy Alliance in 2013 found the average cash seized totaled $5,100 — an alarmingly high sum, considering the same report cited an investigation which discovered in roughly 80 percent of those cases, the person was never charged with a crime.

Law enforcement unions around the country have adamantly opposed any reforms to their convenient second profit source, and after a brief federal suspension of civil asset forfeiture at the beginning of the year, the Department of Justice reversed course, re-implementing CAF in April.

As voracious as police appetites’ for your stuff might be, one of the original creators of the civil asset forfeiture program excoriated its current manifestation as profiteering from behind a badge in an op-ed penned in the Wall Street Journal in February this year. Brad Cates, director of the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Asset Forfeiture Office from 1985 through 1989, wrote:

“During the Reagan administration I helped establish these programs because I believed they would quickly channel seized criminals’ profits into the fight against organized crime and drug cartels. Yet over time we have created a new bad incentive: policing for profit, out of the reach of the proper legislative budget process.”

California’s law will go into effect in the beginning of 2017, and — out of several states recently attempting to curb the ridiculous practice — is so far the only legislation to mandate an actual conviction, a guilty verdict, in order for police to keep assets.

Writes the Drug Policy Alliance:

“Civil asset forfeiture has allowed the government to seize and keep cash, cars, real estate, and any other property suspected of being connected to criminal activity even if the owner is never convicted of a crime. While civil asset forfeiture was originally conceived in the 1980s as a way to target the resources of criminal organizations, it has become a method for law enforcement to confiscate and profit from the savings and property of those not charged with any criminal wrongdoing […]

“SB 443 requires that state and local agencies abide by stricter standards before they profit from federal forfeitures.”

Echoing countless others, Cates concludes his editorial in no uncertain terms:
“Three decades ago I helped create our civil-asset forfeiture system; now it is time to end it.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/theft-robbery-police-ban-california/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3137 on: October 05, 2016, 01:14:10 PM »
Sadistic Officers Murder Handcuffed Man by Stuffing Toilet Paper Down His Throat

Chicago, IL — (CN) A woman claims in federal court that prison guards beat her glaucomic ex-husband while his limbs were cuffed and stuffed paper down his throat until he suffocated and died.

Terrance Jenkins, 56, an avid card and dominoes player, had gone from his cell at Pontiac Correctional Center, about 100 miles southwest of Chicago, toward the outdoor recreation area on Oct. 4, 2015, when three correctional officers approached him, according to the complaint.

During a pat-down search, either Officer Deal or Bufford, whose first names are not included in the lawsuit, allegedly noticed that Jenkins had a small amount of toilet paper in his breast pocket.

The officer threatened to take Jenkins’ “yard time” away, as the paper was not allowed, the complaint states.

“Jenkins told the officer that he needed the toilet paper because of his glaucoma and excessive eye drainage,” for which he was receiving ongoing medical treatment, his ex-wife, Phyllis Ellis, claims.

“Deal or Bufford cursed at Mr. Jenkins and yelled at him to ‘cuff the f*ck up,’ or words to that effect,” according to the lawsuit, which Ellis filed Monday in Chicago federal court.
Correctional Lt. James Boland then “approached Mr. Jenkins and sprayed him with mace,” Ellis claims.

“[Boland], Bufford, and Deal attacked Mr. Jenkins, beating him and dragging him away from the area,” the lawsuit continues. “At one point, defendants slammed Mr. Jenkins against the floor, causing him to scream out in pain that they were breaking his arm.”

Ellis says the officers “restrained Mr. Jenkins with handcuffs and leg irons, and led him into a room out of the view of the other prisoners.”

“Despite the fact that he was totally immobilized, defendants then viciously attacked Mr. Jenkins, beating him about the face, head, neck, back, wrists, ankles, and knee,” the lawsuit continues. “Defendants then shoved a piece of paper (perhaps the same toilet paper that triggered the beating) so far down Mr. Jenkins’s throat that he suffocated. They then smothered him with their weight, causing him to asphyxiate.” (Parentheses in original.)

Jenkins’ autopsy said he died as a result of “restraint asphyxia and airway occlusion by a foreign object” caused by weight applied to him while in a prone position with arms and legs restrained, according to the complaint.

“This was not the first instance of excessive force by defendants [Boland], Deal, and/or Bufford,” the complaint states. “For example, approximately one week before they killed Mr. Jenkins, defendants Deal and Bufford beat another prisoner at Pontiac.”

In addition to Boland, Deal and Bufford, the complaint also names as defendants the warden, Randy Pfister; assistant warden, Marvin Reed; and Reed’s unknown predecessor, who allegedly “failed to provide appropriate supervision, discipline, or training, or to take any action to prevent the repeated instances of excessive force.”

The eight-count complaint asserts claims for excessive force, failure to intervene, conspiracy, emotional distress, battery, negligence, wrongful death and survival.

Ellis seeks compensatory and punitive damages, attorneys’ fees and costs, and a jury trial. She is represented by Sarah Grady with Loevy & Loevy in Chicago.

