Author Topic: Police State - Official Thread  (Read 983491 times)

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2875 on: April 18, 2016, 10:53:05 AM »
Your detecting skills are lacking.  Some on that list do qualify as shit, although not for the reasons pigs do.

Firefighters actually provide a useful service.....helping people, saving lives, etc.

so do police officers, though you pretend in spite of an encyclopedia of examples, they don't

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2876 on: April 18, 2016, 02:10:26 PM »
so do police officers, though you pretend in spite of an encyclopedia of examples, they don't





Yes There are some Decent Cops about, Though as we frequently
See they are shut down / intimidated by the arsehole ones.

Likewise The encyclopaedia of Rogue Cops Grows everyday.
And you appear to Pretend it's Negligible / Semi acceptable
Policing / cop behaviour most times looking for a out to exonerate
Their Behaviour.

As I've said before it may just be down to your 'Politcaly Correct'
Way of Writting About Scumbag Cops Behaviour.
 ;)

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2877 on: April 20, 2016, 10:17:29 AM »
In Spite of a Jury Conviction – The Cop Who Killed an Innocent Father of Two is Not Going to Jail

Brooklyn, NY – After fatally shooting an innocent unarmed man in a dimly lit stairwell, NYPD Officer Peter Liang was convicted of manslaughter and official misconduct in February. Instead of administering CPR or requesting an ambulance for the dying father of two young girls, Liang bickered with his partner and whined about possibly losing his job.

Shortly after the jury convicted Liang of second-degree manslaughter and official misconduct, the NYPD fired him. Liang was the first NYPD cop convicted in an officer-involved shooting in at least a decade and was facing up to 15 years in prison. However, thanks to an infuriatingly corrupt system that grants special rights to its members, Peter Liang will not see a single day in jail.

On Tuesday, a Brooklyn judge ordered Liang to serve five years’ probation and complete 800 hours of community service, saying the Chinese American rookie cop never intended to shoot, let alone kill, Akai Gurley, according to the LA Times.

In spite of Liang intentionally and irresponsibly pulling the trigger, with the intention to shoot whoever was in front of him, Judge Danny Chun called the shooting an accident.

“Shooting that gun and killing someone was probably the last thing in his mind and probably never entered his mind at all,” Chun said. “This was not an intentional act…. There’s no evidence, either direct or circumstantial, that the defendant was aware of Akai Gurley’s presence.”

Naturally, Gurley’s family reacted with sheer sadness as the man responsible for taking their son, father, brother, and friend was told that he will not be held accountable for his actions.

On November 20, 2014, NYPD officers Peter Liang and Shaun Landau were conducting patrols on the upper floors of the Louis H. Pink housing project in Brooklyn even though Deputy Inspector Miguel Iglesias had ordered them not to conduct vertical patrols inside the building. Liang initially reported opening the door to the stairwell with the same hand holding his Glock .9mm pistol. Instead of opening the door with his right hand, which held his flashlight, Liang claimed he accidentally fired a shot that ricocheted off the wall and into Akai Gurley’s chest.

“They didn’t identify themselves,” recalled Gurley’s girlfriend, Melissa Butler. “No nothing. They didn’t give no explanation. They just pulled a gun and shot him in the chest.”

Standing on the floor below them, Gurley staggered down to the fifth floor where he collapsed. Melissa Butler ran to an apartment to ask for help and called 911. As the operator instructed Butler to administer first aid until the paramedics arrived, Liang and Landau remained in the stairwell texting their union rep instead of immediately calling in the shooting or requesting an ambulance.

“It was an accident,” Liang whimpered to his partner, entirely unconcerned about the life he just took. “I’m gonna get fired.”

Gurley was transported to Brookdale Hospital where he was pronounced dead. Officers Liang and Landau were taken to a separate hospital for treatment of tinnitus. Liang was placed on administrative duty following the incident.

“There was absolutely no threat to him, his partner or any resident,” stated Assistant District Attorney Mark Fliedner. “He mishandled his weapon, and as a result, Akai Gurley is dead.”

Last year, a grand jury indicted Liang on charges of second-degree manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, second-degree assault, reckless endangerment, and two counts of official misconduct. During Liang’s trial, Fliedner told jurors, “Instead of doing all that he could to help Akai Gurley, he wasted precious time arguing with his partner about calling for help. In fact, instead of calling for help, he just stood there and whined and moaned about how he would get fired.”

Changing his original story, Liang stated that his finger was not on the trigger when he entered the stairwell. Instead, he now claims his finger was resting on the side of his gun before the shooting. In his defense, Liang testified, “I heard something on my left side… It startled me (then) the gun just went off.”

Akai Gurley did not deserve to die because the NYPD handed a badge and gun over to an incompetent coward. Peter Lang now becomes a member of the long list of killer NYPD cops who the system has failed to effectively prosecute, including, Daniel Pantaleo, Paul Headley, Michael Carey, Marc Cooper, Gescard Isnora, Michael Oliver, Richard Neri Jr., Bryan Conroy, Edward McMellon, Sean Carroll, Kenneth Boss, Richard Murphy, etc.

“Akai had family that loved him just like Peter Liang, a mother just like Peter Liang,” Peterson, Gurley’s aunt, told The Times this month.
“But Liang’s mother can come visit him every day,” she said. “Akai Gurley’s mom … has to visit his grave.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/spite-jury-conviction-cop-killed-innocent-father-jail/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2878 on: April 20, 2016, 10:22:44 AM »
South Florida Cop Arrested After Red Light Camera Proves He Lied on Accident Report

A Florida cop who sped through a red traffic light, only to get t-boned by another car who had the right-of-way, was arrested Monday for blaming the other driver for the crash.

Sweetwater police officer Alejandro Ramos was off-duty but in a marked car when he claimed he first “cleared the intersection” and then “proceeded with caution” on his way to help another officer on a call.

But then a Toyota Tacoma pickup truck “came out of nowhere” and struck him that day on February 17, 2015.