The Illinois Department of Corrections did not immediately respond Tuesday to an emailed request for comment.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/officers-murder-man-stuff-paper-throat/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3138 on: October 06, 2016, 12:26:24 PM »
Texas Man Dies after Pleading “I Can’t Breathe” as Jail Guards Pile on Top of him Pepper Spraying him

A disturbing and infuriating video has surfaced showing a group of Texas jail guards piling on top of an inmate who repeatedly tells them he can’t breathe, only for him to be found dead in his cell the following morning.

Nineteen times in nine minutes is how many times Michael Sabbie told the guards, “I can’t breathe,” only for them to pepper spray him and tell him to stop resisting when the video shows him not to be resisting.

The incident took place at a private prison in Texas on July 21, 2015, but the video was made public today by The Huffington Post as part of an investigative report on jailhouse deaths.

The basic details of Sabbie’s death, one of more than 800 jail deaths counted by The Huffington Post in the year after Sandra Bland died in jail on July 13, 2015, wouldn’t normally raise much suspicion. The initial news reports said that Sabbie, who was arrested on a domestic assault charge, was found “unresponsive” on the morning of July 22, 2015, suggesting he died in his sleep. A medical examiner ― noting Sabbie’s obesity and that he had significant heart muscle damage ― deemed his death “natural,” a label that implies it was an unavoidable tragedy. Those circumstances wouldn’t make Sabbie’s death terribly unique: Heart disease killed an average of 226 jail inmates a year from 2000 until 2013, making it the leading cause of jail deaths after suicides.

But calling Sabbie’s death “natural” obscures more than it illuminates, and would hide the failures that very likely could have prevented his death. A quick internal investigation might have absolved jail employees of any wrongdoing. But in Sabbie’s case, there’s video.

“If you just looked at the cause of death, you would think that Michael died of some sort of hypertensive heart condition, and that may be true,” said Erik J. Heipt, one of the attorneys representing the Sabbie family. “But if we didn’t have a video, we’d never know that he had been begging for help due to his shortness of breath and inability to breathe. We’d never know that he said ‘I can’t breathe’ 19 times in the nine minutes that we hear in that video.”

Sabbie, 35, had been arrested two days earlier after arguing with his wife over money. Police said his wife accused him of threatening her before stepping out of the car and walking away.

Sabbie denied threatening his wife, but was charged with misdemeanor assault.

He was transported to the privately run Bi State Jail in Texarkana, a city on the Texas/Arkansas border, where guards make about ten dollars an hour.

A United States Department of Justice investigation found the guards did nothing wrong.



http://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/06/watch-texas-man-dies-after-pleading-i-cant-breathe-as-jail-guards-pile-on-top-of-him-pepper-spraying-him/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3139 on: October 06, 2016, 12:30:23 PM »
Cop Watcher Arrested at His Home After Police Issued a Warrant for Filming a Traffic Stop

Ryan Scott was arrested at his home Monday evening by Dekalb County Sheriff’s officers.
Scott is being charged with obstructing a peace officer during a traffic stop on Saturday night, which was initiated by Officer A. Becker because Scott had expired registration on his vehicle.

The warrant states that Scott “knowingly obstructed the performance of Deputy A. Becker of an act within his official capacity.” The warrant goes on to claim, “[Scott] repeatedly refused and failed to comply with lawful orders to exit his vehicle.”

During the traffic stop, Becker became agitated and attempted to escalate the situation because, according to Becker, the window was not down far enough when he began to slip the ticket and clipboard into Scott’s hand. Scott immediately asked for a supervisor.

However, there was no supervisor called to the scene.

Scott merely exclaimed that the window was opened enough for the officer to give the clipboard and that there was no cause to ask him to remove himself from the vehicle. Meanwhile, he is still waiting for a supervisor to be called to the scene, as he requested.

After several minutes, Becker finally decides to hand the clipboard to Scott, showing that indeed there was enough space to hand Scott the ticket and clipboard; this means that there was no reason to request Scott to exit the vehicle in the first place.

The facts are clear: there was no obstruction.

Scott did not knowingly obstruct the officer in any capacity. The ticket was signed, and there was absolutely no cause for Scott to be removed from the vehicle.
So, why were there two officers serving an arrest warrant on Scott two days later? Why is Scott being targeted?



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-watcher-arrested-filming-traffic-stop/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3140 on: October 06, 2016, 01:43:12 PM »
What an honorable hero, stomping on a man's head and then retiring at the old age of 46, like many criminals who just happen to resign or retire after violent incidents: "I had my 20 years in, and I proudly served the city

Meanwhile, it took 31 cops to stop 2 people in a stolen car.

Police Release Video Of Arrest At Center Of Excessive Force Investigation

http://www.courant.com/community/hartford/hc-hartford-arrest-footage-1006-20161005-story.html



Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3141 on: October 08, 2016, 02:09:44 AM »
Abusing the elderly should warrant the death penalty.

Texas Cop with History of Abuse Tackles Elderly Man, Breaking his Ribs

An elderly couple riding scooters in a Texas Walmart ended up losing each other, so the wife rode outside the doors with items in her basket, prompting an employee to detain her and call police, accusing her of shoplifting.

Guadalupe Martinez, who is in her 70s, said she was not shoplifting, but looking for her husband, Juan Martinez, who is also in his 70s.

But they brought her into a back room anyway and began telling her she was permanently banned from Walmart.

When Buda police officer Demerriel Young arrived on the scene, he stepped into the room, and was followed by Juan Martinez, who stepped off his scooter to remain with his wife.

Body cam footage released this week shows Young ordering him out of the room, but Juan Martinez insisted he wanted to remain in the room with his wife.

That was when Young tried to shove him out the door, causing the elderly man to fall on the floor, yelling out in pain.

Juan Martinez remained laying on the floor for five minutes with several broken ribs until paramedics arrived, according to a federal lawsuit filed Monday.

The lawsuit, which you can read here, also states that the Buda Police Department hired Young despite knowing he had a history of using excessive force.

The incident took place October 3, 2014 in the city of less than 10,000, just south of Austin, but charges against the couple, including shoplifting charges against Guadalupe; and interference charges against Juan; are still pending.

Walmart provided the following statement to WVUE, who first reported on the body cam video.

“We take this matter seriously. We haven’t been served with the complaint yet. Once we have the opportunity to review the allegations, we’ll respond appropriately with the court.”



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/07/watch-texas-cop-with-history-of-abuse-tackles-elderly-man-breaking-his-ribs/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3142 on: October 08, 2016, 02:16:17 AM »
What an honorable hero, stomping on a man's head and then retiring at the old age of 46, like many criminals who just happen to resign or retire after violent incidents: "I had my 20 years in, and I proudly served the city

Meanwhile, it took 31 cops to stop 2 people in a stolen car.

Police Release Video Of Arrest At Center Of Excessive Force Investigation

http://www.courant.com/community/hartford/hc-hartford-arrest-footage-1006-20161005-story.html




More on this case:

Disturbing Video Shows a Cop Stomp Handcuffed Man’s Head So Hard He Bounces Off the Ground

Hartford, CT — Concerns over excessive force only intensified after Hartford, Connecticut, police released dash camera footage of a controversial arrest — showing an officer in street clothes walk up to a handcuffed suspect sitting on the curb, and kick his head into the ground — for no apparent reason.

“That there is obviously of serious concern to the police department and now to the state’s attorney’s office,” Hartford Deputy Police Chief Brian Foley asserted, according to WFSB.
Ricardo Perez’ mugshot — eyes bruised and one swollen shut, a large bandage on his forehead, and his right jaw alarmingly distended — was sufficiently disturbing to spark an immediate internal investigation, even before the department viewed the video.

“The following morning, based on the appearance solely on the mugshot because we weren’t aware of the video at that point, we started an immediate internal investigation,” Foley stated.
On June 4, officers pursued Ricardo Perez and Emilio Diaz through the streets of Hartford and West Hartford in a vehicle police suspected to be stolen. When the chase ended, officers arrested the pair — but the details of those arrests are now the subject of multiple investigations.

According to reports, officers punched, struck, and used their Tasers against Perez and Diaz — both men’s mugshots show facial injuries.

While Hartford police initially claimed Perez’ dramatic head injuries occurred when the vehicle’s airbags deployed, the new dash camera footage shows a cop in street clothes — later identified as Sgt. Sean Spell, a 20-year veteran of the force who has since retired — walking up to the handcuffed man sitting calmly on the curb and deliberately, stomping his head onto the pavement with enough force, it bounces.



Video proves Perez had done nothing to warrant such a vicious attack — regardless of whether the officers believed the men had stolen the vehicle. Spell’s ferocious kick to the head — and reports the officers punched both suspects — appear to be little more than cops resentful the two men tried to flee.

In addition to the Hartford Police internal review of possible “excessive force,” the state attorney’s office has also initiated a separate investigation.
Hartford police initially attempted to allay the public’s concerns over the excessively violent arrest by reiterating Perez’ criminal record.

“This is a man [who’s] been arrested 18 times in the city of Hartford,” Foley said in June, reported WFSB, “he’s a convicted felon, he’s run from the cops at least four times before this, he has multiple reckless driving charge, multiple interfering with police charges, he rammed several cruisers and actually hit one of our detectives with his car as he was pulling away and getting away.”

It is imperative to note, there have been no reports Perez had a history with firearms or that any gun was recovered at the scene. Simply put, a man in hand cuffs sitting on the side of the road, acting in compliance with police at that moment, did not need to be subdued or otherwise further physically engaged by officers — and nothing can justify Spell’s rogue, tough-guy stomp.

However, the now-retired cop told WNPR, “There is a reason for the use of force” — although he declined to elaborate on what that reason might be, or to comment further except to reiterate he’s cooperating with the investigations.