Ramos is a former internal affairs detective for the Sweetwater Police Department, a police agency in Miami-Dade County that has a long history of police corruption.

Nevertheless, Florida state troopers who responded to the accident took Ramos’ word and cited the other driver, even though he did have the right of way.

But a red light traffic camera proved Ramos had lied on his report, blazing through the intersection without slowing down.

On Monday, he was jailed for official misconduct and has since bonded out.

Sweetwater Police Chief Placido Diaz, who was sworn in last October as 15 cops resigned after a string of scandals and corrupt police chiefs, tried to give the impression that he was cleaning up the department, according to WSVN.

“This is behavior that cannot be accepted,” said Sweetwater Police Chief Placido Diaz

“It felt really horrible seeing one of our own being taken to jail,” said Diaz. “But, then again, the norm here and in the past with prior police administrations were, in some cases, that cover ups were the norm. But that’s not the norm here anymore.”

It was less than a year ago when it was revealed that property, weapons and money had gone missing from the department’s evidence room.

And it would be great to believe Chief Diaz in how he plans to keep the department clean, but he also has a scandalous and bullying history, according to Miami investigative reporter Al Crespo.

So the decision to charge Ramos might only be a way of ridding the department of a political enemy in order to bring in his own cohorts. That’s how it usually works down here.

But Ramos also has a history of bad driving, having been involved in four accidents during a five-month span while working as a South Miami police officer, which led to him having to resign from that police agency in Miami-Dade County.

The only reason this latest incident came to light was because CBS Miami published an investigative report last year after obtaining the traffic video.

The news report determined that Ramos was driving 50 mph in a 40 mph zone and that the driver of the other car was left with $1,000 in damage. It was only after that report that the Florida Highway Patrol chose to withdraw the citation against him and cite Ramos instead.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/south-florida-cop-arrested-for-lying-about-accident/

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2879 on: April 21, 2016, 07:59:27 AM »
South Florida Cop Arrested After Red Light Camera Proves He Lied on Accident Report

A Florida cop who sped through a red traffic light, only to get t-boned by another car who had the right-of-way, was arrested Monday for blaming the other driver for the crash.

Sweetwater police officer Alejandro Ramos was off-duty but in a marked car when he claimed he first “cleared the intersection” and then “proceeded with caution” on his way to help another officer on a call.

But then a Toyota Tacoma pickup truck “came out of nowhere” and struck him that day on February 17, 2015.

Ramos is a former internal affairs detective for the Sweetwater Police Department, a police agency in Miami-Dade County that has a long history of police corruption.

Nevertheless, Florida state troopers who responded to the accident took Ramos’ word and cited the other driver, even though he did have the right of way.

But a red light traffic camera proved Ramos had lied on his report, blazing through the intersection without slowing down.

On Monday, he was jailed for official misconduct and has since bonded out.

Sweetwater Police Chief Placido Diaz, who was sworn in last October as 15 cops resigned after a string of scandals and corrupt police chiefs, tried to give the impression that he was cleaning up the department, according to WSVN.

“This is behavior that cannot be accepted,” said Sweetwater Police Chief Placido Diaz

“It felt really horrible seeing one of our own being taken to jail,” said Diaz. “But, then again, the norm here and in the past with prior police administrations were, in some cases, that cover ups were the norm. But that’s not the norm here anymore.”

It was less than a year ago when it was revealed that property, weapons and money had gone missing from the department’s evidence room.

And it would be great to believe Chief Diaz in how he plans to keep the department clean, but he also has a scandalous and bullying history, according to Miami investigative reporter Al Crespo.

So the decision to charge Ramos might only be a way of ridding the department of a political enemy in order to bring in his own cohorts. That’s how it usually works down here.

But Ramos also has a history of bad driving, having been involved in four accidents during a five-month span while working as a South Miami police officer, which led to him having to resign from that police agency in Miami-Dade County.

The only reason this latest incident came to light was because CBS Miami published an investigative report last year after obtaining the traffic video.

The news report determined that Ramos was driving 50 mph in a 40 mph zone and that the driver of the other car was left with $1,000 in damage. It was only after that report that the Florida Highway Patrol chose to withdraw the citation against him and cite Ramos instead.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/south-florida-cop-arrested-for-lying-about-accident/

I read the article. Even in the face of the Chief having the officer arrested the author speculates that it is only because he may be ridding himself of a political enemy rather than because he is holding his officers accountable.

 "Sweetwater Police Chief Placido Diaz, who was sworn in last October as 15 cops resigned after a string of scandals and corrupt police chiefs, tried to give the impression that he was cleaning up the department, according to WSVN.

'This is behavior that cannot be accepted,” said Sweetwater Police Chief Placido Diaz

“It felt really horrible seeing one of our own being taken to jail,” said Diaz. “But, then again, the norm here and in the past with prior police administrations were, in some cases, that cover ups were the norm. But that’s not the norm here anymore'

Uphill battle..

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2880 on: April 22, 2016, 09:37:54 AM »
screw that cop who lied.  Screw him.  He deserves jail for it.  The other cop automatically believing him and taking his word for it needs a hard look too - first time he's done this?

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2881 on: April 22, 2016, 10:15:23 AM »
screw that cop who lied.  Screw him.  He deserves jail for it.  The other cop automatically believing him and taking his word for it needs a hard look too - first time he's done this?

Men are talking here..

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2882 on: April 22, 2016, 10:32:19 AM »
Men are talking here..

I cannot understand ANY defense of this cop lying about the accident.   Makes me sick. It's why people hate cops - they can lie without the same consequences as the rest of us.  In THIS case, the lying cop was charged - and that's great.  Most of the time, whne they're caught lying, there is no punishment. 

So yes, screw the cop that wore a badge and lied and had another man charged.  He took an oath to enforce the law, not ignore it when it serves him personally.  Screw him.  And I never post things like that.  But in cases of police abuse, teacher abuse, and other cases where a person takes a higher oath of ethics and is given additional power and authority - and they abuse it - screw them.

Agnostic007

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2883 on: April 22, 2016, 11:43:45 AM »
I cannot understand ANY defense of this cop lying about the accident.   Makes me sick. It's why people hate cops - they can lie without the same consequences as the rest of us.  In THIS case, the lying cop was charged - and that's great.  Most of the time, whne they're caught lying, there is no punishment. 

So yes, screw the cop that wore a badge and lied and had another man charged.  He took an oath to enforce the law, not ignore it when it serves him personally.  Screw him.  And I never post things like that.  But in cases of police abuse, teacher abuse, and other cases where a person takes a higher oath of ethics and is given additional power and authority - and they abuse it - screw them.

Oh I agree with you on this one, he lied, screw him. Glad he was charged.. 

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2884 on: April 22, 2016, 11:54:21 AM »
Oh I agree with you on this one, he lied, screw him. Glad he was charged.. 

in SW Fl, we had a bunch of cops who had to pay red light tickets, and their chief enforced it.   

Our local PD is VERY professional to the point of having weekly breakfasts with citizens.  However, 2 years back, one of them killed a kid on bike... he was speeding, between lanes, and messing with his computer... and he even beat the careless driving charge.  So some shit still gets by... any of us is "on a computer, speeding, changing lanes" and we kill a kid on a bike, we're going to do some serious time.

I like consistency.  I applaud it.  When shady cops are caught lying, it makes my blood boil.   Cause if I lie on a police report, I'm getting charged.  They should too.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2885 on: April 22, 2016, 12:21:21 PM »
NYPD Officers Charged for Assaulting Man Who Gave Directions to Notorious Cop Killer

An off-chance run-in with a man on the street asking for directions – who just happened to become a notorious cop killer – left a man fearing for his life after a pair of NYPD cops routinely harassed him before they brutally beat him last October.

But now those two New York City cops are facing jail time, according to the New York Times.

Detectives Angelo Pampena and Robert Carbone were both charged assault. While Pampena faces additional charges of second-degree perjury and first-degree offering a false statement after beating the mailman.

It all started in December 2014 when Ismaaiyl Brinsley asked Karim Baker for directions to Marcy Houses in Brooklyn. Brinsley then went on to kill NYPD Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu in execution style as they sat in their patrol car.

Baker, who was delivering packages for Federal Express that day, said he was unaware that Brinsley was planning on killing cops. On that fateful day of December 2014, Baker gave directions to Brinsley who was only a few blocks away from the Marcy housing projects.

After killing the officers, Brinsley ran to a nearby subway station house where he committed suicide.  Baker immediately came forward to provide a statement regarding his interactions with Brinsley and has cooperated fully with the investigation.

And the story should have ended there, but Baker claims that NYPD officers began harassing him over the next few months, pulling him over more than 20 times.

The by-chance meeting has created havoc in Baker’s life, and Baker has now had to change jobs and works for the United States Postal Service.

The incidental meeting led to Baker being beaten by Pampena and Carbone on October 21, 2015, who feel that Baker is somehow responsible for Brinsley actions.

In October, Baker was attempting to get into his vehicle as two unmarked police vehicles swarmed in and boxed his vehicle in. Baker hopped into his vehicle and dialed 911 as the two detectives rushed to either side of the car. Baker’s attorney Eric Subin said “in surveillance video of the incident, you can see officers reaching into the vehicle grabbing at his phone attempting to stop him from making an emergency call.”

That video has not yet been released.

Detectives then dragged him from the vehicle as they continued pummel him as they placed him on the sidewalk. Baker stated that officers had their foot on his head and neck.

Officers were not satisfied with assaulting Baker, they charged him with resisting arrest and parking too close to a fire hydrant. It is unclear what happened with those charges, but a federal lawsuit would require criminal charges be dismissed before a suit can proceed.

NYPD claims they do not document stops which do not result in tickets or a summons to appear. While it may save paperwork and man hours, it shows that so many police interactions in the nation’s most populous city go undocumented, perhaps willfully.

We know that the change of jobs to a Postal worker doesn’t exempt him from harassment and retaliation as we know from a previous false arrest of a New York Postal Worker.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/nypd-officers-assault-man-giving-directions-notorious-cop-killer/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2886 on: April 22, 2016, 12:23:38 PM »
Cops Receive Slap on the Wrist for Pleading Guilty to Slaughtering Innocent Civilians on a Bridge

New Orleans, LA – Four former New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) officers pleaded guilty on Wednesday to gunning down innocent, unarmed civilians in the days following Hurricane Katrina, while a fifth officer confessed to covering up the unjustified shooting. Although the ex-cops previously received sentences ranging from 6 to 65 years in prison, their new trial and plea deal resulted in reduced sentences ranging from 3 to 12 years with credit for time served.

On September 4, 2006, six days after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, five members of the Bartholomew family along with their friend, 17-year-old James Brissette, were walking across Danziger Bridge when a Budget rental truck loaded with plainclothes cops approached them. Armed with shotguns and assault rifles, the NOPD officers immediately exited the vehicle and opened fire on the Bartholomew family without warning.

Although Brissette was unarmed and had not committed a crime, the cops shot the innocent teen to death as the Bartholomew family ducked behind a concrete barrier. Shot in the arm, Susan Bartholomew later had to have her limb amputated. Her husband, daughter, and another friend survived the ambush but received multiple bullet wounds. Her son remained unharmed by escaping under the bridge.

While walking down the bridge to visit their brother, Lance and Ronald Madison witnessed the cops sadistically gunning down the unarmed family when the NOPD officers began shooting at them. As the brothers fled back across the bridge, several officers jumped into an unmarked car driven by a State Trooper. With the vehicle in pursuit, Officer Robert Faulcon leaned out the window and shot Lance’s 40-year-old developmentally disabled brother, Ronald Madison, in the back with a shotgun. According to his autopsy, Ronald Madison sustained seven bullets wounds including five in the back.