Hartford police released the long-awaited dash cam footage yesterday — which, despite the months of delay — represents an effort toward transparency.
“[W]e’re not going to wait until the end of the investigation to release the facts to the public. We’ve seen nationally this has caused great distrust in the community,” Foley was quoted by WFSB. “We were told this morning we could release the information. It was important for us to get it out to you today.”

Foley acknowledged to WNPR the footage is indeed ‘difficult to watch,’ and explained he has had problems explaining why Spell was allowed to retire.

“I know that the optics of it are difficult and it seems that way. That would be for him to answer. The question we get is, how do you allow someone to retire? The answer is there are no mechanisms in place for us — no state law, no ordinance, nothing in our HR rules, nothing in our collective bargaining agreement — that would prevent an employee from retiring when involved in this type of an investigation.”

Retiring or resigning following accusations of excessive force is how rogue officers are able to move from one department to the next without facing sufficient, if any, disciplinary measures. The phenomenon has become so prevalent, it’s earned a moniker: “Gypsy cops.”

Several state officials and civil rights groups are additionally concerned Spell will ultimately be able to retain his pension — while others who previously viewed the video believe the former officer’s arrest is imminent.

“On its face, the video raises very serious concerns, and I commend the Hartford Police Department for making the video public as soon as they were permitted to do so by the State’s Attorney,” said Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin in a statement cited by WNPR. “As a city, we are committed to transparency and openness, we have an outstanding and dedicated police force, and we expect our officers to uphold the highest standards – and to be held accountable when they fall short.”

In addition to Spell’s savage pounding of Perez’ head, footage seems to show officers beating one or both men several times with their batons.
State Rep. Angel Arce told WNPR he and other legislators viewed the footage several weeks ago, and were “disturbed” by what they saw. But, he explained, the footage makes clear the attack was unprovoked and feels Spell will be charged.

“I truly believe that I’m going to see an arrest being made. I mean, it’s all on tape,” he told the outlet. “They’ve got evidence enough to do it to make an arrest and press charges on this officer.”
The full footage of released video can be seen below:



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-stomp-suscpects-head/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3143 on: October 08, 2016, 09:56:03 AM »
Cop’s Own Dashcam Catches Him Pulling Over and Raping Multiple Women While On Duty

Spring Hill, TN — The lure of authority is attractive to those who seek domination over others, and there’s no easier outlet to assert that authority than becoming a police officer. A now-former Spring Hill cop proves the case quite well after being caught pulling women over and raping them. His sick desire to dominate and rape was so flagrant that he cared not about these crimes being recorded on his own dashcam.

According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Spring Hill Police Officer Christopher Odom was caught raping at least two women in two separate incidents during on-duty traffic stops.
The TBI say they launched their investigation on August 1 after they learned Odom pulled over a car driven by a female in June and raped her.

According to a press release, the TBI says it happened again with another female in July.

Even more worrisome was the fact that in his spare time, Odom worked as a substitute teacher last year in Lewis County. According to WSMV, students at Lewis County High School who used to have him as a substitute teacher told Channel 4 they were shocked.

“It’s crazy. He talked to us just like an everyday teacher did,” said Donavan Conner, a student. “It makes you wonder about everybody else you talk to. ”

However, ‘everybody else’ is not drawn to the job of asserting authority over others. As the famous quote by Lord Acton goes, Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

It is this draw to power that leads to an increase in sexual assault among police officers. According to the Cato Institute, more than 9 percent of reports of police misconduct in 2010 involved sexual abuse, making it the second-most reported form of misconduct, after the use of excessive force. Comparing that data to FBI crime statistics indicates that “sexual assault rates are significantly higher for police when compared to the general population.”

Odom is one of many officers who are caught raping those they’ve sworn to protect. A short google search will reveal the near epidemic of police rape that takes place in the United States.
Not only is sexual assault higher among cops, but it also largely goes unpunished.

Police sexual misconduct is so common that more than 1,000 officers have had their licenses revoked in just the last six years for it, that we know about — nearly half of them involving underage victims. However, only a small fraction of those officers received jail time.

In regards to Odom’s despicable crimes, the Spring Hill Police Department released the following canned statement:

“The actions of Officer Odom are not indicative of a Spring Hill Police Officer and is in direct violation of departmental policies. The department takes great pride in serving our community and preserving the trust of our citizens.”

The department also asked for any other victims to come forward.

“If there are [more victims] we want to know, we want to get them justice. We want them to come in, be able to look us in the eye, speak with us about what’s going on in their lives.”
On Monday, 26-year-old Odom was indicted by a grand jury on charges of rape, sexual battery, and two counts of official misconduct.

According to the indictment, Odom detained the victims beyond the scope of a traffic stop for the purpose of coercing the victims into performing sexual acts.
The indictment states he used force to accomplish the act and knew the victim did not give consent.

As PINAC reports, the bureau watched hundreds of Odom’s dash cam traffic stops and saw the evidence they needed to seek a criminal indictment on Odom. Additionally, upon watching the dash-cam, prosecutors say there may be a third unidentified female victim.