After watching his brother die for absolutely no reason, Lance Madison was falsely arrested on eight counts of attempted murder of a police officer and held in police custody for three weeks before NOPD suddenly released him without charges. Although no weapons were found at the scene, the officers involved decided to cover-up the unjustified shooting by falsifying numerous police reports and planting a gun at the scene.

Responding to a call regarding shots fired in the vicinity near Danziger Bridge, the police opened fire on an innocent family walking toward a grocery store in search of food and water. Later investigations revealed that the initial reports of gunfire before the callous murders came from desperate residents trapped by floodwater who had fired their guns to attract the attention of rescue workers.

On December 28, 2006, a grand jury indicted seven NOPD officers on charges of murder and attempted murder. Sgt. Kenneth Bowen, Sgt. Robert Gisevius, Officer Anthony Villavaso, and Officer Robert Faulcon were charged with first-degree murder, while Officers Robert Barrios, Michael Hunter, and Ignatius Hills were charged with attempted murder for their roles in the shooting. Less than two years later, Judge Raymond Bigelow tossed out the state’s case after blaming a prosecutor for improperly using the cops’ grand jury testimonies to secure indictments.

In July 2010, Bowen, Gisevius, Villavaso, and Faulcon were indicted on federal murder charges for killing Brissette and Madison, while retired Sgt. Gerard Dugue and Sgt. Arthur Kaufman were charged with covering up the killings despite the fact that they had been assigned to investigate the police shooting. On August 5, 2011, Bowen, Gisevius, Villavaso, and Faulcon were convicted on multiple counts of civil rights violations, conspiracy, and obstruction of justice. They received prison sentences ranging from 38 to 65 years.

Kaufman was convicted on several counts of falsifying records in a federal investigation, conspiracy, false statements, and civil rights conspiracy for false persecution. He was sentenced to six years in prison while Dugue was granted a severance and is awaiting retrial.

After the five officers appealed their convictions, U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt decided to grant them a new trial while citing “grotesque prosecutorial misconduct.” Engelhardt decided to toss their convictions out after discovering that senior prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office had anonymously posted comments on Nola.com articles related to the trial.

On Wednesday, the five defendants agreed to plead guilty in exchange for drastically reduced sentences. Instead of serving 65 years in prison for shooting a mentally disabled man in the back, Faulcon agreed to serve 12 years. Instead of spending 40 years in prison for gunning down an innocent teen and nearly killing a family, Bowen and Gisevius both received 10 years. Villavaso’s sentence was reduced from 38 years to 7 years while Kaufman’s prison sentence went from 6 years to 3 years with time served. Except for Kaufman, the other four cops will receive credit for six years of time served.

“This has been a terrible ordeal for our family, friends and the community,” Lance Madison told WWLTV. “We are glad the officers involved have finally admitted their guilt. I pray that no other family will ever have to go through what we have gone through.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-drastically-reduced-sentences-pleading-guilty-killing-innocent-civilians/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2887 on: April 22, 2016, 04:33:25 PM »
Cops Receive Slap on the Wrist for Pleading Guilty to Slaughtering Innocent Civilians on a Bridge

New Orleans, LA – Four former New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) officers pleaded guilty on Wednesday to gunning down innocent, unarmed civilians in the days following Hurricane Katrina, while a fifth officer confessed to covering up the unjustified shooting. Although the ex-cops previously received sentences ranging from 6 to 65 years in prison, their new trial and plea deal resulted in reduced sentences ranging from 3 to 12 years with credit for time served.

On September 4, 2006, six days after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, five members of the Bartholomew family along with their friend, 17-year-old James Brissette, were walking across Danziger Bridge when a Budget rental truck loaded with plainclothes cops approached them. Armed with shotguns and assault rifles, the NOPD officers immediately exited the vehicle and opened fire on the Bartholomew family without warning.

Although Brissette was unarmed and had not committed a crime, the cops shot the innocent teen to death as the Bartholomew family ducked behind a concrete barrier. Shot in the arm, Susan Bartholomew later had to have her limb amputated. Her husband, daughter, and another friend survived the ambush but received multiple bullet wounds. Her son remained unharmed by escaping under the bridge.

While walking down the bridge to visit their brother, Lance and Ronald Madison witnessed the cops sadistically gunning down the unarmed family when the NOPD officers began shooting at them. As the brothers fled back across the bridge, several officers jumped into an unmarked car driven by a State Trooper. With the vehicle in pursuit, Officer Robert Faulcon leaned out the window and shot Lance’s 40-year-old developmentally disabled brother, Ronald Madison, in the back with a shotgun. According to his autopsy, Ronald Madison sustained seven bullets wounds including five in the back.

After watching his brother die for absolutely no reason, Lance Madison was falsely arrested on eight counts of attempted murder of a police officer and held in police custody for three weeks before NOPD suddenly released him without charges. Although no weapons were found at the scene, the officers involved decided to cover-up the unjustified shooting by falsifying numerous police reports and planting a gun at the scene.

Responding to a call regarding shots fired in the vicinity near Danziger Bridge, the police opened fire on an innocent family walking toward a grocery store in search of food and water. Later investigations revealed that the initial reports of gunfire before the callous murders came from desperate residents trapped by floodwater who had fired their guns to attract the attention of rescue workers.

On December 28, 2006, a grand jury indicted seven NOPD officers on charges of murder and attempted murder. Sgt. Kenneth Bowen, Sgt. Robert Gisevius, Officer Anthony Villavaso, and Officer Robert Faulcon were charged with first-degree murder, while Officers Robert Barrios, Michael Hunter, and Ignatius Hills were charged with attempted murder for their roles in the shooting. Less than two years later, Judge Raymond Bigelow tossed out the state’s case after blaming a prosecutor for improperly using the cops’ grand jury testimonies to secure indictments.

In July 2010, Bowen, Gisevius, Villavaso, and Faulcon were indicted on federal murder charges for killing Brissette and Madison, while retired Sgt. Gerard Dugue and Sgt. Arthur Kaufman were charged with covering up the killings despite the fact that they had been assigned to investigate the police shooting. On August 5, 2011, Bowen, Gisevius, Villavaso, and Faulcon were convicted on multiple counts of civil rights violations, conspiracy, and obstruction of justice. They received prison sentences ranging from 38 to 65 years.

Kaufman was convicted on several counts of falsifying records in a federal investigation, conspiracy, false statements, and civil rights conspiracy for false persecution. He was sentenced to six years in prison while Dugue was granted a severance and is awaiting retrial.

After the five officers appealed their convictions, U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt decided to grant them a new trial while citing “grotesque prosecutorial misconduct.” Engelhardt decided to toss their convictions out after discovering that senior prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office had anonymously posted comments on Nola.com articles related to the trial.

On Wednesday, the five defendants agreed to plead guilty in exchange for drastically reduced sentences. Instead of serving 65 years in prison for shooting a mentally disabled man in the back, Faulcon agreed to serve 12 years. Instead of spending 40 years in prison for gunning down an innocent teen and nearly killing a family, Bowen and Gisevius both received 10 years. Villavaso’s sentence was reduced from 38 years to 7 years while Kaufman’s prison sentence went from 6 years to 3 years with time served. Except for Kaufman, the other four cops will receive credit for six years of time served.

“This has been a terrible ordeal for our family, friends and the community,” Lance Madison told WWLTV. “We are glad the officers involved have finally admitted their guilt. I pray that no other family will ever have to go through what we have gone through.”

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cops-receive-drastically-reduced-sentences-pleading-guilty-killing-innocent-civilians/









 :o  Bastards.
How can they have got such short sentences.
We can only hope that there time inside is horrendous for them
At that they are either Killed or commit suicide.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2888 on: April 25, 2016, 07:29:10 AM »
in SW Fl, we had a bunch of cops who had to pay red light tickets, and their chief enforced it.   

Our local PD is VERY professional to the point of having weekly breakfasts with citizens.  However, 2 years back, one of them killed a kid on bike... he was speeding, between lanes, and messing with his computer... and he even beat the careless driving charge.  So some shit still gets by... any of us is "on a computer, speeding, changing lanes" and we kill a kid on a bike, we're going to do some serious time.

I like consistency.  I applaud it.  When shady cops are caught lying, it makes my blood boil.   Cause if I lie on a police report, I'm getting charged.  They should too.

While I would hope everyone would, it isn't the case. We've had 2 cases here in the last few years where a citizen was driving drunk, hit a person walking or biking and left them for dead. At trial they either got off or got a light sentence. Right or wrong, jurors tend to look at those cases and think "there but for the grace of god go I".

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2889 on: April 25, 2016, 07:34:03 AM »

Hit-and-run driver gets 2 years in death of Austin bicyclist

Crime & Law

By Jazmine Ulloa - American-Statesman Staff
0
 

Posted: 4:46 p.m. Friday, Aug. 7, 2015



Highlights


Mahy had been facing up to 30 years in prison on two charges.



Brian Adam Mahy was driving a Mustang when he hit and killed Robert “Chops” Ramirez.


A hit-and-run driver must serve two years in prison followed by eight years probation for the death of an Austin bicyclist nearly three years ago.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2890 on: April 25, 2016, 07:37:22 AM »
Nearly two years after Courtney Griffin was killed in a hit-and-run collision, district court Judge Karen Sage on Monday ordered the woman (Gabrielle Nestande ) responsible for Griffin’s death to serve 10 years probation, six months of which she must spend in Travis County jail.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2891 on: April 26, 2016, 12:29:41 AM »
9 years.

NYPD Cop Sentenced to Prison for Shooting Random People While Drunk

A New York City police officer who downed several beers and whiskeys before getting into his car, driving down the street and stopping at a traffic light before stepping out and shooting two random strangers in another car was sentenced to nine years in prison this month.

Brendan Cronin told police he was “on the job” when he was arrested a half-mile away that fateful evening on April 28, 2014.

He later claimed he did not remember a thing about that night.

But victims Joseph Felice and Robert Borrelli will never forget that terrifying evening when they were driving home from a recreational hockey game and came to a stop at a red light, only for a drunken off-duty cop to walk up to them and open fire.

According to the Associated Press:

Felice was hit six times. Borrelli hunkered down, thinking he’d be killed. Physically unharmed, he rushed his friend to the hospital.

Cronin told investigators he’d downed 10 drinks — beer and whiskey — after a day of training at a police shooting range.

Felice described in his victim-impact statement how the shooting has affected him and his family.

“We have always told our son if something happens, go to the police, as it is their job to protect you,” Felice said. “How do I explain to my son that Mr. Cronin, a police officer, tried to kill me for absolutely no reason?”

Borrelli said he’s plagued by survivor’s guilt and memories of Felice gasping for air and the whites of his eyes as he lost consciousness.

Felice’s mental replay of the shooting includes the popping sounds and “excruciating burn” as bullets ripped through his chest, arm, shoulder, wrist, thumb and back.

One bullet, still lodged in his chest, “is a constant reminder of my terror,” he said.

The incident took place in Pelham in Westchester County, just outside of New York City. Lawyers for the victims say Cronin tried to use his police credentials to avoid arrest

But the incident was captured on surveillance video, so there was not much Blue Courtesy available to him. It does not appear as if the video was ever publicly released.

Initially facing 25 years in prison, Cronin agreed to a plea deal where he was plead guilty to two counts of attempted murder, assault and misdemeanor driving while intoxicated.

He was convicted in September and was expected to surrender in a week to begin serving his sentence, but somehow, that week turned into seven months where he was not sentenced until April 13.