He was arrested and booked into the Maury County jail on $75,000 bond. He spent only one hour behind bars before being released.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/police-dashcam-raping-women/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3144 on: October 08, 2016, 09:59:37 AM »
Cop Illegally Enters Innocent Family’s Backyard & Kills Their Dog, Leaving 7 Puppies Without Their Mom

Shreveport, LA — A Shreveport, Louisiana, cop inquiring about trash in someone else’s lot, walked into Patricia Powell’s backyard — after she explicitly told him not to — and executed her beloved dog for literally no reason.

“I told him I had a dog in my yard just had puppies,” Powell told local NBC 6 News. “Do not step in my yard because she is protecting her babies and he got out anyway and so when she came from up under the house, he shot her, twice.”

Powell, devastated by the inexplicable turn of events that led to the untimely death of Coco, told NBC 6 the unnamed officer had responded to a call further down the street when he stopped to ask about refuse in a lot near her property.

Although she doesn’t own the lot where the officer spotted the trash, Powell told the NBC 6 she cleans it on occasion because of its proximity to her home — but she suspects the errant dog-killing officer was only looking for trouble where none existed.

“What reason you have to stop at 8:15 behind some trash?” Powell said of the cop. “The lot doesn’t even belong to me. Why did you stop here? That means you were picking.”

Public Information Officer for the (as-yet unidentified) Shreveport Police Officer, Corporal Marcus Hines, refused to comment on the matter as the department is in the process of investigating whether or not policy and procedure were followed when Powell’s dog was shot dead.

Such internal investigations so infrequently lead to proportional, if any, disciplinary action, they’ve become the subject of a cynical quip: We investigated ourselves and found we did nothing wrong.

Hines acknowledged that the “information we have is that the officer did not receive a call or a dispatch call to that residence” — confirming he would not have had any justifiable reason to be on Powell’s property or kill her pet.

“You don’t have to necessarily be dispatched out to the call,” Hines explained of officer-initiated encounters. “The officer can see something that draws his or her attention and make contact at that point.”

Although that explanation appears vaguely reasonable, the officer who fired two shots at Powell’s dog had no justifiable reason to be on her property — particularly after she advised him not to enter the area where Coco protected the new puppies.

As pursuant to any investigation, Hines told NBC 6 that a supervisor is summoned to the scene any time an officer fires their service weapon, and statements are then taken from all involved parties and any witnesses.

“All I want is help for my babies,” Powell lamented. “The seven children I have to raise by myself. The kids, the puppies. They are my life, because their mother was my life.”

Tragically, Powell’s interaction with a trigger-happy cop too cowardly to deal with a pet dog is far from uncommon — and is now termed ‘puppycide.’
As John Whitehead wrote for the Rutherford Institute in August, “a dog is shot by a police officer ‘every 98 minutes’” in the United States. According to the Department of Justice, that means 25 dogs are killed by cops every single day.

In many instances, officers claim fear for their lives of dangerous dogs — but the reality proves otherwise.

As journalist and author of “Rise of the Warrior Cop,” Radley Balko, has exhaustively documented, “dog shootings in which a police officer said he felt ‘threatened’ and had no choice but to use lethal force, including the killing of a Dalmatian (more than once), a yellow Lab , a springer spaniel, a chocolate Lab, a boxer, an Australian cattle dog, a Wheaten terrier, an Akita… a Jack Russell terrier… a 12-pound miniature dachshund… [and] a five-pound chihuahua.”

Even when the breed is generally if unjustifiably considered ‘dangerous,’ police frequently create circumstances to putatively justify shooting and killing a dog — such as pushing open a closed door intended to prevent a dog from exiting, or as in Powell’s case, entering an area the officer was specifically advised not to.

“They’re very close relationships that are developed between pets and their owners so for a pet to be killed, unfortunately, is something that we would hope that never happens,” Hines asserted.
Powell plans to raise the puppies and was referred by NBC 6 for additional help from a local animal shelter.

While the Shreveport Police Department busies itself with the investigation of the fatal shooting of Coco, the cowardly trigger-happy cop remains on the force — free to again enter someone’s property against their wishes and for no reason — and to execute their beloved pets.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cop-kills-womans-dog-leaving-puppies/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3145 on: October 09, 2016, 02:57:14 PM »
I can't imagine a parent being held at gunpoint by dangerous armed criminals and then watching his child being shot and not responding in kind to defend the life and safety of their child and their family.

Innocent Family Sues After Police Tried to Kill Their Dog, But Shot Their 10yo Son Instead

Coffee County, GA — The family of an innocent 10-year-old boy has recently filed a $4 million lawsuit on behalf of their son after he was shot by a trigger happy Georgia cop. The boy, Dakota Corbitt was shot in the back of his leg while officer Michael Vickers was attempting to kill his dog.

Dakota Corbitt and the rest of his family had done nothing wrong when they were swarmed by cops who held them at gunpoint before shooting the child.