The victims have a pending lawsuit against the New York City Police Department for failing to train their officer to not drink and drive and shoot random people on the streets.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/nypd-cop-sentenced-to-prison-for-shooting-random-people-while-drunk/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2892 on: April 26, 2016, 09:08:26 AM »
9 years.

NYPD Cop Sentenced to Prison for Shooting Random People While Drunk

A New York City police officer who downed several beers and whiskeys before getting into his car, driving down the street and stopping at a traffic light before stepping out and shooting two random strangers in another car was sentenced to nine years in prison this month.

Brendan Cronin told police he was “on the job” when he was arrested a half-mile away that fateful evening on April 28, 2014.

He later claimed he did not remember a thing about that night.

But victims Joseph Felice and Robert Borrelli will never forget that terrifying evening when they were driving home from a recreational hockey game and came to a stop at a red light, only for a drunken off-duty cop to walk up to them and open fire.

According to the Associated Press:

Felice was hit six times. Borrelli hunkered down, thinking he’d be killed. Physically unharmed, he rushed his friend to the hospital.

Cronin told investigators he’d downed 10 drinks — beer and whiskey — after a day of training at a police shooting range.

Felice described in his victim-impact statement how the shooting has affected him and his family.

“We have always told our son if something happens, go to the police, as it is their job to protect you,” Felice said. “How do I explain to my son that Mr. Cronin, a police officer, tried to kill me for absolutely no reason?”

Borrelli said he’s plagued by survivor’s guilt and memories of Felice gasping for air and the whites of his eyes as he lost consciousness.

Felice’s mental replay of the shooting includes the popping sounds and “excruciating burn” as bullets ripped through his chest, arm, shoulder, wrist, thumb and back.

One bullet, still lodged in his chest, “is a constant reminder of my terror,” he said.

The incident took place in Pelham in Westchester County, just outside of New York City. Lawyers for the victims say Cronin tried to use his police credentials to avoid arrest

But the incident was captured on surveillance video, so there was not much Blue Courtesy available to him. It does not appear as if the video was ever publicly released.

Initially facing 25 years in prison, Cronin agreed to a plea deal where he was plead guilty to two counts of attempted murder, assault and misdemeanor driving while intoxicated.

He was convicted in September and was expected to surrender in a week to begin serving his sentence, but somehow, that week turned into seven months where he was not sentenced until April 13.


The victims have a pending lawsuit against the New York City Police Department for failing to train their officer to not drink and drive and shoot random people on the streets.

https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/nypd-cop-sentenced-to-prison-for-shooting-random-people-while-drunk/

Holy crap.. nutcase

On a side note I make it a point to not carry when I know I will have more than a drink. Common sense and judgement tend to be absent and having a gun is a recipe for disaster. But drunk off my ass, I can't imagine doing that

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2893 on: April 26, 2016, 11:19:47 AM »
Officer Loses It, Goes ‘Robocop’ and Breaks an Innocent Elderly Man’s Leg Over a Tomato

Atlanta, GA — An innocent Atlanta man spent multiple days handcuffed to a hospital bed with a broken leg and a severed artery after an Atlanta cop falsely accused him of stealing a tomato that he actually bought.
Tyrone Carnegay spent then spent three days in jail before the charges were finally dropped. The interaction was all caught on a Walmart security camera.

“I was chained to my bed in Grady. They said I assaulted him and obstructed him from doing his job,” Carnegay told the local news. The video proves that none of this was true.

Carnegay explained to WSB-TV that he was walking out of the store after purchasing his groceries when an off-duty Atlanta cop, working security at the store, walked up to him without warning and began beating him.

“He’s giving me a verbal command. As he’s grabbing me, he’s beating me at the same time. ‘Get on ground.’ Beating me at the same time,” Carnegay said.

In the video, we can see Carnegay get struck by the raging cop at least seven times before he is unable to walk.

“My leg started giving out,” Carnegay said.

Carnegay didn’t resist, obstruct, or assault the officer; he merely tried to protect himself against the cop’s unnecessary baton blows.

Carnegay said that the officer never asked for the receipt prior to unleashing his ‘robocop’ fury. However, after he laid on the ground in handcuffs, his leg broken in two places, and bleeding internally, the cop reached into his pocket and found the receipt — showing he paid for the tomato.

“Somebody could have come up to him and said, ‘Excuse me sir, do you have (a) receipt for that tomato?’ and he would’ve shown him the receipt,” said attorney Craig Jones. “The officer went into Robocop mode and beat the crap out of him.”

“He found the receipt and money, and stood there like he hadn’t done nothing,” Carnegay said.

According to the lawsuit, filed over the incident which happened in October 2014, the Walmart manager told the officer Carnegay had stolen the tomato just before the beating. Named in the suit are Walmart, the manager, and the cop who doled out the beating.

When contacted by WSB-TV, a representative from Walmart said they had not yet been served the lawsuit but said, “We take the matter seriously. We will review the allegations and respond appropriately with the court.”

The Atlanta police department has yet to comment on the lawsuit.

As for now, Carnegay walks with a limp thanks to the titanium rod in his leg.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-officer-loses-it-robocop-breaks-innocent-elderly-mans-leg-tomato/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2894 on: April 26, 2016, 11:23:07 AM »
Worse than Criminals — Cops Use Asset Forfeiture to Steal $53K from an Orphanage and a Church

The criminal depths to which police will sink to bolster their budgets, apparently have no limit, as a recent case of police theft in Oklahoma illustrates. To keep society safe, sheriff’s deputies in Muskogee County, Oklahoma robbed a church and an orphanage of $53,000. Real American heroes.

Eh Wah, 40, a refugee from Burma, who became a US citizen more than a decade ago, was traveling with the cash to deliver it to the intended recipients when he was targetted by modern day, state-sanctioned pirates — for a broken tail light.