The incident happened in July of 2014 when officers were looking for the suspect of an armed robbery and police shooting. The suspect, 19-year-old Christopher Barnett had fled to the woods near Corbitt’s home.
During Barnett’s apprehension, all hell broke loose as this innocent family had their rights violated at the hands of public servants.

According to the lawsuit, the defendants, Coffee County, Sheriff Doyle Wooten and deputy Michael Vickers, “jointly and severely deprived the plaintiffs and plaintiffs’ minor children of their rights secured by the 4th and 14th Amendments of the United States and as a direct and proximate result of said deprivation defendants’ negligence, gross negligence, and the wanton and willful indifference to the rights of the plaintiffs individually and the rights of the plaintiffs’ minor children, caused the physical pain, suffering, mental anguish and ultimately the permanent restriction of one minor’s right leg.

“On that date, Vickers, along with other officers of the Coffee County Sheriff’s Department and GBI agents, participated in an operation to apprehend a criminal suspect, Barnett. The defendants and fellow officers entered the plaintiff’s property at 145 Burton Road and demanded all persons in the area, including the children, to get down on the ground. Other than the suspect, one adult citizen, Damion Stewart, was on the property outside the residence with two children. While complying with the officers’ demands, Stewart was brutally handcuffed in the presence of his children and the barrel of a gun was placed in his back. Others located on the property included Jerry Rich, who was a minor at the time, Amy Corbitt’s minor child, Elizabeth Bowen’s minor child, and Tonya Johnson’s minor child. Corbitt was inside the home.

“The remaining minors were held at gunpoint, each having an officer forcefully shove the barrel of a loaded gun into their backs. These children feared for their lives and have been stripped of their confidence in the justice system.

“While the children were lying on the ground obeying the orders of Defendant Vickers, said Defendant unreasonably, maliciously, negligently and without necessity or any immediate threat of cause, discharged his firearm at the family pet twice. The first shot missed the animal, which retreated under the residence. At no time during the interim did Vickers ask someone to restrain the animal and at no time did any other agent attempt to restrain or subdue the animal. Approximately eight to ten seconds elapsed since the first shot and Vickers then discharged his weapon a second time as it was approaching the pet’s owners. He again missed the animal and struck Corbitt’s son in the back of the right knee.”

“I ran out the house with one of my kids and saw my little brother on the porch pouring blood,” Janelle Rich, Corbitt’s sister said after the shooting.

According to the lawsuit, Vickers is no stranger to excessive and unnecessary force. This trigger happy dog killing cop was an apparent ticking time bomb and Corbitt just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“Defendant Vickers has an extensive history of using unnecessary, excessive force of which Defendant Wooten is and was at the time of the subject matter incident aware of,” reads the lawsuit. “Vickers’ extensive prior excessive force record includes approximately 10 separate occurrences in the immediate three years prior to the incident, the most recent of which was when Vickers shot and killed a dog during the execution of a search warrant about a month before the incident.”

Corbitt is still required to receive therapy for the wound, now two years later. He’s also left emotionally traumatized and has little faith left in the system that led to him being shot.

The lawsuit seeks a total of $4 million, with $2 million of that for Corbitt and the shooting victim to cover past and future medical expenses, recovery for pain and suffering, emotional distress, permanent disfigurement, and punitive damages.

Unfortunately, cops shooting children while trying to kill their dog is not isolated.

After interviewing the victim of a hit-and-run incident on June 19, 2015, Officer Jonathan Thomas was returning to his patrol car when he heard a woman from another house calling for help. Andrea Ellis had cut her arm on a piece of broken glass, and her sister, Brandie Kelly, called 911 to request an ambulance. While Kelly was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher, she noticed Officer Thomas outside and called out to him for medical assistance.

Arriving at Ellis’ front door, Thomas suddenly pulled out his gun when he noticed the family dog approaching him. Although the pet did not attack Thomas, the officer abruptly opened fire and missed.
Instead of gunning down the dog, Thomas had mistakenly shot Ellis’ 4-year-old daughter, Ava Ellis, in the thigh.

Last month, Ellis’ family was awarded $780,000 for the incompetent actions of officer Thomas.

Instead of firing Thomas or arresting him for negligently shooting an innocent child, police supervisors merely recommended a three-day suspension and retraining.
Officer Vickers received similar treatment from his department. He never received so much as a slap on the wrist for putting a bullet in an innocent boy. And so the vicious cycle of police negligence and their taxpayer supported unaccountable nature continues.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/family-sues-police-went-shoot-dog-shot-10yo-son-instead/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3146 on: October 10, 2016, 01:49:11 PM »
While there are tears for the "war on cops", the criminal gang is exposed once again trying to cover up their crimes and rewarding their "brave heroes".

Man Cleared of Attempted Murder After Leaked Dashcam Shows Cop Shoot HIM in the Back, TWICE

Birmingham, AL — In May 2015, officer Daniel Aguirre was given a Combat Cross Medal after he said in a police report that he successfully fended off a struggle in which he and his partner were in danger. However, someone on the inside leaked Dashcam footage showing Aquirre shooting a man in the back as he lay prostrate on his hands and knees. Still, Birmingham police charged their victim, Aubrey Williams, with attempted murder.

But, last week, after spending more than a year in jail for a crime he never committed, the Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office finally showed a semblance of logic and dropped the charges against Williams.

“After an extensive review of all the evidence in this case, the state is unable to meet the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt,” according to the press release issued by the Jefferson County District Attorney’s office late Friday.

“This man stayed in jail for more than a year and a half on some trumped up charges by these Birmingham police officers,” Anthony said. “Not all police officers are bad, but when they make a mistake they should own up to it,” he said, according to AL.com.

According to the entirely fabricated police report, Aguirre began to struggle with a man named Aubrey Williams who pulled a gun and pointed it at his partner officer Richard Haluska. When he ordered the man to drop his gun, the suspect then pointed his gun at Aguirre. Aguirre fired and struck the suspect.

Newspapers reported on it, and the local media hailed Aguirre as a hero. However, the dashcam video of the incident was released in November that contradicted Aquirre’s claims.

Immediately after the dashcam was released, Aguirre was stripped of his medal. However, the department still pursued murder charges against a man innocent of murder — and neither of the cops was disciplined for lying.

On April 24, 2014, Aguirre and Haluska were in search of suspects involved in a robbery when they encountered Aubrey Williams and Devon Brown. That much of the story is true.

But the dashcam video shows what really happened after the encounter. A struggle ensued and Haluska had Brown under control when Aquirre approached Williams, who was on his hands and knees.

Aguirre then unnecessarily feared for his life and fired two rounds into a man complying with his orders, on his hands and knees.

Williams wasn’t pointing the gun at anyone, and the department had to have known this, but they gave Aguirre the award anyway.

The dashcam was leaked to AL.com from a confidential source inside the department. After it had been posted on their website, the department had no choice but to issue a statement saying they are taking back the award.

“In regards to the officer involved shooting that took place on April 24, 2014, the award is rescinded until further review by the Awards Committee,”  said Officer Lt. Sean Edwards at 10:57 p.m. last November.

According to Anthony, Williams even told officers he was carrying the gun.

“We have been in communication with the DA’s Office throughout this entire process,” Edwards stated in an email to AL.com. “We do understand with Alabama being an open carry state there will be times when officers may use force without any subsequent criminal charges.”

“When you look at the video and different statements given by police officers it should never have been brought,” Emory stated in regards to the murder case. “There was never any evidence that Aubrey Williams pulled a gun or pointed a gun at the police officers.”

Instead of an award ceremony, there should have been an investigation. A man was shot twice as he was laying on the ground, and there was video showing that he may not have been an actual threat to the officers at the time. At the very least, an inquiry by the department was warranted…..but that never happened.
Instead, a police department knowingly went along with a false narrative and perpetuated a lie and charged their victim with attempted murder.


Aguirre’s attorney issued a statement to AL.com on Saturday.

“Officer Aguirre stands firm on the justification for having to use lethal force in this instance,” Aguirre’s attorney, Scott Morro, stated. “Officers are called upon to make split second decision with regard to their own safety and the safety of others. Ultimately those who decide to prosecute or not do so after scrutinizing much more information then what the officer on the scene has. Officer Aguirre has no control over those prosecuting decisions.”

“Any suggestion by anyone that officer Aguirre is a “bad cop” is completely and utterly false and defamatory,” Morro wrote.

Apparently, according to Morro, ‘good cops’ lie on police reports and receive medals for shooting non-threatening men in the back.

“This video provides evidence that Police Officer Daniel Aguirre shot Aubrey Williams twice despite the fact that Williams was on his hands and knees and not in a position to fire a weapon,” Frank James Matthews of the Outcast Voters League said in a statement in November. “It is clear that the Birmingham Police Department attempted to prevent the release of this footage, and it seems that Officer Aguirre’s actions were rewarded based on outright lies.”



http://thefreethoughtproject.com/53140-2/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3147 on: October 10, 2016, 11:44:22 PM »
Once again the criminal gangs trying to cover up their crimes, ignoring the laws. Because in their mind, law enforcement=law exempt.

Hundreds of police departments in Texas, California broke laws on reporting police shootings, study finds

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/police-departments-texas-and-california-broke-law-reporting-police-shootings-study/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3148 on: October 12, 2016, 01:30:32 AM »
After dragging this young man through the mud with laughable "evidence", the only thing the criminals say is "thank you for your patience". No responsibility, accountability or punishment for the criminals, only for innocent citizens. It would nice if he could sue them to the ground and take every last penny from the criminals' pockets, but as always, the taxpayers will foot the bill.


Utah Police Drop Charges Against Teen Accused of Drugging Cop After Lab Reports Find No Drugs in Drink

Two months after Utah police dragged his name through the mud, accusing the teen of drugging an officer while preparing his food at Subway, police are now saying there were no drugs in the officer’s drink.