Eh Wah had been entrusted with the money by the members of his Christian band who had been on a 19-city tour raising funds for the Dr. T. Thanbyah Christian Institute, a religious liberal arts college in Burma serving the Karen community there. And, they had also collected funds for the Hsa Thoo Lei orphanage in Thailand, which serves internally displaced Karen people.

Clearly a vulnerable host for their parasitic process, Eh Wah’s English was incompatible with that of the deputies’ and he was accused of trafficking drugs. A K9 was called to the scene, and, naturally, alerted to the vehicle. As the Free Thought Project has reported in the past, drug dogs will alert to your vehicle nearly every single time they are brought out regardless of actually having drugs or not.

In spite of the fact that not one single bit of contraband was found, Eh Wah was brought to the police station and interrogated for hours. Police even called one of Eh Wah’s friends in the band who confirmed the story, but the cops, with dollar signs in their eyes, still believed that his story was “inconsistent.”

Eh Wah was then released without charges and sent on his way — police kept his cash, and Eh Wah kept his broken tail light.

In an interview with the Washington Post, Eh Wah’s attorney, Dan Alban, noted that while the deputies took all of the cash, they left Eh Wah a check written out to him for $300 from a family friend.

“If they really thought these were drug proceeds and they thought he was a drug trafficker, why would they give back a check that they thought was drug proceeds?” Alban asked. But, he said, “if the real purpose of the stop was to increase revenue, there’s no point in keeping the check because they can’t cash the check.”

In an apparent attempt to justify their lowlife theft from an orphanage, five weeks after he was stopped, Muskogee County authorities eventually charged Eh Wah with a crime. They issued a warrant for his arrest April 5, for the crime of “acquir[ing] proceeds from drug activity, a felony.” For probable cause, the authorities noted the positive alert from the drug dog, “inconsistent stories” and, according to the Post, said Eh Wah was “unable to confirm the money was his.”

And we call this process ‘justice’ in the Land of the Free.

For decades now, the federal government and their cohorts in law enforcement have been carrying out theft of the citizenry on a massive scale. We’re not talking about taxes, but an insidious power known as Civil Asset Forfeiture (CAF).

The 1980’s-era laws were ostensibly designed to drain resources from powerful criminal organizations, but CAF has become a tool for law enforcement agencies across the U.S. to steal money and property from countless innocent people.

It was CAF, which allowed the Muskogee County deputies to legally pilfer from an orphanage without any worry of recourse or accountability.

No criminal charge is required for this confiscation, resulting in easy inflows of cash for law enforcement departments and the proliferation of abuse. This is called “policing for profit.”

In the last 25 years, the amount of “profit” stolen through CAF has skyrocketed.
According to the US Department of Justice, the value of asset forfeiture recoveries by US authorities from 1989-2010 was $12,667,612,066, increasing on average 19.5% per year.

In 2008, law enforcement took over $1.5 billion from the American public. While this number seems incredibly large, just a few years later, in 2014, that number tripled to nearly $4.5 billion.

When we examine these figures and their almost exponential growth curve, it appears that police in America are getting really good at separating the citizen from their property — not just really good, criminally good.

To put this number into perspective, according to the FBI, victims of burglary offenses suffered an estimated $3.9 billion in property losses in 2014.

That means that law enforcement in America has stolen $600,000,000 more from Americans than actual criminal burglars.


When police surpass the criminal accomplishments of those they claim to protect you from, there is a serious problem.

When police can publicly steal from charitable organizations and orphanages in the name of the war on drugs, it is time society reassess who the criminals are.

The good news is that Americans are waking up to this Orwellian notion of police robbing the citizens, and they are taking a stand.

Even police officers are taking a stand against CAF. In an exclusive interview in September of last year, the Free Thought Project talked to officer Stephen Mills, chief of police at the Apache, Oklahoma police department. Mills became an outspoken advocate against CAF after he became a victim of it.

The idea of thieving cops has also united organizations on opposite ends of the political spectrum. In October, the ACLU and the Koch Brothers came together to stop the inherent police theft in America.

While the police keep grabbing your property, it is important to remain vigilant. Only through a lesser ignorance and the spreading of information will we overcome this blatant tyranny. Please share this article with your friends and family to wake them up to the criminal reality that is – civil asset forfeiture.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/worse-criminals-cops-asset-forfeiture-steal-53k-orphanage-church/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2895 on: April 26, 2016, 11:34:44 AM »
9 years.

NYPD Cop Sentenced to Prison for Shooting Random People While Drunk

Something tells me any of us would get a lot more than 9 years for the same crime.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2896 on: April 26, 2016, 11:56:28 AM »
Something tells me any of us would get a lot more than 9 years for the same crime.

A most reasonable assumption.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2897 on: April 26, 2016, 01:14:45 PM »
Officer Loses It, Goes ‘Robocop’ and Breaks an Innocent Elderly Man’s Leg Over a Tomato

Atlanta, GA — An innocent Atlanta man spent multiple days handcuffed to a hospital bed with a broken leg and a severed artery after an Atlanta cop falsely accused him of stealing a tomato that he actually bought.
Tyrone Carnegay spent then spent three days in jail before the charges were finally dropped. The interaction was all caught on a Walmart security camera.

“I was chained to my bed in Grady. They said I assaulted him and obstructed him from doing his job,” Carnegay told the local news. The video proves that none of this was true.

Carnegay explained to WSB-TV that he was walking out of the store after purchasing his groceries when an off-duty Atlanta cop, working security at the store, walked up to him without warning and began beating him.

“He’s giving me a verbal command. As he’s grabbing me, he’s beating me at the same time. ‘Get on ground.’ Beating me at the same time,” Carnegay said.

In the video, we can see Carnegay get struck by the raging cop at least seven times before he is unable to walk.

“My leg started giving out,” Carnegay said.

Carnegay didn’t resist, obstruct, or assault the officer; he merely tried to protect himself against the cop’s unnecessary baton blows.