So the Layton police officer apparently drugged himself.

Not that they have even released his name.

But they were sure to release Tanis Lloyd Ukena’s name as well as his mugshot after arresting the 18-year-old man on August 8 in a story that quickly went viral, charging him with a felony, accusing him of lacing the cop’s drink with marijuana and methamphetamine.

And almost every single commenter took the word of police without ever thinking why would a teenager waste his drugs on a cop, not to mention how is it even possible to lace a drink with pot without it being obvious?

Also, not only does ingested marijuana take about 45 minutes to take effect, methamphetamine produces completely different effects than the paralyzing effects the officer was reporting, being unable to find the gas pedal after taking three sips of the drink.

Even a cursory look through the young man’s Facebook page indicates he is a church-going Mormon who excels in school and is obsessed with sports – and never once expressed any negative sentiment towards officers.

Not that there is anything wrong with that.

Layton police sent out a press released earlier today saying that further laboratory tests were “unable to confirm that contaminates were in the officer’s drink,” which contradicts earlier reports that they found “the presence of a foreign substance in the officer’s drink.”


However, their initial tests were done on what is known as an ios scanner, which as we reported back in August, is highly unreliable when attempting to detect marijuana and methamphetamine.

Police also said at the time that they had obtained surveillance video showing Ukena taking an “unusual amount of time” preparing the cop’s drink, but they never released that video, which was also an early indicator that they had flimsy evidence.

The initial articles on his arrest generated calls from commenters that Ukena needs to be executed because how dare him try to drug a uniformed hero?

His lawyer also said he received “death threats and nasty letters” from the cop-loving populace.

But now that it turns out it was all a lie, what is going to happen to the officer who had to be hospitalized because he was under the influence of drugs while on duty?

Or did they even test his blood to see if he was drugged? If so, it was never reported to the media, which is another indicator they were grasping for straws.


As for now, the public has the right to know the officer’s name to know to never trust a word that comes out of his mouth.

But all police can say at this time is: “The Department would also like to express our appreciation for the patience of Tanis and his family during this investigation.”

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/11/utah-police-drop-charges-against-teen-accused-of-drugging-cop-after-lab-reports-find-no-drugs-in-drink/

Skeletor

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #3149 on: October 12, 2016, 11:00:42 AM »
Deranged and violent career criminals terrorizing innocent people.
Point a gun, cellphone or hot dog at a cop: summarily executed. Cop pointing gun at innocent citizens: 11 months.

Florida Cop Sentenced to Jail for Pulling Gun on Couple with Baby in Back Seat

In a case of excessive road rage, Florida sheriff’s deputy Sheila Langlais lost her cool and pulled a gun on an unassuming couple in a car with a 2-year-old in the back seat.

Now the Pinellas County sheriff’s deputy is out of a job and will spend nearly a year in jail in addition to paying a $500 fine.

The embattled deputy has resigned from three law enforcement agencies since 2001.

It all went down on February 7 when Brett Dowd and his fiancee, Brittany Byrne, were driving in the parking lot of Twin Lakes apartment complex to visit friends for a cookout.

As Byrne was driving, she pulled into a parking spot as you normally would.

But the off-duty deputy was also pulling into the spot, which is when all hell broke loose, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

Langlais began shouting profanities to Byrne and Dowd, who shouted profanities back.

That was when Langais pulled out her pistol, pointing it at the couple, all while their 2-year-old child was in the backseat.

After apparently gaining some sort of satisfaction from pointing her gun at innocent people, Langlais then drove off.

The couple called police and gave a description of the gun-touting suspect and the vehicle. Police located Langlais’s vehicle within minutes in the complex parking lot.

Subsequently, Langlais was located in a nearby apartment.

As police investigated, Langlais denied carrying a gun. But investigators found Langlais’s gun inside the apartment of a fellow deputy named Sarah Swanner, whom Langlais was visiting that day.

In a last ditch effort to avoid being fired, Langlais resigned the next day.

Even Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri weighed in on the situation:

“She made a very, very bad decision. I wouldn’t even call it a mistake. It’s a lie. It’s not a mistake.”

The trial concluded on Friday, resulting in Langlais being sentenced to eleven months in county jail.

She was charged with two felony counts of aggravated assault, but a jury found her guilty of two misdemeanor counts of improper exhibition of a firearm. Pinellas Circuit Judge William Burgess III dismissed one count citing double jeopardy.

Langlais began her career with the Tarpon Springs Police Department in 2000, but resigned a year later after it was discovered that she was having a romantic relationship with a sergeant in her department.

She also got the Tarpon Springs Police Department sued after Langlais wrongfully arrested a man and had him sitting in jail for 39 days. The department eventually settled that lawsuit for $7,000.

In 2001 Langlais joined the Pinellas Park Police Department, but resigned in 2005 after she refused to end a high speed pursuit the way her supervisor instructed her to.


https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/10/12/florida-cop-sentneced-jail-pulling-gun-couple/