Carnegay said that the officer never asked for the receipt prior to unleashing his ‘robocop’ fury. However, after he laid on the ground in handcuffs, his leg broken in two places, and bleeding internally, the cop reached into his pocket and found the receipt — showing he paid for the tomato.

“Somebody could have come up to him and said, ‘Excuse me sir, do you have (a) receipt for that tomato?’ and he would’ve shown him the receipt,” said attorney Craig Jones. “The officer went into Robocop mode and beat the crap out of him.”

“He found the receipt and money, and stood there like he hadn’t done nothing,” Carnegay said.

According to the lawsuit, filed over the incident which happened in October 2014, the Walmart manager told the officer Carnegay had stolen the tomato just before the beating. Named in the suit are Walmart, the manager, and the cop who doled out the beating.

When contacted by WSB-TV, a representative from Walmart said they had not yet been served the lawsuit but said, “We take the matter seriously. We will review the allegations and respond appropriately with the court.”

The Atlanta police department has yet to comment on the lawsuit.

As for now, Carnegay walks with a limp thanks to the titanium rod in his leg.

http://thefreethoughtproject.com/video-officer-loses-it-robocop-breaks-innocent-elderly-mans-leg-tomato/

I wonder why they aren't naming the cop - assholes like that ought to be publicly named and shamed.

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2898 on: April 27, 2016, 03:44:26 PM »
Remember this case?

Oregon Man Found Guilty Five Months After Receiving Settlement for Same Arrest Involving Recording of Police

Having already received a $7,500 settlement for a wrongful arrest involving the recording of police in public , an Oregon man was surprised when a jury found him guilty for the same arrest Tuesday.

But Judge Stephen Bushong did not allow any mention of November’s settlement to be part of the trial.

Instead, the six-person jury heard testimony from several police officers that Fred Marlow IV was interfering with their investigation by standing on the property of his apartment complex recording them blasting their way into a home using flash grenades in September 2014.

Gresham police said they had ordered him away for his “safety,” but he refused to leave, citing his right to record police activity, which left them no choice but to body slam to the sidewalk, leaving him with several cuts and bruises before handcuffing him and throwing him in jail.

Gresham Police Sergeant James McGowan wrote in his report that Marlow appeared to be drunk because he was walking funny, but Marlow told PINAC in 2014 that is because he has a titanium rod in his leg.

He also said that he had been sleeping when he was jolted awake at 4 a.m. by the sounds of several armored cars rumbling down the street, followed by several flash grenade bangs and a cop speaking into a bullhorn.

So he grabbed his iPad and stepped outside, never leaving the apartment complex property while recording police raiding the house across the street.

Two cops dressed in full military gear then ordered him back inside, accusing him of interfering, even though he had said nothing to them and was standing nowhere near them to physically interfere.

One cop walks up to him and slaps at the iPad. He then begins to walk away with the other cop.

“Hey, this is on iCloud,” Marlow tells the officer.

The officer then returns with his buddy, saying, “You’re under arrest, dude.”

During the arrest, we can hear the officers telling him to stop resisting, but the jury found him not guilty of resisting.

They did, however, find him guilty of two counts of interfering with police.

According to Oregon Live:

The Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office filed misdemeanor criminal charges against Marlow within a few weeks of the September 2014 incident. After a series of delays, a judge dismissed the case in September 2015.

On Nov. 10, 2015, the city of Gresham sent Marlow the $7,500 settlement check to ward off any claim of police brutality that he might make.

A week later, the district attorney’s office re-filed the case, which it was able to do because the statute of limitations hadn’t run out. That led to this week’s trial.

That meant that Marlow had to use all of his settlement money in addition to several thousand additional dollars to pay for his lawyer to fight the refiled charges.

Judge Stephen Bushong sentenced Marlow to one year probation, 80 hours of community service and a $500 fine.

“Hopefully Mr. Marlow has learned a valuable lesson, and he won’t ever do that again,” Bushong said.  “…Not that you can’t videotape the police. Just don’t interfere with their activities.”

According to Oregon law, the definition of interference with a police officer is as follows:

(1)A person commits the crime of interfering with a peace officer or parole and probation officer if the person, knowing that another person is a peace officer or a parole and probation officer as defined in ORS 181.610 (Definitions for ORS 181.610 to 181.712):

(a)Intentionally acts in a manner that prevents, or attempts to prevent, a peace officer or parole and probation officer from performing the lawful duties of the officer with regards to another person; or

(b)Refuses to obey a lawful order by the peace officer or parole and probation officer.

However, Oregon passed a law last year affirming that citizens have the right to record.

(c) The recording of still or motion pictures or sound of a peace officer or a parole and probation officer while the officer is engaged in official duties that does not, by itself, actually prevent a peace officer or a parole and probation officer from performing the lawful duties of the officer. (4) An order by a peace officer or a parole and probation officer to cease recording still or motion pictures or sound of a peace officer or a parole and probation officer while the officer is engaged in official duties is not a lawful order as described in subsection (1)(b) of this section unless the recording is actually preventing a peace officer or a parole and probation officer from performing the lawful duties of the officer.

So perhaps it is Judge Bushong who needs to learn a lesson here in the definition of interference because it does not include the recording police.

A website that launched this year called the Gresham News Source published an article last month accusing the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office of prosecutorial misconduct because it refiled charges on Marlow after he received his settlement.

But for unknown reasons, the site removed the article, so it can only be viewed through Google Cache.

Special:
Marlow had another experience earlier this year with police from neighboring Fairview where a cop told him to get out of town because he was parked on the side of the road configuring his GPS.

Video of his 2014 arrest is below.



https://photographyisnotacrime.com/2016/04/oregon-man-found-guilty-five-months-after-receiving-settlement-for-same-arrest-involving-recording-of-police/

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Re: Police State - Official Thread
« Reply #2899 on: April 27, 2016, 04:09:37 PM »
It's a never ending stream of Bad Cops Supported By A bad Justice System.

When is it going to stop.